The road to mental health readiness is based on the DND training. We have taken what DND has developed, because they were very open to that, and the Canadian Mental Health Association designed the course. We took that course. Calgary police have taken that course. They modified it for police work, but it's a very similar concept. This is the base foundational piece. It's not more than that. It's just to give you an awareness.
When we are on deployment, as I said, there are pre-deployment briefings. There is assessment pre-deployment and post-deployment, to ensure that our members are okay. That's where you will probably see more of these specific types of training. In Afghanistan, they would have a different type: “Here is what's happening in Afghanistan. Here is the stuff you'll see.” Then they would have a cooling-off period coming back, because of what they might have seen. Every mission is a little different.
Our international police are the ones who do that piece and ensure that our members have what's needed as they reach into the field. You're right. They are working side by side with our military colleagues. Kudos to our military colleagues at DND. They have been very open to helping us in our challenges and supporting our members when they are out in the field.