Thank you very much.
With respect to mandating local procurement, if I understood that correctly, mandating can often raise challenges. We have to be respectful of our international trade obligations, so we have to understand what any such practice could do.
I think the first step, and perhaps even the better step, is to look a little more in our own backyards. A number of provinces are doing this; the federal government is doing this: bringing together agriculture, education in the provinces, public health, and aboriginal affairs, among other departments, to try to understand how each of those departments has a touch point on food, because many of them do. How do we then get those departments working with community groups, associations, and producers and players in the agrifood supply chain? How can we better serve key populations? Many of the tools are at hand. It requires working differently together to help do so. I think that should be the first order of business. It comes back to the point that if we think differently about the food system, we may try to resolve many of those key issues.