Again, Mike, thanks for that very important question.
We're doing a great deal to help victims of crime. Particularly vulnerable are children, but in particular children who are in remote rural areas of Canada. We have a particular focus on human trafficking and intimate partner violence or family violence.
Through our strategic aid fund for victims, which is a federal initiative, we're trying to encourage new approaches through organizations on the ground in order to provide service, increased capacity and help in the establishment of help and aid networks.
One of the things I would point to is the support for child advocacy centres across Canada, CACs. In my remarks, I mentioned ones in Ontario, but we have been doing this across Canada. I visited a number of CACs across Canada. They're 360-degree wraparound services that are multidisciplinary, in which a child isn't retraumatized, his or her family is supported throughout, and police officers who interview do so in a non-confrontational setting, not in uniform, and it's taped so that the kids never have to be interviewed twice and their testimony can be used further down the road.
We're trying to support a number of these types of initiatives that represent best practices, but also to really help victims a great deal.