Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to our witnesses for being here.
The work you do to support families and children is probably the most important work that can be done in our society today. It is absolutely true that if we invest in young people and provide them with the opportunity to get an early start and have a balanced approach, it produces a better child, a better adult, a better citizen and a better country.
It's astonishing to me that we are talking about children here, and still Conservatives.... This bill is a very simple piece of legislation. All it's asking is to develop a coordinated strategy between the provinces and territories. That's it. It's saying, ”Let's work together.”
Mr. Mansfield, I think there were $230 million dedicated in your province of B.C. to student nutrition programs. This is a huge amount of money. It really does complement well the federal initiative, and we can work together, the federal, provincial and municipal governments and school boards, to do something important here.
I was a trustee for eight years at the Toronto District School Board. I led the task force on student nutrition. One of the recommendations back in 2007 was for a national food program. I remember visiting different jurisdictions, and I heard over and over again that we need a national program.
I taught in South Korea, and they had a national food program. The United States, a country that sometimes is not considered the most supportive of social services, has a national program. Canada is one of the only countries in the G20 that doesn't have one, so I think this is a huge move for Canadians.
The Conservatives talk a lot about carbon pricing. They say that carbon pricing is the way forward—