Permit me.
If we look for a moment at just the roughly 1,000 a year who currently access full parole as a result of directed parole releases through the APR process, those 1,000 cases a year, give or take, would have to go to hearings.
But what we see right now in terms of the behaviour of the Correctional Service of Canada is that most releases from a federal penitentiary today happen as a result of statutory release and not due to a conditional release decision of the parole board. One of the reasons for that is that case preparation, getting those files together so they can be presented to the parole board so a hearing can be held, is behind. We also know that there's an increased number of waivers and postponements of hearings. So even with 1,000 cases a year being siphoned off and directed through APR, there's still a backlog, and most releases are still happening statutorily as opposed to being a decision of the board. So we can speculate that if you put those 1,000 cases back into the system, you're only going to create a deeper backlog. It's really a matter of speculation.