The first step is to get the provinces and the federal government on the same wavelength. There's duplication of work, programs, and costs.
You are dealing in the title of your study with the major aspects of a strategy. It all deals with healthy aging. Again, a report was produced by the National Seniors Council on that topic. It provides a whole lot of different recommendations on how that can be achieved.
Somebody mentioned it in one of the presentations. The strategy needs to involve seniors themselves in saying what they need and how it is going to be implemented. You need to have this coordinated somewhere, and that's why a minister of seniors is so important, in my view and in our view as an association. It's so you get all the information in one place, digest it in one place, and act in one place.
The key element, which we've not achieved in Canada in many instances, is to have the provinces and territories and the federal government working together. Unless you achieve that, it's going to be a failure, and we can't fail. As I said, the situation is with us today. It's not future planning; it's now.