I can attest that the drug treatment courts across Canada have varying results, and I think that's what Margaret was alluding to. We're seeing very promising and encouraging results, moving forward. We're seeing a great cost saving. I can speak a good deal about Edmonton, because that's where I'm from. We did a social return on investment piece in our program evaluation, and for every dollar we spent, there was a $5.90 return on investment.
We also know that we've had success rates in Canada of up to 32%. I guess “completion rates” is a better way to put it, because success is really hard to measure when you have people who maybe don't graduate from the program but have benefited from it and have decided to opt out near the end of their term with the drug courts. That happens across Canada. They have, for some reason, decided that they would now just want to get it over with and move on. Many of these people remain clean as well. We would want them in the program longer, but they have decided that they want to get out, because it's not an easy program.