Absolutely. It's not just my office that made these recommendations; they are now being endorsed widely. When we speak about indigenous offenders, for example, or people who are incarcerated, recommendations that my office has made have now found their way into the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada in its calls to action. We can find them in the Auditor General's report of 2016, “Preparing Indigenous Offenders for Release”. We found them in your committee, dated June, 2018. We found them in the status of women committee in June 2018 as well.
Let us not forget also that there are many recommendations in the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls that basically cut and paste recommendations straight from my reports and those of my predecessor, Howard Sapers.
I think at some point it's not just a case of dismissing me as an ombudsman—by the way, I am part of the enabling legislation for the Correctional Service of Canada—but now it's also a question of maybe not respecting democratic values, because duly elected individuals have made those recommendations and inquiries and commissions have been set up by elected officials to look into issues and make recommendations. All of this seems not to be acted upon by the Correctional Service of Canada, so I am concerned.