I'm not sure if I can entirely answer that question. You're referring to the Breakfast Club of Canada. That is its own charitable organization. It works through Nourish Nova Scotia, but it also has its own operations and many other relationships across Canada.
I'll just share one story that actually backs up the point that Ms. Corbin made about its making sense for the federal investment in school food to go through the provinces and territories.
I recently had an opportunity to meet with the Child Nutrition Council of Manitoba, which is the organization in Manitoba that is most similar to Nourish. However, unlike Nourish, it doesn't have a relationship with the Breakfast Club of Canada.
When the emergency support was made available during COVID, when the federal dollars flowed through the Breakfast Club and came to Nourish, we divided it, according to a formula, among the different regional centres of education.
In Manitoba, it went from the federal government to the Breakfast Club of Canada to the schools with which the Breakfast Club of Canada has relationships. Therefore, there were some educational regions that didn't get any federal resources. That's my understanding from the Child Nutrition Council of Manitoba. It was because the BCC doesn't have a relationship with every region, so some schools got a lot of money and were able to maybe really invest in a garden or in a cafeteria, but it didn't accomplish the sort of system-wide, relatively equitable distribution of that resource that I think is what you would want public dollars to serve.