Certainly. The people appointed as Board members come from a variety of backgrounds, to start with. In fact, the Act provides for this. The Corrections and Conditional Release Act tells us that the Board must be representative of the community. That is why Board members come from diverse backgrounds. That is why, when they become Board members, we have a very rigorous training process to bring the knowledge of people who come from different occupations up to the same level, if you will. We may have lawyers, police officers, teachers, nurses, people from the private sector, and so on. So as I said, we have a very rigorous training program. At the outset, new members are given training at both the national level and the regional level. They have at least five weeks of training, plus training on the ground, if you will, in the regions. As well, training isn't limited to that initial training. We offer our members ongoing training every year, again at both the regional level and the national level.
On November 16th, 2010. See this statement in context.