Thank you.
I want to talk a little bit more about this whole idea of integration. It's probably what most affects what's going on in the communities right now.
Francie, you talked about the multi-pronged approach as a concept, and seeing how the bigger structural macro kinds of things could have a positive impact. I think for the purposes of our discussion here today, uniquely with Public Safety and Aboriginal Affairs side by side, it would be useful to talk a little bit more about how we could start to think about some of the prevention programs that are working on reserve.
I know in Kenora, through the Status of Women, there was funding at the Women's Place there, and we had a violence de-escalation program, which had tremendous impact. I was concerned that there wasn't an evaluative tool after the fact, but people spoke highly about it, and many of them came from first nations communities in and around the city of Kenora. But again, that just goes to how we're talking to each other as departments. When we are funding prevention programs, Francie, on reserve, when Status of Women is funding certain projects, especially in the last intake and beyond in this calendar year, many of these kinds of programs will focus on that.
Then there's the Public Safety piece. Of course, Shawn, we've spoke before, but you spoke earlier about a variety of different programs.
How do we pull this in together a little bit more effectively? I don't know if that's what Libby was trying to get at, ultimately. But on the ground, where I've spent a great deal of my time professionally, I still see great efforts, but a lack of collective inertia, if you will, that helps to give us data that we can use meaningfully, in terms of prevention and more nuanced or focused programs.
I'll stop there. I see a certain eagerness to respond to that.
Go ahead, Shawn.