What I can do is refer you to a few things you'll find in your presentation package.
If you look at chart 12, the heading on chart 12--I'm making the asumption that they're not all numbered there--almost one-third of conditional sentences imposed for a Bill C-9 listed offence.... What we were able to do for illustrative purposes was apply the Criminal Code offences listed at the end of Bill C-9 to our 2003-04 conditional sentence data. And when we did that--and we didn't take into account the type of procedure that was followed--we found that one-third, almost one in three of that conditional sentence population, just over 2,800 people, were sentenced to a conditional sentence in 2003-04 that was for a Bill C-9 legislated offence.
It's not in your chart, but I spoke of it a little bit during the presentation that we also added drug offences to those Criminal Code Bill C-9 offences. When we did that we saw that 4,865 persons--about half of all the persons with a conditional sentence in 2003-04--would have been convicted of either one of the Bill C-9-listed offences in the summary document, or of a drug offence.
In terms of your question around cost information, I don't have with me a cost analysis. What I can tell you is that in 2003-04 approximately $1.2 billion was spent on provincial-territorial custody and community supervision. If you look at community operating expenditures, it cost about $5 per community supervision offender per day. And if you look at custody operating expenditures, it cost about $142 per inmate, per day. That's the information I'm able to provide to you here.