Yes, absolutely. I think it means a lot.
Right now, the parole board has discretion at the hearing—the hearing time within two years, as it is—and sometimes they actually do what is called a “paper review”. I don't know if you've experienced that. The hearing is one aspect of what they can do, but the parole board can actually do a paper review.
We had this circumstance. If you've noticed the gap between the times I visited the parole board, we had a hearing, the offender was denied day parole, and then, in a subsequent paper hearing, was actually given day parole. They have a lot of latitude in regard to their operations. This simply gives them the capability of, by statute, not having a review within two years, so they can make that judgment.
You mentioned all the great work and the preparatory work they do. That gives them a good idea about where they want to go with regard to how to deal with the offender and how to stream them into the community in the best way, so that they're not going to reoffend, they're going to be rehabilitated successfully, and the community will be safe. It's a win-win-win situation.