Thank you.
I'll make just a personal comment. I think if the recommendation was that every Canadian for a month not eat anything that has a label, nothing from a bottle, a can, a package, or a restaurant, we'd all change our taste for salt within a month. That may not be a practical recommendation.
I mean, it is frustratingly complex. I understand the absolute necessity of including the industry in the discussions. I want to acknowledge the good intentions and the hard work of the salt working group. But it does make me wonder, due to the terms of reference of the federal government to the salt working group, whether this hasn't been only almost like a delaying tactic, as opposed to an action approach. That's especially when it has precluded recommendations of mandatory regulation.
I guess I'm still wanting to get some clarity in terms of this committee's recommendations. I don't want to put you on the spot, Stephen or Dr. Pipe, but do you believe a committee that has a major component representing the 75% of consumption that is so laden with salt.... Would that working group actually be able to make recommendations to eat fresh food and eat foods without labels that have not been processed? Or is that kind of counter to the very make-up of the group?
I mean, are we going to get recommendations that are going to really take action, fast and effectively? Or by the nature of the group are we going to have it predisposed to the waiting and the careful, slow “we can't change peoples' taste because it takes years” kind of report?