That's a huge question. I don't have any personal experience of their weighing in on it at all, on a direct level, but there are some private sector enterprises that do care about the community in which they are working and that do want stability in the communities.
One of the problems in the north, as everybody knows, is that most of the communities are fly-in only, and they're very remote and very isolated, so if there is a problem with one or two of the seniors.... First of all, the average age of the Inuit is 20, so you can imagine a community of 300 people of whom 150 are under 20. It's a very unusual dynamic to see. So having an outside company come in and say it is going to get involved with watching or monitoring or ensuring that anything happens...it is a very difficult, disruptive way of doing it. I don't mean disruptive necessarily in a negative connotation; it's just that it changes everything in that community.
I hear what you're saying, though. You don't want to put resources in the hands of somebody who then becomes a target for it.