I think along the same line as the guys. Veterans understand that what is being offered is still a little more than for some people who retire and who aren't in the military. Having two years with 75% pay to figure out your life.... Most of the people we talk to day to day we tell that two years is two years, but you're going to blink, and it's going to be gone, so you need to figure out what you're doing right now.
I think that offering help in those areas is definitely allowing veterans to concentrate on something and to see where they want to go on their path, and maybe they don't in the end. For example, I started off as a real estate agent because I was into housing and I liked that whole idea, so they paid for me to go to school and learn to be a real estate agent. That got me on my feet because I don't believe that a veteran sitting at home and doing nothing all day is beneficial to anybody. It's definitely not beneficial to him. Within months you'd be trying to blow your brains out.
I think that putting them in those services and allowing them to figure out what they need to do—go to school, get a job, or whatever—is something we are doing well, although I don't think that a timeline is a smart idea because, in that state of mind, you don't know what you want to do.