Well, that's a very good question. It's obviously important for everybody to have equal opportunity, but we need to make a distinction between sport, recreation and activity.
Sport I look at as organized sport. Perhaps you pay a fee and join a team and there's some coaching involved, some training, some skills technique. That is great, obviously, and important, and a good way to be active, but you don't need to be in a sport to be physically active. This is what we need to move away from a little bit.
Encourage people to play outside. Encourage municipalities to say, when they're developing a subdivision, that the builder has to put a park in the middle of it. It's simple things like that. Encourage children to play outside, to be active, to be physically involved, to learn how to play, learn how to catch a ball, learn how to run. You only learn these things by doing them.
I also think that anything we can do to promote children being involved at any level is important, and anything we can do to overcome poverty as a barrier to that is important. I obviously don't have the answers as to what that could be, but certainly the income children's parents make shouldn't be a determining factor in whether they're physically active.