First of all, let me also say thank you for being here. This has been incredibly good information you're bringing to us. I appreciate your taking the time to travel and having the courage to be here as well.
The first thing I want to do is bring up the fact that the comment about our being concerned about segregation really, if we want to be partisan about it, came up on the other side. We think it's an issue as well. We want to get our heads around that issue.
I just would like your comments about my comments. In the federal system we're typically dealing with longer sentences, and we have more time for different types of rehabilitation. The one thing, when we travelled and saw the various institutions, is we saw some programming but in my opinion not nearly enough about getting people trained for meaningful work when they exit. Does that play a role?
Warden Tole, perhaps you could answer that from your perspective. I know you don't have a lot of time in the provincial system because it's two years less a day, but I'm interested in exploring that just a bit in terms of how useful it would be, in your mind, that we concentrate some kind of focus on education for people and retraining for people when they're in the institutions so that they can integrate better when they get out and have meaningful work.