It's not an easy question to answer.
I suppose my previous answer indicates one of the areas I would go to. If you're talking about really getting after crime and dealing with the fallout of it, you're asking me to put myself out of business, but there is one area I would go to. We've seen it in Toronto. It's starting, and it's not necessarily that effective yet. It's treating drug crime and drug addiction with a medical model as opposed to a policing model. I've even heard whispers that the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police is thinking that maybe that's not the worst way to go. It's quite a bit different from the model used in the United States, which is harshly punitive.
If you're looking at going after crime, then go after its roots and deal with heroin addiction on a medical model. Maybe you can move forward so that the addict is not perpetrating crime in order to deal with his habit. As I said, it's not in my self-interest to be advocating that sort of thing, but it's something that I think is worthy of consideration across the country. And this is not something new at all.