All I would respond to in terms of offender management is that consequential learning is important, and if somebody chooses not to comply with an instruction—during the pilot they were called local instructions—to wear the bracelet, and they removed it, they would face the consequence of perhaps returning to custody. That's a very powerful tool in itself. Having meaningful consequences is important.
I'm not aware of the experience in Manitoba with the young offenders. I can imagine that if there were no consequences, it would be no small surprise that they would do so. If there is no consequence, they would continue to not comply.
We basically frame this around four basic risk management principles. The first one is good assessment analysis. Second is good communication. A really important risk management principle is monitoring of activities. Should something go awry, an intervention is required. It's the monitoring aspect we need to improve in our technology, across the board, within corrections.