Yes.
Again, mayors are getting calls because family members can't find supports, or because someone's afraid there might be a needle in a park or something. Working with people where the rubber hits the road has been tremendously effective. Most people actually know what their community needs. They know this when it comes to outcomes, but they don't always know how to get there. A municipal team isn't going to have all of the expertise and policy necessary.
They need a menu of options. We had mayors from Iqaluit, Cambridge, Ontario and Lethbridge, Alberta. They similarly needed a menu of options that could help and evidence-based tools that can change outcomes, but they wanted to be in that driver's seat and say, “Okay, this one will work for me in my setting, and this one won't.” At that local level, getting law enforcement, harm reduction and different people to work together is actually not too hard.