No, I'm not—nothing to that extent.
When we worked through this pilot project, we worked with the Province of Nova Scotia and were able to learn from some of their early experience. When they had people down near the waterfront and the GPS was showing them in the middle of the Halifax harbour, unless they were fishing they knew there was some issue there. They were able to address those kinds of things. But these weren't 60-mile kinds of problems.
Some of the early technology that I experienced previously in other jurisdictions had significant drift problems, but with some of the newer technology there's still drift. With any GPS tool that you can buy on the street right now, you're never pinpointed to one-foot accuracy anyway; that kind of technology is usually reserved for the military. But you get a level of accuracy that allows you, in this case, to do the kinds of supervision that you would expect from us of offenders in the community.