I would say there are a lot of skills going on at the farm to benefit the community, because a lot of guys come with a lot of baggage when they come to camp. Even though you're in a work-sharing program and you're not a threat to public safety anymore--or you wouldn't be in minimum--there is still baggage going on, where there's animosity. We've seen this in the job force, where the staff have sent them to the unit and they're rehired. They've learned that this will not be tolerated in the community, that a job is in jeopardy. Those are valuable tools to have.
It's not all about the correctional plan when looking at that last step of going into the community, where people have learned to be team players and have moved away from worrying about who this guy is and being a judge and jury about who a guy is. At least, that was the way most of the time when I went through there. I learned all of that.
We all know that certain sentences go through and people don't get along, but when you're in the camp, you learn not to be judgmental. You're to come and do your job. There are people in the community who don't get along in the job force.