The strategy is based on many years of working with different communities. The Canadian Association of Community Living developed a safety audit tool for communities several years ago. It's very much based on the concept of identifying gaps at the community level. The process of identifying those gaps, however, has to be one that is through community engagement.
Hedy, when you're talking about how one addresses those different things and with whom, you have to involve the local police. You have to involve local community organizations and people with disabilities in the process. That's fundamentally where this starts: with the inclusion of people with disabilities in the process at the community level.
It's a national strategy, but it has to be drilled down into by going into each province, territory, and municipality. Initially we plan to do 13 locations across the country, some urban, and some rural. We certainly recognize the fact that it's not a one-size-fits-all kind of approach. Again, the audit tool that's been developed and will be transferred, if you will, from the application CACL had for people with intellectual disabilities to the broader community of people with disabilities is one that is really focused on inclusion of people with disabilities and inclusion of local actors in the community.
One of the things I face all the time is trying to get access to the violence against women sector, if you will. The violence against women sector is a sector, and we all know, especially here at the Status of Women, that there is a whole body of work and a whole bunch of organizations, people, and so on involved in this work.