I can speak to the question of the impact that it has on the law school.
As I mentioned, we have a correctional law program that we've had for well over 30 years. Every year 18 students are involved. They're working in the prisons advising inmates. In fact, today I was chatting with one of the people who came up from Kingston, Caroline Yull, a former student of mine, who participated in the correctional law program. She was telling me the story of many of the inmates she worked with who worked on the prison farms and telling me about the impact of that, the importance of it, and how much it was of assistance to the inmates in terms of their own rehabilitation.
You've heard this, of course, from the other witnesses. Frequently these inmates will have a history of violent crime. They may never have cared for a living thing before in their lives, and they're having an opportunity to work with animals in animal husbandry. It's well documented in all of the literature that this has a very positive rehabilitative effect on inmates. I think that our own students working in the correctional law project have seen this first-hand. They have seen the value of the prison farms in terms of the inmates they are advising on other legal matters. This has, I think, been a powerful experience for our students.