First of all, we don't know, and the RCMP doesn't know, in fact, whether they have enough carbines. One of our observations was that they don't have a methodology that they've implemented that allows them to know what the correct number is. We observed that they bought more than they had estimated, but that's not the same as saying that they have all that they would need.
In terms of hard body armour, they do have a total across the country that meets the standard that they had set of one per operational vehicle plus 10%, but there were two provinces that weren't at that threshold, so that meant other provinces had more than the minimum, which they are certainly able to do, but we did expect that all the provinces would have the minimum.
Therefore, the issue is clearly partly one of distribution and partly one of deciding what threshold you want to meet for the hard body armour and the carbines. What we found was that methodologies for distributing the carbines were not sufficiently in place. They had identified that they should be giving them to at-risk officers, but they didn't have a consistent definition of what that was, nor had they worked out how many carbines there should be in different locations based on the characteristics of that location, like the number of high-risk incidents that it experienced.