I think systemic thinking would actually be encouraged. Right now if one court has a few more resources than another, they might share who goes where. This happens already in Toronto, where the mental health court at Old City Hall takes the high threshold clients, and the other courts might deal with some of the less serious cases.
Similarly, if you're a woman charged with an offence, you're going to College Park in Toronto as opposed to Old City Hall. It goes back and forth.
I think if you want to have a coherent legislative framework that guides this, it needs to take into account local conditions and local resources. By holding everyone to a similar standard, I think you would encourage the normalization of interjurisdictional sharing arrangements, whereas right now they tend to be quite ad hoc.