Okay, we'll get into it further with agencies later, because if we can't get it today, I would like a written response on how many requests were made by each agency, those with warrants and those without.
I'll go to my second question.
You seem remarkably proud that you're turning back moneys from Correctional Service Canada. However, I think an even greater concern is what will the decision you're making today to pay down the deficit by probably making harsher conditions in prisons and probably jeopardizing the rehabilitation of inmates who are going to come out into society at some point in their life.... I would refer you to the correctional investigator's annual report, which he tabled less than a year ago, and this is what he says in the report and I quote:
Today, as my report makes clear, many of the same problems that were endemic to prison life in the early 1970s,—
Some of us remember that, where there were riots, etc. Going on with the quote:
—crowding; too much time spent in cells; the curtailment of movement, association and contact with the outside world; lack of program capacity; the paucity of meaningful prison work or vocational skills training; and the polarization between inmates and custodial staff—continue to be features of contemporary correctional practice.
That's what the correctional investigator is putting on your plate, Minister, and you're paying down the deficit with these problems in a prison system. I find it hard to believe.