Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I thank the witnesses for their presentations.
The national crime prevention strategy has been around for a considerable time. I had some experience with it previously, especially with youth. I think you need to be congratulated on that strategy because I think it has obtained results.
The chart in annex 1 is intriguing. I think it shows what the potential is, but I'm somewhat on side with Mr. Garrison's question in the beginning. This study seems to be targeted at one small aspect of the national crime prevention strategy, the social finance proposal. Given the record of this government, one of the concerns we have is that this could be a way of transferring costs onto others for crime prevention, policing, and the criminal justice system. That is a worry. Increasingly in the research we have done, we're seeing cases where that can happen.
As a U.K. ministry study stated:
...that there has been a transfer of risk from the government to private sector investors. However, this transfer, and the contracts themselves, are untested in many respects....
I think as this social finance bond, or whatever you want to call it, comes into play increasingly around the world, there is also evidence around the world that cost is transferred to the private sector.
Ms. James in her questions said a number of programs have been successful. It raised the question, should they be expanded?
Neither she nor you folks went into what those programs are. I'm wondering if Public Safety Canada has a list of those programs, any analysis of the experiences under them, and if it would be possible for you to provide a list to the committee so we can have a broader example of what programs are operating and how they are being handled.