I'm going to be a little bit more categoric. I think the services are there.
We link disability benefits to mental health services, and I think we have to be very careful when we do that. The disability benefit—the 16 weeks, the 32 weeks—for sure, it opens the doors to many services for a veteran.
That said, there is a lot of other support available to a veteran. We have the crisis line, which will give them 20 sessions with a psychologist. You can call 24-7. You will get to meet a psychologist. There are peer networks, such as OSISS, where a veteran can talk to a fellow veteran who has been where this individual man or woman has been. The services are there.
First and foremost, we can't forget that we have national health care in Canada. Any one of these...and actually, we're not a 24-7 operation at Veterans Affairs, so when we have a crisis at two in the morning, my counsellors—I do have people on phones—call 911. Any veteran that is in a crisis, the national safety net is there to take care of them.
Now, if you talk purely about Veterans Affairs programming, the one about the 20 sessions is with us. OSISS is with us. We use the services of our colleagues in the CAF for veterans. They are available to help veterans also. They have full-time psychologists, psychiatrists, and things like that.
The review looked at the disability process. It is 16 weeks, and 32 weeks from the view of veteran. We agreed with the OAG on that. I think we have to be careful, because there are services—not that everybody would take those services, as there's still the stigma. I'm not going to...but the reality is that there are services available to a veteran.