Very well.
I will say that we are proposing this amendment because of the current situation. The testimony we have heard throughout this study underscores how difficult it is for victims to attend parole review hearings. However, nearly all the witnesses have talked about the importance of rehabilitation in order to help victims feel safe. That is something we need to focus on. Rehabilitation is extremely important to victims. They want to make sure that when the offender does reintegrate into society, they don't commit the same crimes. Various experts talked to the committee about that. And parole workers also stressed that point when I visited a number of institutions in my riding.
We are talking about a very big impact. So I think we would do well to approach the issue of access to parole review hearings with a certain degree of openness. I do not mean in terms of offences that are necessarily less serious because they are all serious. But I just think it would be a good idea to establish parameters around those crimes. That would be an important measure to include in this legislation, for victims, for those who will be administering the bill and, from a public safety standpoint, for Canadian society in general.