Yes. Actually, that's an idea that I codeveloped with Calvin. There's more that we have written on that since then. I would be happy to send that along.
I think one of the ideas that come out of our work on search and rescue is that some communities have 30 to 35 searches a year, which is a ton of work for volunteer search and rescue coordinators. It's not just the search; it's the organizing, the fuel, the food and the paperwork. It's a drain.
One of the ideas that came out was, what if we had paid search and rescue coordinators at the community level? Some communities only have one or two searches a year. Is that really justifiable across Inuit Nunangat? The response to that, which we worked on, was, what about a community public safety officer position that could do search and rescue coordination, that would do emergency preparedness, that would do marine safety, that could go into the schools and educate about SAR prevention and that could fulfill all of these kinds of safety, resiliency and emergency management tasks at the community level? This would, of course, be a local individual with local ties to the community, who could really easily integrate themselves into the broader community makeup.
That was the idea for a community public officer program. We tied together search and rescue and a whole bunch of other requirements and needs in northern communities. It would also act as this individual at the local level who could bridge these different federal and territorial agencies that have different pieces of this pie—