I think that's a reasonable reflection. There are my federal accountabilities as a deputy within the federal system as well as a chief adviser on public health issues for the federal government, but also there are linkages through the public health network, which again is a collaboration—federal, provincial, territorial, and experts—regarding how we as a society and how multiple levels of government feel we can best approach these issues together.
I don't have authority over provincial chief medical officers—nor do the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have authority over states in the United States—but we work together and try to figure out who's in the best position to do which pieces.
Our clear intent is that we do bring added value to what's already there. We bring expertise, we bring some resource, we bring some connections, we bring some capacity to pull the various kinds of expertise together. The intent is that wherever we are in the country, people have access to the best expertise, the needed resources, etc., to address the problems. We are an important contributor to that, but not the only one, obviously.