Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Mr. Speaker, clearly this is a shared responsibility and we have some resources and capacity to provide expert advice and come in and work with communities. There is also a tremendous amount that can be done at the community level, as the Member indicated. At the end of the day, type II diabetes tends to start with personal choice with what we eat and we drink and if we smoke. Places like Inuvik, for example, have taken junk food vending machines out of the schools. That was a decision that was made at the local level. Parents and elders play a very clear role in terms of being role models, in terms of demonstrating the proper habits. As well, I do believe there is an opportunity, as the Member said, not only with the government but with communities talking to their local stores to talk to them about putting in the proper kinds of food and not have all the junk food front and centre and the other healthier alternatives in the back somewhere.
So this is a shared responsibility. I will commit that the Department of Health and Social Services and the whole system will work collectively and collaboratively on this issue. Thank you.