I'll just give you a quick start. Within the Public Safety portfolio, I think we are starting to really pull together. One of the things I've been able to do, because I have the authority over the various silos within my department, is ensuring that as we look at the investments we make through first nations policing, they correspond to the kinds of investments we're making through the National Crime Prevention Centre.
I want to ensure that we're not going into a community twice, and not really knowing what the left hand and the right hand are doing in those communities. We are starting to pull together in a very clear way those kinds of partnerships, so that certainly works in our favour.
Our partnership with the RCMP certainly facilitates our ability, again, to look at some of the challenges that would be particular in the context of violence against aboriginal women and girls. We are developing our partnerships there, and again can bring together a portfolio perspective.
Even in the context of looking at Corrections and understanding how we better manage aboriginal offenders, I have policy responsibility for that within the department, and I have a very close partnership with the Correctional Service and the parole board. So we are able, in that context, to look at a range of issues that span the criminal justice system and start tying them together. We are doing a better job of that, and we are making our investments so that we're trying to stretch those dollars and get a bigger bang for the buck.