It's just that I'm finding some odd statistics. Actually, I'm following up on what Mr. Rathgeber said. As of 2007, Ontario actually had 8,229 people in the national registry, and 4% were non-compliant, which is one of the lowest non-compliance rates. Quebec, with one-quarter of the registered offenders, 2,500, has 19% non-compliant, so there are more non-compliant people, objectively, at 480 versus 317, with one-quarter of the population on the registry.
There seems to be something very odd in this. It may be that the judges in Quebec are less prone to issue the orders or.... I'm not sure that there's a difference in the actual number of convictions in those provinces.