We in the OPP have traditionally responded to every call for service in policing. We're proud of that. We'll send an officer 75 miles down a gravel road just to verify that a chainsaw's missing out of a truck. There's no reason that we should. We're proud to do it and it's a contact with the community, but we just can't do that anymore.
There are technological solutions. There's the diversion of calls to officers who maybe are physically being accommodated because they can't go out on the road anymore due to a physical issue, temporary or permanent. There's more analysis and technology we can use, but they have a cost to them too. You just can't snap your fingers and have a bunch of analysts who are civilians, maybe, who are looking at where the best place is to send officers and direct patrols. But if you find efficiencies elsewhere, you can convert positions to analytical positions, and maybe make better use of those positions and the salary dollars.