Yes, and Ray McInnis talked about it.
At VAC, early in 2018, our legislation essentially allowed us to award entitlement on a full basis or on a partial basis. VAC reviewed those partial entitlements and realized that there was a huge subjectivity in it: there was no fairness in the system, and two veterans similarly situated could end up with two different amounts of disability. So they implemented a policy that essentially said that if you have partial entitlement, everybody will be awarded four-fifths or five-fifths. Obviously, that opened the door to a whole bunch of people who had been previously awarded at one-fifth, say, to come forward and say, “I want the benefit of the new, more favourable adjudicator”, and there's simply no provision needed on basic principles of fairness or in law to deny them that opportunity to bring it forward, and so all of those cases are coming back.
On hearing loss and tinnitus, between us and VAC, I'd say in excess of about 95% has been awarded in the last year. There are a whole bunch of hearing loss cases out there. Hearing loss was much more restricted when I started five years ago, and you had a very difficult chance, unless you could establish something. So there is a group of veterans who are now bringing it forward and saying again that, “I want the benefit of that more favourable, more informed, updated policy”, and we must give them that opportunity.