You're saying, sir, in your presentation that “Outside the wire, they eat, sleep, and live under conditions that most Canadians would find difficult to imagine.” When they come inside the wire and before they come home, not just with physical wounds, do we have a team of psychologists or mental health people?
They're under this constant stress. I can just imagine what it might be like—or maybe I can't imagine what it might be like. But when they come back in, with the relief they might feel or whatever scars they might bring with them when they come back inside the wire, what kind of support do we have, or what kind of diagnosticians do we have there who would provide for them, to find out the things we can't see?