I understand that schools are under funding pressures, but if this is going to be a new model of delivering multidisciplinary care in a community setting, could it be that the health portfolio provides that chunk for that kind of school, a psychologist system...? You may need, I don't know—you'd probably know better—one psychologist for six schools, etc., but I think that really is going to be at the front end of preventing some issues.
I wanted to ask Dr. Bland this, because I met with some psychiatrists when I was in Halifax. I was always very impressed and moved by something that one of the psychiatrists said to me. He was a forensic psychiatrist who had been working in the prison system for 11 years. He quit and went back to do pediatric psychiatry because he believed that if you could get the kid before the age of four you could prevent a lot of the hard-wiring that goes on and that leads to certain behavioural problems later on. That links to the school thing that I was talking to Karen about.
Do you see this linking to preventing a lot of the forensic psychiatry that's needed in a prison system? I wondered if you could also comment on why there have been no ads for prison psychiatrists or psychologists from the federal government—that you have seen—because this is absolutely necessary in a corrections setting.