Thank you very much for that question.
There are really three areas.
In terms of the partnerships, I would like to see a strong, sustained relationship with the Canadian Red Cross. They have been invaluable in providing services at a community level and helping outreach. They have an understanding of what happens on the ground and an awareness that bridges the public health element with some of the other concerns regarding our vulnerable communities and the issues they're facing and how best to address them.
While we are dealing largely with a public issue, it is making even more difficult the issues that vulnerable people in communities are facing. Organizations such as the Red Cross have real value there. To see them in some sort of more formalized working arrangement would be incredibly valuable.
We have had phenomenal collaborative relationships with our provinces and territories. I have never seen organizations come together so quickly, so thoroughly and so openly. On the health front, that has been a real bonus. It does reflect years of planning. This is not something that just happened because of this pandemic; it's happened since SARS. We've been doing a lot of pandemic planning and a lot preparedness work with them. I do think that we do need to actually have broader exercises to understand the implications of public health on other areas of the economy, so not quite as insular as just public health but leveraging that approach, that collaboration, those types of exercises and taking them broader, engaging more in terms of the groups that Patrick Tanguy is working with in that area.
The third thing as we look to the future is to understand the implications of a public health event such as this on national security. We tend to deal with public health as something off to the side. We are now seeing the impacts of this not just on people but also on supply chains, on our ability to bring food across the border, on agriculture and on every aspect of the economy.
I do think something that has come out very strong is the recent call to action. While I'm dealing with procurement, with suppliers that may exist, there's been a call to action to the private sector, to private businesses to actually build capacity in Canada to deal with public health requirements for PPE. We have to understand that's something we have to sustain and build into a broader, longer-term strategy as we move forward.