Yes. We found that access to legal services has diminished during COVID, mainly because there were extremely serious lockdowns. People were confined to their cells for excessive periods of time. They weren't getting the medical treatment that they needed for other underlying conditions. They weren't getting access to counsel.
The internal audit of the CSC indicates that when they did get access to counsel, they were often listened to, so the solicitor-client privilege element was violated. There is a whole slew of human rights abuses that go well beyond solitary confinement, but it has to be one of the most serious, given that it is defined as a form of torture. It's just inconsistent with the values of Canadians that it would be persisting in the way it is.