Thank you.
I'll pick up on the same vein.
At this committee, we're trying to nail down how this.... We all agree that there should be a red dress alert. It should be indigenous led, but what does that look like? I've heard several witnesses, including you, talk about the Amber alert and how it should be similar.
Pelmorex is the company that operates the red dress alert system in Canada. It also does the silver alert system. It also operates The Weather Network, so I always just call it The Weather Network. It operates those for free as part of its broadcasting licences.
What happens for those alerts is that the threshold to decide whether or not to call it goes to the police. I think what we've heard at this committee is that it should be a consortium of indigenous leaders—indigenous women—that makes that decision. I think that's the key decision in all those instances: What's the threshold? How do we decide whether this is someone who even wants to be found or whether it's someone we need to look for right now?
I like your idea of it being regional to start with.
Could you see a system where we have regional bodies of indigenous women in particular who oversee the initial contact and then...? Can you see what I'm getting at?
Where do police fit in? Do they fit in at all? Is there a role for police?
Maybe you could hash out where we're getting at with this committee with this red dress alert system.