Thank you for that opportunity. If you look at the PPDO, you could think of a transcript from high school or university that says you took this course and completed it. Victims want more. They want to know what were the risks associated with this offender, what programming is being put in place to mitigate those risks, and whether they have really engaged towards their rehabilitation. That's why the correctional plan is so important.
The correctional plan is really a tool used by Correctional Service Canada, and that's why the modification or amendment that we're recommending is of course that the correctional plan would become, as you head toward the parole hearing, available to the parole board. But in terms of having that information available to victims and having a right to have that information earlier on, it would make sense that the modification, the amendment, be made so that section 26 and section 142 would be reflective. Again, the Parole Board of Canada and the CSC can only give a victim what the legislation allows them to.