There are some inaccuracies in your question, but let me try to shed some light on your comments.
First, yes, drug addiction is a personal problem. It is the personal responsibility of an individual to take the necessary steps to get free of addiction. Our role is to offer them the support, the help, and the tools that are needed. In fact, we are doing so. We are investing tens of thousands of millions in our correctional facilities to help inmates with the different issues. In fact, you may be interested in knowing that for those individuals seeking a drug-related therapy, 95% of inmates are being provided with the therapy.
Yes, the Correctional Service of Canada is providing help and support to those who need it. That's part of their rehabilitation program. That's why we've been investing in rehabilitation, but that's why we also need to invest in reducing the possibility of drugs entering our facilities, and for anyone who is caught testing positive, to give those individuals the opportunity to get therapy.
If we don't have this testing and if we don't test the inmates randomly like we do, we won't know we have a problem; we won't be helping the inmate and we won't be helping society. The individual will go back into society with a drug addiction problem. You can be sure that there is a strong possibility the individual will come back into our facility, and we'll be dealing again with the same problem.
That's why we are moving forward. That's why we are increasing random testing. The first way to solve the problem is to recognize there is a problem.