I was ready, but I think my colleague Mrs. Vien read my mind, because she wanted to talk about the same thing.
I think everyone on this committee is in favour of a red dress alert. That's not even a question. We're all in favour of it being indigenous-led and culturally appropriate. Really, what we're trying to nail down in this study is what it will look like and the best way to approach this next.
As my colleague Michelle Ferreri mentioned, a phenomenal witness earlier this week set up her own red dress alert system in her community in Nova Scotia. I can't remember what she called it—it was something else. She managed to get, I think, 4,000 people signed up to receive these alerts. She is managing the whole thing herself, but it's very effective because the people receiving the alerts have all signed up. They are all engaged. They go on and share these alerts on their social media pages and it has a very far reach. She's had extraordinary success in helping to find and save indigenous women, girls and 2SLGBTQIA people. I think 96% was the success rate.
Maybe, Lisa Cooper, you can talk to us about this model and whether this would work across the country. The other model we have is the Amber alert, for example. It is a national platform, but it's rolled out and managed by provinces and territories that decide the parameters on when the alert is going to roll out.
Maybe you can comment on some of these different models and how you think it would work best.