I'm sorry. It is the law itself as well, because it is how it's currently being applied but it is also the law. What it doesn't allow us to do is to jump to the top rung, which may be the most appropriate for the crime that has happened. That is what we used to do.
What we've done now is essentially flipped it on its head, and we are now letting people out of custody whom we wouldn't have let out of custody prior to that. Is there an overcorrection? Probably there has been an overcorrection as a result, and that's why I said that I'd like to see that particular piece of legislation modified.
I believe that the Ontario Association of Chiefs of Police, the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police and many of the police associations have all signed on to that. It's not to say that people shouldn't be let out; it's just to say that this particular piece of legislation needs to be amended in order to allow for a better application.
I think we agree on the data sharing. There is insufficient data sharing with regard to intimate partner violence across jurisdictions, and even within our own provinces and across borders. If somebody has not been charged, then the likelihood that they will appear in a database that's accessible to another police agency is next to nil, so there can be people who move from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, and as we've heard, within rural jurisdictions there's a particular risk to people who are there, and there's a lack of resources.
What was the other question you had?