Well, show up one day for a justice committee meeting and you're on the agenda right away. Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Mr. Gill, I certainly appreciate your testimony and your efforts.
I'm going to ramble on a little here. I represent a rural community in central Alberta. In my community are the four bands at Hobbema: the Samson Band, the Ermineskin Band, the Louis Bull Band, and the Montana Band. They are notorious for gang activity. They are notorious for having had upwards of 13 gangs operating there several years ago and for drive-by shootings. The drive-by shooting of a young girl, Asia Saddleback, made national news. I went to Ethan Yellowbird's funeral. He was a five-year-old boy who was shot, incidentally, through suspected gang activity. The community is largely silent because they fear repercussions and retribution if they were to speak out about these organized crime elements.
The Government of Canada has invested a lot of money in youth crime prevention initiatives there and in expanding the size of the RCMP detachment. Those are some of the common-sense things that we're doing there and that we don't get any credit for, particularly from our friends across the way, but the community also has gotten involved. They've had enough of it.
Nothing creates an environment of tolerance for crime other than tolerance for crime; I mean, that's the way it is. If you don't tolerate it, if you're not going to tolerate it, and if the community stands up and says they've had enough.... The numbers of gangs and their activities have gone down immensely. Notwithstanding the fact that we've changed some of the laws and invested in police, it's just the willingness of the community to partake in this.
I sense that the community would be willing to partake in your piece of legislation here, Mr. Gill. I applaud you for your efforts in trying to do something constructive, even though others may be detractors with regard to your legislation.
For one such detractor, I would ask you this. Let's say hypothetically that your bill has passed and that someone is in jail, incarcerated and convicted for trying to lure somebody into a gang. During their term of incarceration, how many young people exactly—give me a real hard-and-fast number—will they be able to recruit while they're incarcerated?