Thanks.
I'm just going to make a comment on something and not ask for your response, since we only have five minutes. It goes back to a discussion we were having earlier about costs of prison construction. You talked about whether the assumptions are for single bunks, double bunks, triple bunks, and things like that.
One of the things that came into account here was the estimation that the Correctional Service of Canada and prison officials had. They estimated that over the course of the last fiscal year approximately 1,280 new inmates would be incarcerated. The actual number was 519. So there are more than 700 inmates who were projected to be incarcerated and were not, at an estimated cost by your office of $340,000, at least for female inmates. Clearly that would result in projections being way out of whack. So again, I put that to my colleagues opposite. But my question for you is not on that--that's a fact--because there were differences between forecasts and actual numbers.
I want to go back to follow up a little bit on what my colleague Mr. McGuinty was talking about. I find it quite incredible. He keeps going to the same well again. Let me just ask you: what statute specifies what information your office is entitled to?
