I can indeed, yes.
I am very familiar with Kitchener-Waterloo and Christiane Sadeler and all the wonderful people who have worked there for a long time. Kitchener-Waterloo is actually the model poster child for this approach to crime prevention in Canada. It has consistently worked on this across-the-board approach at the local level for the last 15 years, I would think, since ICPC was founded. I think Kitchener-Waterloo was part of the origins of the organization.
We absolutely promote good practice. We produce a lot of compendiums on good practice and good strategy. We talk about effective practice based on good evidence and highly researched pieces of work. But we also talk about practices that are well planned and well developed and look extremely promising so that you can give people a notion of what it is someone has done in their city or in their province on a particular problem.
When we produced the international report last year, it came with a compendium of 75 practices and strategies gathered internationally, including ones from Canada. We have a website. We have a newsletter. We regularly put out information. We will be holding our 15th anniversary colloquium in December, here in Montreal. That will include, among other things, a meeting of the 14 cities across Canada that have formed a network around crime prevention. They will be meeting during our colloquium, or on the margins of our colloquium.