Thank you, Jean-Guy.
If I may, I will quickly touch on the previous question. Ms. Lowther mentioned “brown envelope syndrome”. This is definitely something that we've heard about from the veterans we represent. When they get that envelope in the mail, it signifies something very heavy for many of them. That is an indicator, frankly—in terms of how we take it, anyway—of broken trust and some difficulties that veterans have there.
Also, in terms of what the veteran community looks like, women talk to women. When women have problems or concerns in connecting with VAC, there's very much an interconnectedness among the women veterans community in how those experiences get shared.
Finally, there can be difficulty in connecting with the institution—the Government of Canada—that may have been involved in some of the service-related injuries someone might have experienced. Making the leap and breaching the gap to rely on that institution—to become vulnerable again and trust that institution to deliver on the services and support you need as a result of your injury—can be very difficult when you're in a vulnerable situation. That's what we are discussing when we talk about some of the challenges of trust, but that's a very in-depth topic to get into.
On the investment of $140 million, it is—