No. It wouldn't be national in scope, because each indigenous community or region has a different reality, and in some cases different customary codes. The idea is to enable first nations communities or regions to have policing and safety programs that are specific to their own area and their own cultural realities, and use their own members.
For example, many communities talk about the need for—I don't even know the right term—public safety officers, people who are engaged with the community in a preventative way, prior to needing enforcement in the classic way that we might think about it.
Those kinds of ideas are, in some cases, very historical for first nations groups. It's about peacekeeping prior to having to enforce the law. They would be very specific to each community or region. That's how we're anticipating it would unfold.