We do that. There are 16 designated safe communities in Canada, and we have an authenticated community injury-priority-setting session. The data is so much better now, but it's still not close to being good enough. Within four hours we can build consensus. We can put 250 people in Winnipeg around the table and they'll have a unified consensus on what injury issues are the major ones, what are the interventions that are required, and what's already going on that could do it. There are actually tools in place to make that happen. It's just limited in terms of its expansion and scope.
I would also say, finally, there are a lot of things going on at the local level in terms of investment that the federal government makes: economic development, infrastructure support, sports funding. You issue contracts and workplaces have to deal with this. You could begin picking through each one of those, setting standards for what you could tie your investments to and the conditions under which you'll give that money in terms of safe practices.
In the skate park that you helped build in Halifax, across from the CBC, no kids are wearing helmets because the cops don't go by. You could tie a condition to the development or the funding of that to say we'll do this providing it's operated safely. There are literally hundreds of things that can impact people locally at the community level, and communities are willing to help you do that if you organize them.