First, with respect to our youth justice system, the last time I looked, in British Columbia we have per capita the lowest youth in custody in Canada. We have worked hard.
When I was the director of Burnaby youth custody centre, we could have over 200 youth in there at overcrowded times. We had that, and the Victoria Youth Custody Centre, which has just been closed, the Prince George Youth Custody Centre, and four camps, so our population could be 500 or more. Now it's well under 100.
I think that has occurred for a couple of reasons. Partially, that cohort of age group is down somewhat, but also, we've worked hard at developing restorative justice models and community-based alternatives for youth. We also recognize that there are some high-risk youth who need to be incarcerated and need to be held out of the public in doing that.
The model we've used has been helpful in terms of doing that. Crime rates for youth are down. Again, there are lots of reasons for that, and I don't want to draw a direct causal relationship, but I think there's a significant correlation in terms of the development of community-based programming that has occurred in British Columbia. It's starting to occur in a number of other jurisdictions across Canada as well.
Those are probably some of the more significant ways.
In terms of the community contribution companies and their ability to thrive, I think we really need to get our flow-through tax credit in place. We don't have that there yet. Our Minister of Finance has been looking at it. Originally, the ministers of finance I've been dealing with on it had been fearful that it would reduce income to our province. In fact, we have a cap of $32 billion on that, and we can cap our percentage to community contribution companies at whatever level we choose, so I don't see that it presents an economic risk. Hopefully we're going to move forward with that in our fall session.