We still have a vacuum in data, so we don't necessarily understand the complete picture of complaints in Inuit communities across Inuit Nunangat. We do in Nunavut, because it is a jurisdiction, and there are just Inuit communities in Nunavut. For the Northwest Territories and for Newfoundland and Labrador, we would have no way of understanding how many of those complaints come from Inuit communities in any given year. Those are some of the essential building blocks that we need to change.
As far as compliance and the building of a shared interest are concerned, I think a lot of that has to do with some of the things I've raised already. The nature of policing in Inuit Nunangat and the transactional nature of policing have to change to a more community-focused approach to policing, whereby people have an affiliation with the community beyond their job and a vested interest in building a healthy community alongside all the people who live in it.
That requires more resources. It also requires, sometimes, a shift in attitude about what a person is there to do. I would love to see a more holistic, community-focused RCMP. We've talked to the RCMP, and it shares those sentiments. However, it immediately always comes back to, “We don't have enough people to do that.”