Thanks, Madam Chair. I just have a short question and then I'll split my time with my colleague Mr. Lobb.
If an inmate chooses to work and gets paid $6.90 a day and if the commissioner or whoever makes the decision to take the maximum back from him or her, my math says they'd still end up with $500 after that for their own personal use.
We're talking about people who are incarcerated for two years or more, I believe, and over the age of.... On the issue of children, I'm not sure there'd be a lot of children. There could be, of course, but I'm not sure there would be a lot. Among inmates of that age, are there many of them--you might not even know this--who are being trained, or are they taking any kind of a formal education to better themselves when they get out? I think of things like doing income tax or accounting or maybe carpentry and all those of types of things. Is there a pretty wide range of things that these folks can engage themselves in while they're in there?