The other part of this that I do want to talk about on a very personal level is the following. For all of my working life, or until October 2008, I had my own construction company, and I know, having looked into this, that the construction trades are the biggest employer of inmates. In fact, I had an aboriginal carpenter who worked for my company who had run into trouble from time to time and spent some time in institutions. I have to tell you he was one of the best employees I ever had. The skill set he had developed during his life, which didn't only include the time he was in prison, was among the best I've ever had.
You mentioned the CBC documentary on or commentary about this. I also went to that website and got some information. I just want to talk about one individual, Jessie Hoover, whose name is not confidential because it was mentioned in the documentary. He worked on the house project you mentioned and he said he was now apprenticing at framing houses. I quote him:
Some of the skills that I learned in this project would be, you know good work ethic, coming to work on time, working hard when you're at work, plus the carpentry side of it, learning how to frame the house from the ground up.
Now that is not to diminish the fact that these kinds of skills can be acquired as well through farming and the agricultural route. That said, I truly appreciate your comment that we will achieve greater benefits by taking this action and helping people acquire the skill sets, trades, and things they will need when they get through the programs you're moving towards.
I'll open it up for you either to debate me on this or reinforce my comments.