In terms of your question about the breaches and the results, I have heard reference here to the idea that you go to jail and serve your sentence. In Ontario, that's not the case. About half the breaches that we have laid have not resulted in any jail time at all. As Don was just mentioning, in the last two years, approximately 25% to 32% resulted in the conditional sentence being terminated—which means serving the balance of the sentence in its entirety in jail—with the remainder, which is about one-quarter or so, getting some custody.
So the fact is that in half the cases in Ontario they don't get any jail time at all as a result of their breach. That's significant compared to what is being said here, that you go to jail if you breach. That's certainly the message the offenders may get at the outset in terms of a deterrent, but the reality in Ontario is not that.