Absolutely.
When you talk about bail reform and incidents involving drugs and things of that nature, obviously, our service is very well versed in responding to high-crime severity calls for service. When it comes to specialty units, we do have positions in place, but again, one-time funding, not sustainable funding, and again, pulled from our front line, which is challenging for us when our communities expect visibility and presence in our community. That definitely came through in our operational review. In the conversations we're having in the community, the expectation is much different on an indigenous police service than a municipal police service. Our communities actually want to see a police cruiser every day.
When it comes to fulfilling these positions in our street crime unit and our drug units, we have a civilian offender management unit of one person covering our 22 communities. Those are the challenges put on us in trying to address the issues around drugs.
