Yes.
I would like to add to what you just said. I had a niece come here to a women's shelter. She came here because she was being abused, but then she came back home. She was crying. She said, “Auntie, guess what?” I asked, “What, my girl? What happened?” She said, “You know, Auntie, I went to Prince Albert. I went to a women's shelter to stop being abused.” She'd brought her little girls with her. She broke down in tears. I asked, “What's wrong, my girl?” She said to me, “Auntie, I went to Prince Albert to stop being abused, and at that women's shelter where we went, I got abused. I got called down. My kids got called down”, is what she said. Then I told her, “Well, we'll work it out. We'll talk.”
So I could just feel what you said about the two police officers sitting at the back of the room here. I come from a northern community, Ile-a-la-Crosse. There's not much police help. When you call a police officer in the middle of the night, when your spouse is abusing you or whatever, they don't come right away. You know, we had a youth stabbed to death in Ile-a-la-Crosse. He died there. It took police officers one hour to come there.
So I understand where you're coming from in terms of what they're saying.
That's it.