Yes. I think the problem is in the way it happens on the ground. There are many times that someone will plead guilty and say, I did x, y, or z, and that's all the judge knows. Then the judge says, this person is found guilty of these offences; then they go away for the pre-sentence report and come back for sentencing.
At that stage, the probation officers are really in a wide-open field, with no guidance as to what they're supposed to be doing other than what's in their policy. They wouldn't know what's relevant to the offence, they wouldn't know how to advise on consent, they would just have to start compiling that information. It would be very difficult.