When you look at the resources that are available, they're not meeting the demand. In 2018, when Public Safety went through a cybersecurity update and threw a lot of money at the RCMP to get more serious about online cybercrime, that was when the initial announcement was made about NC3, the national cybercrime coordination centre.
I wrote about this three years ago and said that we were already waiting a long time to get this rollout happening, but fast-forward three years, and that reporting system is two years behind schedule. If you visit the website right now, it will tell you that the system is still in beta testing and that it accepts only 25 cybercrime complaints a day for the entire country, which is really low. In a series of access to information requests regarding the number of resources that were devoted in terms of personnel, I discovered that there are several provinces that don't have any cybercrime investigators, which is a really shocking statistic. Here in B.C., the third-largest province in the country, we have only four full-time people on the cybercrime team.
I believe these tools need to be rolled out more rapidly. There should be more transparency around them, and legislation should be crafted around what we're seeing, because these tools allow us to understand what types of harms are being perpetuated. There are all kinds of analyses you can run based on the reporting data that comes in, and NC3 shows that more than half the reports that go to NC3 are about ransomware. It's really interesting that Canadian legislation ignores ransomware, which is the biggest cybercrime threat we're facing.
One thing that's interesting to take into consideration when we talk about Bill C-27 is also Bill C-26, which would regulate things like ransomware for critical industries.