I think for me the key element is that each one of these is going to be centric to the community. I think Jacqueline talked about that quite clearly around the capacities of each community, the big-P and small-p political will, and who are your champions within that community. I don't think you're going to be able to rubber-stamp these pieces.
For these to be successful, I think the key is to really follow a community development approach, where you listen to the community. The community will tell you what they want and what they're willing to champion. As they tell you that, that's where the investors will also be coming from—that community—to step in and participate. When you have that marriage, you'll have success.
The previous speaker talked about how there's a whole bunch of things you can do, a menu of things you can do, in terms of preventing crime. None of them are bad. All of them produce positive outcomes. We need to find ways to do more of them, wherever you choose to start. I think it's really incumbent on us to say that we need to prevent crime as a national strategy and then support our individual communities to say, “This is how we want to prevent crime in this community.”