I'll quickly respond, but I can't speak for the food banks. Community Food Centres Canada has a very different model that is more upstream and preventive.
About 27% of people who use our community food centres across the country are seniors. We're very concerned right now about them feeling isolated and lonely. There is no question that if we continue to put money into GIS, OAS, CPP, etc., it will have a very important impact on their status in terms of vulnerability. The data is really clear on this. If you put money into programs like the child tax benefit and seniors programming, it materially impacts food insecurity and reduces poverty in this country, which is what we should be doing. We're talking about using the current infrastructure that's out there, although we're also talking about building a refundable tax credit for working-age adults, but we have these systems in place, and if we put money into them, they reduce food insecurity and reduce poverty. It's pretty simple. There's a direct correlation between income and reducing food insecurity.