I can tell you that in my 13 years at the CJC, I'm not aware of a single instance of a newly appointed judge who didn't attend the seminar for newly appointed judges; and if I were to discover that, I think it could very well become an issue of judicial conduct. The accountability mechanisms are there. The transparency exists by virtue of the fact that judges' decisions are public and the appeals are public.
In terms of further transparency, the CJC is very pleased that budget 2017 has identified funding to do some of the things we've wanted to do for a long time, which include being a lot more transparent, as Justice Kent noted, with respect to the number of seminars, the curriculum for judges, and so on.