Okay, thank you.
I had a similar experience. The Ontario Provincial Police have argued over the years that a lack of trunk space was an issue that prevented them from carrying defibrillators. I got so frustrated by this. On one occasion, I was at an event. It was a festival in Frontenac County and the cops were out. They had their trunk opened, and I noticed there was a ton of trunk space there, so I took out my camera phone and proceeded to film their trunk as evidence that there's room in OPP cruiser trunks. The cop on duty looked at me a little suspiciously, but I'm a well-known figure in the constituency, so I think he decided I wasn't a security threat.
I say this by way of saying that my impression is that this argument that comes up from time to time is a red herring. I don't want to put words in anybody else's mouth, but that's my impression.
I'll turn to the folks at St. John. In addition to police forces, where I think it's essential that there be defibrillators put into the trunks of cruisers, which other first responders or similar types of public services don't have them now that ought to have them? Where is the logical focus?