Thank you very much, Kamal. I think this is the question of our time with gun violence in Brampton and in the city of Toronto.
First I'll take the opportunity to remind the committee that this government actually provided $327 million over five years to the provinces and territories to fund municipal police services across Canada. We provided $65 million to the Province of Ontario to fund police services such as the Peel Regional Police service in its guns and gangs investigations. Those monies clearly are being well spent and well invested by the Peel Regional Police service, and I join you in commending them for their dedication and their hard work and the success of their investigation.
However, we also know that just investing in law enforcement isn't enough. We've worked with the police community, and we are strengthening gun control laws to create new offences and new penalties to eliminate the ways in which criminals get guns. Many of them are smuggled across the border; some are stolen and others are criminally diverted. We'll be bringing forward legislation that will strongly deter all of those activities.
Most important, and as you highlighted in the second part of your question, we have to make investments in kids and in communities to change the social conditions that give rise to so many of these crimes of violence and create a demand for guns. I think the police are doing some extraordinary work, as is CBSA, to reduce the supply of guns, and we're going to help them do even better.
We also know we have to reduce the demand for guns in those communities, and that's why we have promised that we'll be bringing forward, in the very near future, initiatives to provide additional funding directly to communities through the municipalities for community organizations that work with kids to get them involved in after-school programs and job training programs, changing the social conditions in our communities that give rise to that violence. We believe it's important to invest in policing but also to invest in community. I believe that in the long term, it's those investments in our kids and in our communities that will have the greatest impact on public safety. They are worthy investments and investments that we are prepared to make.