You're asking what we would like in order to do more.
What we've been able to do so far, we've done with existing financial and physical resources. We've been able to do quite a bit, but there's so much more we can do.
In British Columbia, there are two police officers who are going around the whole province giving presentations. They're having to turn people down, saying they're sorry, but they're so booked right now that they need extra people to get this done. They're showing the video and they're handing out the posters and the contact cards we've distributed. They're handing out their own cards. People say we need more people. You're hearing it from the public. You're hearing it from the other law enforcement agencies.
They're speaking, specifically now, with law enforcement--with RCMP detachments across the province and with other municipal police forces.
They address NGOs, also, in large groups. What the officers tell the NGOs is to get a large group and they will be happy to present to them. They can combine a whole bunch together. That's what they've been able to do, and it's been very successful there.
We need resources to provide awareness all over the country. We have six immigration and passport sections across Canada. There are not even six officers who we've been able to dedicate to this. In British Columbia we have one dedicated to it. The other one is helping out at this time.
We need resources in each of the I and P sections to do this awareness training. We need officers to go out and investigate, to go out and actively seek victims, and once they find them, to provide protection for them.
We need people to do research, especially in the northern communities and the prairies. We need to go to the reserves to talk to the aboriginals there, to talk to the NGOs there, and to talk to law enforcement agencies there. We don't have the resources to do that now, and we desperately need them.
Those are our biggest needs right now.