I would say similarly, from the work I have done since I have been here in contact with federal and provincial corrections and from the things I have read—both your report from late last year, as well as Howard Sapers' report after the Ashley Smith death—and the contact I've had in terms of the work federal corrections is doing around trying to develop systems of care within corrections, that I have no doubt that federal corrections understands how vital this area of work is.
The people I have spoken with have a strong sense that they have a long way to go in developing the services. They have a vision and drive that they want to implement, but they are the first to admit that services are not where they want them to be now. So the high-level commitment is clearly there, as well as the recognition that although there may be areas where good programming is going on, we don't know much about what percentage of all the people who have need are actually getting it met in the current system. That is clearly one of the answers one would wish the system to be able to give.