I'll start, if I may, Madam Chair.
One of the things that I find is really important on a personal level is that the legislation provides for a police officer and another person—it is intended that regulations will support that it can be another person—to be able to apply on behalf of an applicant. So if that person is unable to make it, another person could.
For instance, in my community there was a young woman who was denied access to see her mother, and two weeks later she was beaten to death by her partner. Had the emergency regulations been available—it's possible she could have been worried—she might have been able to apply on behalf of. The clerk could have given her permission to do so, to have the partner removed and prevent that.
So in that instance I think that's one of the ways, with the combination, the procedurals.... Most of the provinces currently—B.C. just had their new family law come into force in March, which now includes emergency protection orders—