And it goes through the courts, and so on and so forth.
Is it fair to say, from reading the charter of victims rights, which I think has a lot of good intentions behind it—it's very hard to fault good intentions—that nothing in the charter would change those aspects that you're describing? It won't make the victim less fearful of filing against a husband, a wife, or whomever. It doesn't address those issues. It addresses the people who are going in front of the justice system.
It goes to what Mr. Krongold was mentioning, that we are not solving our number one problem with the justice system, which is—I think your expression was—“glacial” speed, which is really frightening and is becoming a big problem. You can give all the rights you want to whomever you want, but if your access to justice is still slow, I'm not sure we're achieving anything at that point.
What type of resource do you think, Mr. Krongold, we would need—