In our laboratory, we have been putting a lot of emphasis on turnaround time over the last two years, because we've had a report from the Auditor General of Ontario that has told us to do that. We have set up practices so that we can turn around some of the easier cases, such as break-and-enter cases, within 30 days. We have several months for some of our non-urgent cases. We're targeting to get those out in three months.
We're just starting to do this. As I said, we've changed our processes, so we don't have any measurements on that yet. We are improving our turnaround times, but we do have a system similar to the one you heard about in Quebec for urgent cases.
The other thing we are doing, though, is we are simply telling police officers that we won't accept certain kinds of cases. We can't continue to have cases come in that we know are going to cause us these kinds of delays. So we have taken the step of saying that we won't take any additional work as a result of Bill C-13 and Bill C-18, unless it meets some very narrow criteria relating to issues of public safety. So we have very significantly curtailed the work we do.