I think it starts with the renewed relationship and the Inuit-crown partnership that the Prime Minister and the Inuit signed in February. The work that flows through that with the Inuit-crown partnership committee is a place where we create a shared work plan. In areas that are of common concern, whether they're issues related to an Inuit Nunangat policy space or whether they're things related to housing, infrastructure, or food insecurity, working together is the first step. Many of our Inuit Nunangat regions already have food insecurity strategies, ways in which to combat it. We already have solutions or paths that we want to take.
The challenge has been with the broader inequity, the fact that we have 45% overcrowding in our homes, the median income gap, the infrastructure gap, the lack of education attainment. We have the high cost of living and the high cost of food. Again, this work and this policy aren't going to fix everything at once, but it's putting one step in front of the other. Anywhere that we can, we must figure out how to work in partnership, rather than having the old way of working of broad government policies that are not distinctions-based, that are not Inuit-specific, and that imagine solutions without ever thinking about our imagination as a people.