I would very much, sir.
The more we can have a tool that helps us have the parole officers engage the offenders, the safer we're going to be. The alternative is to carry on doing business the way we're doing, without any kind of tool to assist the parole officers, and we'll never know if that sex offender has been skulking around a playground or a swimming pool until it's too late.
This isn't going to stop the criminal behaviour from happening, but if it does happen, we're going to know more quickly. We're going to know if somebody is starting to show certain behaviours that are leading that person back into a crime cycle, and we can have the parole officer intervene much earlier and make the appropriate case-management decisions.
So my preference, sir, would very much be to have this kind of tool—understanding its limitations and understanding its shortfalls—as opposed to having the approach we have now.