I would recognize those areas that I've talked about.
With my own knowledge base, if I were the premier of a province, I would start by recognizing that you have to take a look at the lifespan. You have to talk about across the spectrum and across the lifespan and deal with all of those things at the same time.
The ideas of inclusion and autonomy kind of crosscut all of the different things that I was talking about.
Six main areas is not a big number. You have to recognize that if you get the diagnosis piece right, you're going to be helping people earlier. This goes for anybody. All of us were better off when we got help with things we were challenged with or when we got reinforced on things that we were good at. We're better off when someone started early with us. It's no different, but then you're going to lead to better outcomes in the education system. You're going to lead to better outcomes in employment and in housing.
I think that probably where it starts is just making sure that you start by getting really good information from the community around you, which includes autistic Canadians, experts, scientists, researchers and families, and that you're having that conversation, but not waiting for unanimity.
The problem in Canada right now is that everybody is waiting for unanimity, and you're never going to have it. We have to move. There are a lot of things that we know work, and we have to move.