Provincially, it's all around the policing model and structure and service delivery model. In Ontario, there are 53 police services, plus the OPP. I think at some point that will be down to maybe 20, and the OPP. It's larger departments with more economies of scale.
On the federal level, I'm not going to speak on behalf of the Commissioner of the RCMP, but I think federally there have been a lot of good things coming out of the federal government in terms of legislative change and things that help us do our jobs better, which potentially saves money. There are things like the police officer recruitment fund that puts a lot of police into communities. There may be better ways for the federal government, if it wants to make investments to fight crime, terrorism, organized crime, and those things, to give police services across Canada money to help fight that, so they can keep their officers on the road doing the prevention and response activities they do now, but potentially get help with cybercrime and some of those things.
It may be a case of some legislation around who does what. Maybe the RCMP should be the lead on all cybercrime in Canada. I just picked that out of a hat. They're very involved with organized crime, as we all are. We work very cooperatively together. But sometimes for something that's federal in nature, the RCMP may not necessarily have the resources to take that on, so it ends up being done piecemeal from province to province. There may be some things that way, but I really haven't thought about the whole federal picture a whole lot, to be honest.