With that answer, I get right into the probation officer representatives. We're here to write law, and we can't really supervise every judge and every prosecutor and every defence attorney. The law would suggest—and it's not going to be changed by anything in Bill C-9—that this conditional sentence remedy is not going to be given unless the court is satisfied that it won't endanger the safety of the community.
It's been my experience, and I'm glad to hear it from people who are more specialized in the field, that probation officers—and I know you may not speak for New Brunswick and all the provinces, but it might be similar across Canada—often write pre-sentence reports that are determinative of a judge's deciding to let this or that person serve the sentence in the community.
If your association is for everything in Bill C-9, is it fair to say that all of your members haven't heard the tune yet and are not singing it? Am I off base?