I would make a suggestion, Mr. Chair.
To the witnesses first, Mr. Sullivan made a number of very sensible suggestions, and I think Ms. Lee's concern about recordings and video will be dealt with by amendments coming forward from committee members based on her testimony. But, Mr. Chair, there's been a number of, I think, very good additional suggestions for amendments by the witnesses today.
We need to see a transcript of that, of what the witnesses said, and I do think we need some time to prepare those amendments. We can't have them done by Thursday. We just can't. So I'd suggest maybe the committee—you and maybe the parliamentary secretary—reconsider, if we could, because we want to do the best job we can on the bill, and there are some good suggestions here.
In any event, to you, Ms. Lee, one of the suggestions that has come up a lot of times by several witnesses—and I think by Mr. Sweet as well—is that victims have no way of being informed of how well or not an offender is doing on their rehabilitation plan. There's always the privacy issue coming up, but I'm sure that can be dealt with somehow.
From anyone who wants to answer, how important is that to victims?