Well, ultimately, our police services are overworked as it is, and lots of times when you're dealing with any issue of somebody missing, it takes a lot more time, effort and report processing than the police are able to put in.
It could always start with an organization outside the police. It could start with an organization taking the information and working with the family, and then the agency notifying the police and going from there.
This isn't a criminal offence. At that point, it's not a criminal incident, so it doesn't necessarily have to have police involvement right from the get-go. We all recall two years ago that during a check on the wellness of somebody, a young indigenous woman was killed. Sometimes it's simple things like that. We have a stigma when it comes to policing and police officers, and sometimes it just de-escalates the whole situation when somebody from their own community is checking on them rather than a police officer.