It's very problematical because changes in municipal administration can change the situation from black to white. We saw that in Timmins.
At one point, we had a municipal council that was very open, and we worked on a number of issues. We worked very hard on a tourism file in partnership with Témiscamingue and Rouyn-Noranda. After the election, it all fell through because the new administration didn't consider that a priority. It may wait until it's too late. The forest industry is completely in crisis. We're in a mining boom, but you know that, with globalization, Canada has to carve out a place in new technology. We need a hyper-skilled labour force because we can't compete with China. It's time we worked together. This is a new way of looking at things. People have always worked in isolation. Now the federal government, provinces, municipalities and community organizations must work together. This is a culture that hasn't spread everywhere. Where it does exist, in Moncton, New Brunswick, for example, there has been extraordinary success. There are places where people have decided to take the bull by the horns, and that's produced good results. We haven't gotten there yet. We always have to go again, hat in hand, to convince people, always to show that we aren't dangerous dissenters, who want to contest for the pleasure of contesting.
Our concern is economic development. I'll give you an example. In Timmins, we're fighting for a Francophone college and a trades centre because 30% of our population has no training. This group will miss the technological conversion and will depend on government. We don't want these people to depend on government. We want them to have the necessary training to function in thetwenty-first century. We want these people to be citizens who pay taxes, start up businesses, and make northern Ontario a place with a healthy economy. We now have an opportunity to do that in the forest industry crisis. We must do primary, secondary and tertiary processing. We think we can play a role in that, a catalyzing role, a leading role for our communities, so that they can get the services that will enable them to train and to turn the corner of the twenty-first century. This is an eloquent and specific example of the kind of role we want to play.
I have nothing else to add on the subject.