I'll ask Mr. Dias to return to the table quickly. I know we're running up against our time limit.
You mentioned, Mr. Dias, during your testimony, the quality of the training that you've been to. I'm a lawyer by trade, and I've sat through those same sessions. They can be incredibly weak by times, when you show up just to prove that you've done what's mandatory.
One of the pieces of testimony we heard from the Office of the Commissioner for Federal Judicial Affairs was that they're seeing a huge uptick in the number of judicial applications, to the tune of 500 in this year alone. He said, point-blank, we do not have the capacity to deliver quality training, and what will happen is that we will put in some session that satisfies the requirements. Essentially, in my mind it would be like a rubber-stamping process.
One of the things that came out of the testimony was that there might be another way to do this, by saying, let's disclose the training you have as part of the lengthy questionnaire that we've introduced in the appointments process. Let's have every judge say, “If I'm appointed, I will undertake to complete training”, and then, on the back end, fund community organizations who are experts to deliver the training. Would this be a better way to protect against the risk that we do a rubber-stamping process with people who don't have the lived experience that the experts do?