Madam Chair, the Minister mentioned the review of the Liquor Act, which is underway right now. I'm pleased he did so. I was one of the advocates of getting the act overhauled and one of my principle concerns, Madam Chair, was, as I stated in my previous question, that I just did not see our government seriously undertaking a responsibility, or a mandate, to do something about the way we abuse alcohol. It was through, hopefully, a review of the act. As I understand, it's ongoing now and we don't need to get into a discussion of that specifically, but I guess through this process, Madam Chair, is the Department of Health and Social Services looking at this in such a way that it could perhaps undertake that mandate, as it has with tobacco, so successfully with tobacco, and shoulder the challenge, the responsibility, of trying to do the same thing with alcohol? I'm talking about trying to fundamentally change the way society considers alcohol and the way we use it. One of the principle successes, I think, with the tobacco campaign is that we set out to de-normalize its use. We wanted to make it un-cool, uncomfortable, inconvenient, to use tobacco in any form, anywhere. A lot of success has been done with that. Can we look at alcohol in the same way and can we take on a commitment as big and as challenging as what we've done with tobacco? Can we do the same thing with alcohol and can this department, you know, is it planning? This is my question, Madam Chair: Is this department planning on taking an active role, a lead role, in the liquor review and seeing where it can assert its mandate? Thank you, Madam Chair.