Pushing the financial bucket higher isn't the answer. It is a big piece of the issue in the first nation communities, because in many of them now they just don't have anything.
In the case of the OPP, for example, we're not going to get more money, so we have to change how we do business, and we are. We're not going to go to the cat in the tree anymore, and that's a sad commentary because we were proud to go to the cat in the tree for many years, but we have to focus more on prevention.
There has to be a more cooperative relationship between police and the private sector. There are a lot of companies out there that we should probably work more closely with than we do now, because they're losing money through frauds in banks, and telecommunication companies are losing cellphones, etc.
Also, with all social service agencies.... That's happening very effectively in some communities, but not so much in others. That's a big part of it. It's the prevention piece, I think, that is the most important part of all this. I wouldn't have said that 35 years ago. I would've said, “what the heck do they do?”, but....