Thank you very much. I'm going to try to be brief.
First of all, I think Mr. Leef actually articulated the difference, which you then went on and explained as well.
In prisons, we're talking about, I think your words were, the kept and the keeper, as opposed to your job, which is to be the ombudsman. Your job is to receive complaints. The guards and the officials in prisons are, in so many ways, keeping the inmates safe and being part of their rehabilitation. They obviously play a completely different role than the role you play, and I think that's the point Mr. Leef was trying to make.
In relation to that, what I would like to make sure I'm clear on is that you believe that it's valid that you have the ability to receive a complaint and just decide that it is vexatious, that it is not a valid complaint, and that you're going to write a letter, whether it's a one-line letter or several lines. You'll write a letter and say that this is not a valid complaint and you won't be moving further ahead with it, whereas CSC officials, you believe—and again, there's some difference of opinion on the process CSC has told us they are obligated to go through—have other options. What you're saying is that you think they should use mediation and go through a variety of steps as opposed to just being able to say to an inmate, “That is an invalid and vexatious complaint.”
You're able to do that, but CSC should not be able to. At the same time, they're the ones who are actually dealing with these inmates on a day-to-day basis. I don't think you would want to try to say that what you're doing compares at all to what a guard is doing. Am I hearing you correctly? Are you saying that they shouldn't have the same abilities you have?