Yes. One of the things that we are piloting right now in the Pacific region, just as you pointed out, is the integrated correctional program model. This approach is allowing us to do several things. It's allowing us to eliminate the duplication that occurred among several types of programs that we were offering. We found in some of our programs that the kinds of materials that were delivered in one program versus another were identical. We would have offenders who may have to go to a violence program, an anger program, and a cognitive skills program, and they kept getting that same piece over and over again. That would cause some of them to think about dropping out of those programs because they felt they were taking the same thing over again. We've taken an approach now where those common elements in the programs are being delivered at the time that they're being admitted to the federal correctional system. They're getting those common pieces up front so that after they've gone through the assessment units and have been placed into the penitentiary where they will be for a while, they can start the more specific components of the programs.
This has allowed us to do a couple of things. One is to get offenders engaged in programs much earlier than before. What we had found is that the offenders were not starting their first program for as long as 150-plus days after their time of admission. Right now we've dropped that down to where they're starting these program primers within the first 30 to 45 days of coming into the federal system. So this is achieving some efficiencies for us. As well, it's getting the offenders more engaged in their programs, because we can take a modular approach to programs, where before they used to have a fixed start date and a fixed end date, and if you miss the start date you may have to wait several months before you're on the next list to start that program. The approach that we put in place is a modular one, so people can be plugged into the programs regardless of what time, and we can keep it flowing. This way we get more offenders engaged in programs quicker and in a more effective and efficient way.