 For the next six months, uniform members of the Vancouver Police Department working in the downtown core, East Vancouver, and our traffic services section will be deploying with body-worn cameras. This is part of a trial period, which will help guide us towards a broader rollout for all frontline Vancouver police officers. This is the body-worn camera. It's the start of my shift, so I'll be turning on the camera by pressing the top button here. I can see that the camera has turned on as on the LED screen there. It says ready. It is in what we call the buffering setting, which is visual recording only, no audio, and it's on 30-second loops. When I'm required to record an interaction, I'm gonna select this center mass here button two times. And as you can hear, that beep, that double beep, and as well, there are now red lights on the camera. When I decide to end the recording, I select the same button and hold it down for three seconds. You'll notice now the lights are gone and that long-durated beep signifies that we're no longer actively recording. As part of this project, we're aware that people have concerns about their privacy for good reason. And we're taking steps to address those concerns. This is a big change, and we know that some of you might have some important questions. So for more information or to share your thoughts on body-worn cameras, visit vpd.ca slash body-worn cameras.