That would be someone else's mandate right here.
As you have said, schools are a very key setting to promote and support healthy eating and physical activity. That is certainly clear. And again, as you said, the responsibility for school health is really with the provinces, but that shouldn't be seen as an impediment to actually working with the provinces and territories to really move forward on this.
So what we have done certainly with respect to the school nutrition guidelines is that we've been in a process now for about a year and a half where I suppose one could say that we hold space and that sort of quiet leadership with respect to bringing together the provinces and territories to talk about school nutrition guidelines and to look for developing consistency in those guidelines from province to province. Those are, again, meetings that we have hosted, bringing together the provinces and territories, and we're working in a very collaborative way. So what we're trying to do is to improve the consistency of school food guidelines from province to province, which then makes it easier to make sure that you've got the food supply that can be used in schools and as well to enhance implementation efforts so that if there are lessons to be learned from one province to the next province, we can take those forward.
So our federal role there is really, I suppose, one could say, more of holding space, but actually to bring together the analysis of the guidelines that have been there.
The other thing that we've done with respect to school guidelines is to work with the World Health Organization, and we directly supported the development of the framework for school health. The aspect on school nutrition we supported from out of our office. The aspect on physical activity was supported from the Public Health Agency. So in some ways we were going straight up to WHO but we were reflecting the learnings and what the provinces had to offer. We worked with our federal-provincial-territorial group on nutrition to get the right types of recommendations that go into the World Health Organization.
So there are ways that we as federal government do have a responsibility in this as well. It's not that direct one; it's more through indirect means.