I'll start and then turn it over to Assistant Commissioner Brown to focus on the indigenous piece, because he's the national leader supporting that.
As Deputy Tupper alluded to, each of our provinces and territories where we're the police of jurisdiction—and/or municipalities—has a leadership team. We engage provincially with our Public Safety, Solicitor General and community safety colleagues to set priorities around the province.
We look at crime severity. We look at patterns and trends and some of the public disorder challenges that are ongoing, and that liaises.... We do have a national deputy commissioner, who supports a number of the provinces and territories. We also have a deputy commissioner in British Columbia and Alberta due to the large size of deployment of RCMP members in those provinces. Our priorities are set based at the localized level, whether that be provincial or municipal. Equally, that is also turned to the indigenous communities where we provide policing support. Again, there's that national function. One of the commissioner's priorities was to launch a full-time senior executive particularly around indigenous pieces.
Around your comments on success, we do have performance measurements—departmental results—that we look at. Those are divvied up across the country based on the area and whether we're the provincial police of jurisdiction or the municipal police service of jurisdiction, and/or we also have departmental results at the federal level within federal policing and specialized policing.
Specifically to indigenous, I'll turn to Assistant Commissioner Brown, as that falls within his responsibility.