Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Mr. Broderick and Mr. Tansey, thank you for telling us about social finance.
I would like to go back to what Mr. Easter mentioned about social finance. I am referring here to its repercussions on various communities and to the fact that this will not necessarily replace what the government does.
One of you spoke earlier about the percentage of rehabilitation and how this was done. When inmates have access to good programs, the rate of rehabilitation is extremely high in society, in Canada. One witness talked to us about support circles, which offer reintegration programs to inmates who committed serious crimes such as sexual assaults. This system functions really well, but unfortunately the government is going to cut the funding for that group over the next few months.
This concerns me and I think that a lot of people share that concern. I fear that the government is offloading its responsibilities, for instance by abolishing a service like support circles, by claiming that private investors could fulfil that function just as well.
What do you think about that?
You also said that we have 10 years before we have to worry about the government's lack of accountability. I think it was you, Mr. Broderick, who said that.
Can you tell me why you are talking about a 10-year period?