Well, how can it not be now, Mr. Chair?
Mr. McFee, I do have a specific set of questions for you, and then I have a broader question for all of the witnesses. As Mr. Sorenson, the chair, pointed out, I represent the constituency of Wetaskiwin, the city of Wetaskiwin and the town of Ponoka, and the counties immediately adjacent to one of the largest groups of bands in western Canada. The Samson, Ermineskin, Louis Bull, and Montana bands have about 16,000 first nations people living there.
There are over 40 RCMP officers stationed in Hobbema. There's a large contingent of RCMP in Ponoka and Wetaskiwin who spend a lot of their time dealing with issues in these communities. So I'm very curious to find out from your perspective—understanding that Prince Alberta has its own police force—what I can take back to my riding in terms of being able to get the RCMP, who are the police on the ground in most of the communities that I represent, involved in getting up to speed on what you're doing there. I ask because it sounds to me, as you just mentioned, that it's not an issue of race or whatever; it's an issue of those indicators setting off a process, which you've identified, for intervention. I was just wondering what experience you have had in Saskatchewan that I can take back to the RCMP in the communities I represent.