As you indicated, our community is large and we bring the information or, to use your words, knit the information together. I think it's important for all of us to also understand and appreciate that to do this we have a national database designed specifically for organized crime activity. As you heard in my opening comment, there are approximately 400 law enforcement agencies across this country, and 264 of those law enforcement agencies are plugged into our national database. Each time an operation is initiated, for the most part it is their responsibility to put that information on the national database so that all parties can see the initiation of an investigation and can feed off that.
To go more directly to your point as it pertains to police entities in a specific province, and I just speak in generic terms, in a number of the meetings that I've been at with the provincial executive committees, which are represented by the senior law enforcement executive in that province, they sit down and talk about the specific groups of interest, the groups that are posing the most significant threat that would be applicable to them. They also speak of very detailed operational activity, and I would assume that in the province of British Columbia, certainly the last meeting that I was at, they were actively involved in such discussions.