I think your question is very good, in that the cost associated with the basket for healthy eating is a very significant issue. We're very concerned. This isn't specific to the food guide; this is specific to Canadians' food security and where the population is with respect to adequate resources to buy a nutritious basket of food.
So I think the question is an important one, and it's bigger than the food guide. But to answer your question specifically, we often hear that we have a lot of fruits and vegetables in that food guide and are asked if it will be something that people can afford to buy. We hear that. We have the question asked, and what I can say to you is that we look at the food pattern and we look at the costing of that basket. I think it's important for you to know that there is a nutritious food basket that is actually based on the food guide of the day. It is that basket that is costed right across Canada and used by provincial and local municipal governments in terms of social assistance programs, in terms of calculating the amount it's going to cost. So costing food baskets is part and parcel of what emerges from a food guide.
But in order to assure ourselves that this wasn't going to be a pattern that was too costly for fruits and vegetables, for instance--