Okay. Fair enough.
You did mention some of the organizational changes that the RCMP talked about here in committee when they testified not too long ago in respect to their administering of the program. In particular, some of those were around the oversight of admissions and trying to separate the investigative interests from the main objective of protecting witnesses. Of course, as Judge Major accurately pointed out, public safety is obviously a defining concern for this bit of legislation as law.
Could you to touch on what you see as the key elements of those organizational changes from B.C.'s perspective? How will those changes serve to enhance the operations of the witness protection program, where you have competing investigative interests in a very close proximity with the vast array of municipal police forces there, particularly in the Lower Mainland? I would see B.C. and the Lower Mainland being fairly unique to Canada in terms of the number municipal police there in such a compressed area and representing such a large volume of people.
Could you touch on how you see the organizational changes being beneficial to that region and which ones are most significant, in your opinion?