Thank you for your question about that.
I did note that the Ashley Smith coroner's inquest recommendations were noted specifically in the mandate letter, and I was encouraged by that. Ashley Smith died in her segregation cell at Grand Valley Institution in October of 2007. The coroner's inquest was completed late in the fall of 2013.
In December 2014, the response from the Government of Canada was provided, and there were a series of commitments made. Some of those commitments have yet to be realized. The areas that I addressed are the most outstanding in terms of dealing with the mental health needs of federally sentenced offenders and how those offenders are managed.
I think we can look forward to some work from Correctional Service of Canada when it comes to a different strategy for the use of segregation, but I think we've waited too long for some of the other issues to be addressed, such as some of the issues around contracting for more forensic bed space. The only movement has been two beds in a hospital in Ontario. It's been since 2007. We made the recommendation that that process accelerate back in 2008, so I think we've waited long enough.