I would recognize we probably have some challenges in some areas, but I am not aware of any specific offender who's been diagnosed for mental health issues whose needs have not been attended to. Where we do not have, on site, a professional--for example, if someone quits--we have the capacity to recruit people from the community to come in and give the services.
While we could probably improve in many areas, I have to tell you there's a comprehensive service that exists from the beginning of the admission of the offender and then into the community and the continuum of care of that mental offender.
In fact, I can tell you that after the offender has done their time, we have established in the community what we call discharge planning, whereby before the mental offender is released there is a complete strategy, which also includes a circle of support in the community, and the offender is connected to resources in the community that can provide the needs and the services that the offender needs with respect to mental health.