I'm sorry, but I didn't get that last little bit. I'm going to answer, and you can tell me whether you need a correction.
Amazing work is happening in Quebec and in every province and territory in Canada. That work is happening with a lot of passion from community organizations and support from municipalities.
What I believe this framework can do, in combination with the funding we now have in place, is to create a truly cost-shared program. You're right that working towards its being universal is going to cost a lot of money. The vision of the Coalition for Healthy School Food has always been for it to be cost-shared among the federal government; provincial and territorial governments; municipal governments—a lot of regional and municipal money has been put into school food programs—the community sector, through such things as the charitable sector and donations; and families. There's a role for families to play. We see that when families contribute, they have an investment in it. It is a broad piece.
The coalition has always been very clear that it needs to be flexible and locally adapted. Every province and every community knows what's best for its community. School food programs in rural Quebec are going to look different from those in Newfoundland or in Vancouver or in Tofino. That is the strength of what Canada is.
I think part of this is bringing communities together to figure out how best to feed and engage their children and how to link in local farmers, fishers and food businesses, because the economic benefits go far beyond the investment. The return on investment in children's health alone pays back those costs. If we look at how we support local food economies and how we integrate all these different pieces, that's a different kind of accounting. I think we need to have a bold vision, like what we have with this framework and like what we have matched with the budget, to really see that the benefits truly go beyond just those for children to include those in the form of thriving school communities and local food economies.