I will take it chronologically.
Shortly after I arrived, there was the abolition of the court challenges program, and the report we did on the 118 complaints we received was the basis before the courts for the court case, which resulted in an out-of-court settlement and the creation of the language rights support program. The fact that the report we did was the only piece of documentation in the court case that resulted in that out-of-court settlement is something I'm proud of.
I'm also proud that we were able to engage in a constructive way in the planning for the Olympics. In many ways the Olympics were a huge success in terms of linguistic duality, with only one failure, and that was the opening ceremonies. We were able to produce a handbook that is now being used by the organizers of the Canada Games in Sherbrooke and also by the organizers of the Pan American Games.
I'm proud of the ongoing work we've done in terms of investigations, complaints, and audits, which I think has had a greater impact than is often publicly recognized or realized in helping institutions to realize the problems that exist and in leading to the corrections.
I'm also proud of the fact that we've been able to use our study on post-secondary learning opportunities as a continuing evergreen document that I can take across the country and use as a basis for discussion with federal councils, with provincial governments, and with university presidents and department heads about the importance of the continuum of language learning.