I'm honoured, Ms. Khera, that you raised this.
You'll notice that in my remarks, I comment that we're still challenged at the Law Society of Ontario. We still have benchers who, literally, deny the existence of systemic racism in the profession.
What I would say is that, in the end, those who are in the business of denying reality will be left behind. The response following the Floyd death is proof positive that the majority of communities want to see real change.
What I suggest is that you take the power and privilege that you, as a committee, have and you force the auditors general, federally and provincially, to start enforcing these reports. It's all there. I don't mean, Ms. Khera, to get off topic, but you could make that change. You could make the change requiring the mobile crisis teams by the RCMP to be real and effective. You can make those changes. There are examples of concrete steps you could take.
Finally, I do want to point out something in regard to Mr. Harris's question about a university or a school not investing in conventional policing. Maybe they should look at aboriginal police services. Maybe what they're not finding for their students in one place, they'll find in another.