I can't see it being something that will necessarily assist their rehabilitation. As I say, if they're getting settlements from corrections—from the state because of actions of corrections—then they're often, as I've mentioned, using those resources to get support to assist them to get out, or to assist their children.
I do think that, unfortunately, it's the bill. As others have said, including Mr. Fineberg, there are other mechanisms. It's one of those issues where, as we've seen with some other pieces of recent legislation, the cost to taxpayers of implementing this, the cost to corrections of trying to implement this—instead of looking to the provinces to buttress the mechanisms that already exist—is not a useful way to be expending resources.
As I said at the beginning, that is not to say we don't support in principle compensation, restitution, and victim support; absolutely, we do. But I think implementing this sort of bill and putting in place legislation that's not required will probably have a huge cost to administer, versus what the benefit will be to victims.