I think it starts from a recognition that this is a problem that exists in every jurisdiction in the country from coast to coast. While education is formally a provincial area of jurisdiction, I think that when there's an instance where it's happening in every subregion of the country, then there's a case for the feds to be involved.
I think of back in the 1970s when the Canada fitness award program was created—and funnily enough my organization actually created the fitness test that went along with that program 40 years ago. There is a precedent for that, and I would argue that some kind of national intervention—and we made this in our pre-budget submission—around diagnosing and assessing physical literacy would be a good place to start.
We think that can be done for about $10 million a year, basically, for every school kid in the country. Remember that school is the one place you get every single Canadian kid for six and a half hours a day. In clubs and some of the other contexts, some children are unable to be in those places, whereas they are in the school system.