I can maybe just add that there has been an increased amount of work that Public Safety has done through new investments with respect to establishing trilateral agreements with communities with respect to policing, as well as increasing the number of self-administered police services among first nations and Inuit. There have been 93 new and ongoing projects in that regard, as well as investments in police infrastructure. I think this is improving relationships over time. More needs to be done, for sure, but it is a very important priority of a number of first nations.
If we can potentially look at some of these self-administered police agreements that exist in some jurisdictions, start in regions that have those types of relationships and actually bring that forward to chiefs of police across the country, I'm sure there would be openness to look at the types of protocols and the relationship building that's happened.
Krista also talked about Washington, where they have a navigator, a steward or someone who can advocate within the context with police services directly, to have a bit of an interlocutor role and to enable a safer and more transparent environment. I think it is about transparency as well, with respect to what's happening in police services when these alerts are issued.