If I had more sway, then victim services would have a lot more resources.
First, I'll say this. One of the dangers in over-promising when it comes to victims' rights, and there's some research that supports this, is that if you tell victims this and you raise their expectations, and then they go into a system and those expectations fall very short, it's actually worse than doing nothing at all. Again, I'm not opposed to the bill. I'm not saying people should vote against it. I just think the rhetoric has to be realistic.
If it is realistic—and my kids would tell you I'm wrong all the time, so it's not unreasonable that I'm wrong again—then you're going to have crown attorneys spending a lot more time with victims, which means that you need crown attorneys in court as well, which means you're going to need more crown attorneys. Crown attorneys associations, I think, will tell you they already need more crown attorneys to keep up with that, and that's been with the different bills before Parliament where they've testified to that consistently.