I don't work in prisons, and I can't really comment on that. I think what we know is that people who are in prisons and have mental illnesses identified, have addiction problems identified, not all of them are getting the help they need. From my reading of some of the testimony before this committee and some of the reports, it sounds like maybe half of the people who are identified with mental health problems—and these tend to be fairly serious mental health problems—get the help they need. So there's clearly a need for a lot more services.
I understand there's also a problem with the level of remuneration for staff, so it's hard to hold good staff. We're all facing that problem in the health field. If you're paying 40% less than the competition, you're going to have a very hard time having good staff in those facilities. We do know that there's a shortage of good services, and that on the addictions side in particular, most of the investments recently have been in interdiction and trying to prevent drugs from getting into prisons rather than trying to address the demand side of the question in terms of treating people's addictions. That's not uncommon in drug policy around the world today, but it's not, in the long run, an effective strategy. Sooner or later you have to address the demand question and help people with their addictions.