I've said multiple times—and I'm glad that Chief Swamp is on here—that there's nobody that polices within a first nations community better than the first nations chiefs of police, represented also by the Indigenous Police Chiefs of Ontario. We have the privilege of policing 22 directly within the OPP, administering 17 and also having the three that Inspector Kreisz has.
Within the indigenous policing bureau, after the tragedies of Ipperwash, we certainly learned a lot of lessons. We have, under the indigenous policing bureau, an indigenous awareness training unit to provide culturally responsive training to our members who go into communities.
We have the MMIWG implementation team to implement the calls to justice across our organization. We have the provincial liaison team, which came out of the tragedies of Ipperwash, which allows for, in times of crisis, communication strategies and building relationships with people and which, hopefully, can leverage situations, and then we have the Ontario first nations policing agreement.
We have regular conversations and interactions with the Indigenous Police Chiefs of Ontario. The superintendent for the indigenous policing bureau is a non-voting member of the Indigenous Police Chiefs of Ontario. I talked to multiple chiefs of the nine this week. We are in continual conversations as to how we support each other to become better and how we make sure we're filling the gaps with the finite resources that we all have.
