Having great knowledge regarding what you just spoke about, I'd say probably 85% to 95% of our inmates have some type of an addiction that either brought them or got them into prison. That being said, every inmate is at that risk. That is always looked at for every inmate in their correctional plan. I think there's almost a standard sentence about their drug or some type of an addiction.
Overcrowding makes it harder and harder to do some of that programming. Given the gangs we have in prison and the way we divide up prison populations, it is much tougher to run those programs as openly as they were run years ago. Your time is limited. You divide up the 24 hours in a jail among seven populations rather than one, as it was before. Getting into programs is tough and getting inmates to see them through is tougher. Actually, we've seen a decline in program delivery since some of the corrections budgets have been cut.
I don't know if I'm in full agreement with Mr. Head on it being reported that way.