That is a great question. A couple of people have already talked about this, but it's really developing partnerships at the local level. You talk about community organizations in partnership with housing developers. Are they sitting down and talking about healthy aging? It's not just about infrastructure development. It's working together to support healthy aging.
I think that's the role that community organizations play. With community organizations, you talk about co-operatives. It could be a credit union, for example, that becomes a partner in a housing project. Certainly in Nova Scotia there's a case of a credit union actually donating land to build affordable housing for seniors. There are those kinds of roles that they can play as well.
Community organizations can be champions in that they may have the expertise required to get a project off the ground, and again, credit unions have played key roles in multi-stakeholder health care co-ops, actually, in the province of Quebec.
With respect to the role of the federal government in particular, I'm not quite sure of the answer to that. Perhaps it's modelling what partnerships look like and presenting best practices for provincial level or community level organizations.