Well, I first have to say that the drug treatment court is what you're referring to, as opposed to a drug court, which we had—a separate court dealing with drug issues in Vancouver. That was put in place in 2001. I retired part-time, if I can put it that way, in 2001, and I retired full-time in 2003.
I have been doing some research on the community court. I haven't completed that research yet, and I want to compare it to the drug treatment court. But I think based on the little I've seen so far of both, they are an attempt at a band-aid solution that will relieve the court of the burden, not the drug-affected community it's supposed to be dealing with. The idea is to try to reduce the number of recidivists coming back before the court over and over and over again, taking up court time and wasting judge time, all because the drugs that are being used are prohibited, carry the stigma that they do, and so on. They are prohibition crimes.
I don't have a great deal of faith in drug treatment courts, and as for the community court, to be clichéd about it, the jury is out. I'll wait on that. But I'll let anyone else here—