Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you, all three, for being here, especially Ms. Czukar. I think today's a big day in your organization, with the closing of the 1001 campus, a campus I've actually spent many hours at. I think it's great you're here today. I hope you get back in time. You won't, but it's a big day in the life of your organization.
I also want to thank Dr. Sirotich for your work in your organization. Often the prison populations are forgotten in mainstream studies about everything, whether it's income security, education, whatever. Your organization has kept the prison population on the radar within the broader mental health field, and that's very much appreciated.
I don't know the work of Mr. Livingston, but I'm now learning about it, and I think there is some interesting modelling for the federal system that we can take from B.C.
I want to make sure I'm getting some points, because my time is limited.
What I am hearing overall is this. Both from what you've written in the past and what you've said today, you have made six points: an emphasis on crime reduction with a concentration on the social determinants of both health and crime behaviour; an assessment diagnosis model that is appropriate for all people within the criminal justice system; diversion processes including court and other diversion processes to get people out of the penitentiary system earlier; a continuum of care, which begins right from arrest and remand all the way through sentencing to release; capacity-building, both on the infrastructure and the programs as well as on professionals and caregivers; risk reduction models that should be incorporated into the prison population, not left out; and upon release, community programs and integration and continuing care.
That's what I'm hearing. First, is there something major I'm missing in what you're presenting today?