I think that's a very good and important question.
First of all, we do not have statistics specific to how often conditional sentences are being used that end up with house arrest right in the vicinity of the victim. We know that in 2012 there were 4,000 reported sexual assaults against children. Not all sexual assaults are reported. These are police-reported calls, so the number of actual assaults is much higher.
If you create an atmosphere in the sentencing and the administration of that sentencing that provides a healthy environment for the victim and the offender, I believe the actual workload to deal with that situation would be less if the sentencing is ideal. People want justice and they need justice. You need healing for the victim, but you need healing for the offender to get at the root causes of why they committed the offence and how we prevent them from committing any future offences. If it can deal with those root causes and put them in an environment where that can be dealt with appropriately, and the victim and their family can heal, I think the workload would actually decrease.