I was the regional deputy commissioner in the Pacific region, and it did happen on occasion. It's only in an emergency situation and it's only for short periods of time that we do this.
The reason we do it is that at that point, the woman is seen by a psychologist or a psychiatrist she knows well. She has her case management team and her parole officer and probably her family is there, so to take the woman and transfer her to the the Regional Psychiatric Centre on the Prairies or to Pinel Institute in Quebec is very disruptive.
What we have done now, though, is that in policy, the placement will only be—