Obviously you and the commissioner disagree on that point. It reminds me of a comment I heard. I don't have the stats exactly accurate, but I think it makes a point economically. It says that two out of every three Canadians have a mental health issue, and if your buddies seem normal, it's probably you.
My point is that we introduce the concept that inmates may have mental health issues. We know that the inmate population has a higher level of mental health issues, but it doesn't mean they can't reason between frivolous and vexatious. It doesn't mean they can't function and understand, and that when they launch complaints of sexual harassment or sexual assault or very damaging and demeaning comments against staff, they don't fully appreciate and understand what they're doing. They can very well have mental health issues, but they can also fully understand and appreciate what they're doing. I think those are the things we need to highlight, protect staff from, and stop.
If you or your staff were subject to frivolous, vexatious, and vile complaints of that nature—only so someone could get personal satisfaction from either clogging the system or attacking you—you'd want control over that.