Yes, thank you for the question.
If I go back to the original comments that I made, I think the important point is that the thrust of this is going to be trying to minimize the administrative burden on the veteran. Once eligibility is determined—and again, I should specify that the regulations have yet to finalized, and they will be coming forward in the next number of weeks—I think the idea is to reduce the administrative burden and determine eligibility as per the legislation. Once eligibility is established, it's paid as a grant. It's up front, $7,200 tax-free. The expectation is the veteran will use it for the purposes stated.
Again, it has been designed to be absolutely flexible so that if the veteran may reside, say, in Ottawa but he or she may have a son or a daughter living in St. John's, Newfoundland, or Vancouver and maybe he or she wants to bring that son or daughter home to Ottawa to help provide relief, that is going to be perfectly okay. The idea is to make it as flexible as we can to ensure that the veteran's needs in this respect are met with a minimum of burden.