That's a very good question and not an easy question to answer at the same time.
I think it comes back to what a member discussed about health care and things like that. I think if there's one area where everybody could help—and maybe it's not the simple side of it—it's to ensure that our veterans, wherever they decide to retire, receive health care in those locations.
There are a lot of initiatives on employment, whether it's at the federal level or companies stepping up to the plate and hiring veterans, and we're doing a lot of work on homelessness. A lot of groups are involved in homelessness and they want to help, so how do we coordinate all that?
On medical care, I'm not talking about specialists and surgeons, I'm talking about your day-to-day medical help because we can work with the veterans but they often need a family doctor to give them access to some very basic care, and in some cases in some parts of this country, that is very difficult. Veterans Affairs do not have practising doctors in the sense that we don't give prescriptions and the doctors we have are references. They are there to make sure we're doing the right thing. I think if there is one area that collectively we could work on, I really think it's on the health side of ensuring that our veterans get a doctor, that they're not put in long queues. I'm going to stop because I could get on the soapbox on that one. But I think that's an area where I think there's work to be done.