The scenario that has been painted by others suggests that if a criminal goes in to hold up a store and has an unloaded handgun and comes out and is caught, there would be a mandatory minimum applicable under the legislation in front of us, but if the same person went in with an unloaded long gun and came out, they wouldn't have it. I have concerns for your officers and how they deal with that, because it doesn't make a lot of sense to me.
Anyhow, I'm now going to turn to prevention. There's a lot of money coming in to the RCMP, so I'd like to talk a little about prevention. Under the estimates, I turn to community safety and partnerships. It appears to me that there is a significant decrease when we look at the item on page 22-5:
Payments to the provinces, territories, municipalities, Indian band councils and recognized authorities representing Indians on reserve, Indian communities on Crown land and Inuit communities, for the First Nations Policing Program
There's a significant decrease. Is that due to transfers or just lack of demand? What's happening there?