I also met Mr. Poissant during those events, and to have you here now.... I'd like to think that it had something to do with getting food policy into the mandate letter. It makes me feel very good about engaging during election time. Thank you for that reference.
We don't have a comprehensive assessment, for example, of school food programs in this country. There is no map. What we have now is a patchwork of programs. Some kids are getting Coke and doughnuts, and some kids are getting fresh vegetables and hummus. There are all kinds of programs across this country.
The vast majority of them are very innovative, very grassroots, and they are doing the best they can with what they have at their disposal. I think it's exactly the model you're suggesting that the Coalition for Healthy School Food is after. It's a bottom-up model. It's not a new, big, one-size federal program, with all its complex rules that everybody has to follow.
It says, for example, we believe that all children should have the right to a healthy diet. We are creating a social innovation fund to which school boards, non-profits, and municipalities can apply in order to take the best of what exists in their community and build it up. We have fantastic programs in this regard. Some of them are doing just amazing farm-to-fork stuff.