I appreciate that.
I want to pick up on another previous topic. The thing about going so late in the round is that a lot of the topics have been touched on already, but I think it's important to dive into them again.
Obviously, in the region I represent, northern Ontario—and as you know, Grand Chief—there are a number of remote fly-in communities. I think there is a staggering amount of gang activity, of drugs, firearms and other illegal items being brought into these communities. I think it's, maybe, counterintuitive for a lot of people outside of the north to understand. The communities are isolated. You have to fly in to get to them. I think a lot of people don't recognize, as well, that these are planes—even passenger planes—for which there is no security necessary. You can get on the plane without security and get off the plane without security—without going through security as you normally would at Pearson or other large airports. I just put that on the record for folks who might be watching and are unaware of that.
I think that's an important gap, though, because in these remote first nation communities across northwestern Ontario, the people are in a vulnerable situation. There aren't resources available to watch for people who are transporting things in by plane, sometimes through mail or through a number of other methods.
Could you speak more to that issue, Grand Chief, in terms of that unchecked travel into those remote communities and how police forces could be better equipped to handle that?
