I'll try to be very quick, Mr. Chair.
First of all, in 2017, we committed $327 million to provide funding to police services right across the country. That includes the RCMP, CBSA, and also municipal and indigenous police services across the country. Of that, $214 million was specifically allocated to municipalities. I can speak to the federal dollars, and that might be even more appropriate, Mr. Chair, because we did make investments in the RCMP to increase their capacity to conduct investigations in their jurisdictions of responsibility, because organized crime investigations into the gangs responsible for smuggling, stealing or diverting these guns are an important part of their work.
Under the agreement, we have tried to work with the provinces across the country to provide that funding. We do that by providing, for example, $65 million to the Province of Ontario. It is then Ontario's responsibility to determine how best to allocate that within their jurisdiction. As we know, there were some difficulties in getting that flowing efficiently. The money was made available to the province, but getting it out....
I was very pleased to meet with the Ontario ministers in Brampton in front of the Peel Regional Police headquarters in your area, where we announced the additional $54 million that they agreed to accept. They announced at that time 17 different projects they're investing in. That money is now beginning to flow.
It's important to support the police, but it's important to do more. We've listened very carefully to communities, and we have in our platform.... I don't want to get ahead of the budget, but it is our intention to make significant new investments in communities and in kids, because we've also heard that it's not just an issue of policing, but you have to address the social conditions that give rise to this violence.
We'll be making significant investments, and we intend to work more closely and directly with communities and municipalities to make this money flow, not just more quickly but more effectively, to get it where it will have the best account. I also think we have a responsibility to produce good public value for these investments for Canadians, and we need to be able to demonstrate the return on that investment. The best way to do that is to deal more directly with the organizations responsible for making those investments.
Of course, that's not all we're doing. We've also heard the importance of interdicting the supply of guns that are coming into our community, so we'll be making efforts to strengthen gun control laws to keep guns from being stolen by requiring stricter storage measures to keep them from being diverted and by providing the police with authorities and resources to detect and therefore prosecute such offences. Also, we've made, and continue to make, very significant investments at the border in CBSA officials and also in technologies and in our investigations to deal with those organizations and individuals responsible for smuggling guns into the country.
We are doing work to interdict the supply of guns, but also doing work to reduce the demand for guns. All of those investments are important and necessary.