Just very quickly, when I started 37 years ago you probably saw more of those sex offenders in protective custody kinds of settings. Nowadays that's not so much the case. We've actually worked hard to integrate them in the population. Having those kinds of separate operating systems is very costly and not very efficient in terms of doing programming.
Having said that, we'll have some cases who we may have to put in segregation for their own protection and in some cases for protecting others because their behaviours are aggressive to other inmates who are vulnerable. While they're in segregation we'll work with them through the psychologists, the social work staff, the programming staff, and the parole officers to try to modify their behaviours so that we can get them back into the general population and into the full stream of programs.