Perhaps I can start.
Thank you very much for the question. It's a really important issue that you've highlighted.
I'd like to start by indicating that under the community action program for children that the Public Health Agency of Canada administers, there are currently over 440 organizations across Canada receiving funding. That funding is provided to support food security for vulnerable populations, to help people develop the tools they need to eat healthy, and to teach them and train them on how to cook nutritious foods. So there are programs like that in place.
As we move forward, I'd like to bring us back to the work that was initiated last fall under the auspices of the federal-provincial-territorial declaration on prevention and promotion, and specifically the work to combat childhood obesity. In that context, one of the priorities is looking at the ways that we as a country can move forward to provide access to healthy and nutritious foods for Canadians.
That of course includes looking at the settings in which those foods can be provided, and the ways that we as a federal government can enable those working in provinces and territories--