It's both. Other issues in first nation communities impact on the police, such as a total lack of social service agencies, so the police end up having to do everything. They're really the only social service agency in Pikangikum for the most part.
Because of budget cuts some of those social service agencies are non-existent or diminished so the police end up picking up the slack in dealing with things they normally wouldn't have to deal with. So do you invest in more $50,000 to $60,000-a-year social service people in different programs or do you invest in police who respond, lock people up, prosecute them, and incarcerate them? The expense on that end is bigger. If you can do things that prevent, that saves victimization and it saves—