We don't have statistics, but we have a lot of anecdotal evidence from individuals in the system, indicating that they feel there's a reticence to actually make bail decisions.
Police officers are reluctant to release when they have the power to release, because they're afraid they'd be responsible if the person should offend while out on bail. The same thing happens even with crown attorneys, so they keep on pushing things up the line to the judge and let the judge make a decision, so they don't have to accept responsibility. That's one of the factors that a number of people in the system indicate.
With respect to times, there is some new data that we're looking at with respect to Ontario and Saskatchewan that seems to show that the majority of people in remand are actually out within a couple of weeks. Then it goes to the question of the credit. Quite often they're in for a couple of weeks. They plead guilty and their sentence is essentially time in custody and there's no further sentencing.
Again, that is sort of reflected in the statistics, which seem to show that most of the people who are in provincial custody are there for remand purposes and not custodial, either because there's a booming remand population or people do their remand time and their sentence is time spent already in remand and there's no further sentence custody, so sentence custody goes down proportionally.