That's a tough act to follow. Well done.
Thank you for the opportunity to address you this morning.
As was indicated, I want to talk about a bit of public opinion research that was done in conjunction with an event held here in Ottawa in March of 2010, a conference on 150 Canada organized by MASS LBP and IPAC. The purpose of that conference was to start a dialogue among a lot of key opinion leaders in this country about how the country should proceed to celebrate 2017. The idea came about to do a public opinion poll as part of that, simply to extend the dialogue a bit beyond the boundaries of that particular event and hear from other Canadians.
In the few minutes that I have, I would just like to speak briefly about that survey. I believe that copies of the presentation deck have been circulated. I will just touch the highlights.
The premise of doing this research is that Canadians overall like know-how and like to celebrate important occasions, and I certainly think the experience from the Vancouver Olympics as well as Expo suggests that perhaps Canadians do. The notion was to go a little beyond that and understand a little more in 2010.
A national survey was done by Environics for the conference, a very modest survey as these things go, just 1,000 Canadians across the country by telephone in February. The survey was sponsored by MasterCard, which was willing to front costs.
Three themes or questions were addressed in this survey. The first, and I know Helen will speak to this, is what do Canadians remember about 1967 and the centennial celebrations? How do Canadians think we should celebrate the 150th? And finally, who do they think is responsible for making that happen? So those were the three broad questions this research went into.
Again, we'll hear more about this, but in answer to the first question, about the centennial, quite clearly, as Andrea indicated, many Canadians have very fond and very strong memories of 1967 and the centennial celebrations. About one-third of Canadians remember directly what was there, like Andrea and I'm sure Helen, and another quarter remember from hearing about it from other people. Those numbers would be higher if you factored out all the people who had come to Canada since that time who obviously weren't here. I count myself among them.
We ask people what they remembered most about the centennial celebrations, and the thing that stood out most was Expo 67. Perhaps that's not surprising. There are various memories about it, as you might expect. Perhaps more importantly, we asked people in the survey, if they remembered it, what were the feelings that the centennial or Expo 67 brought to mind? Do you still have those feelings? The feelings were all very positive. It was pride, pride in Canada, joy, happiness. There was very little negative emotion. What's striking is that going back that many years, people who were there even as young children still had vivid emotional memories. It may be that emotional connection is the most important.
Turning to the second question--perhaps an obvious one, but we wanted to ask it--we asked Canadians how important it is to celebrate the 150th anniversary coming up in 2017. Our guess is that most Canadians either weren't aware of that or weren't thinking about it when we called them, so it wasn't exactly a top-of-mind issue we were asking about. Almost half of Canadians, 49%, said it's very important that we celebrate this in some kind of meaningful way. Very few said it wasn't important. Perhaps those people were having a bad day.
What's also important is to look at that across important subgroups of the population, for instance by age. Those people who remember Expo are thinking we should do this again. You'd expect them to put a priority on this. But what about the millenials? What about the young generation? Do they really care whether we celebrate an old birthday like this? We found in the survey that those 18 to 29 put almost as much importance on this kind of celebration as those 65 and over.
Clearly this is not a generational issue. It's not just for the older folks to celebrate. We looked at it by income. Perhaps only those people who are higher up in the socio-economic spectrum can think about this sort of thing. But no, even those people at the lower end, with less education and income also felt this was important. I think this was borne out perhaps in the response to the torch relay that Andrea was talking about, that you have all sectors of society coming out.
Finally, we also looked at it by first language, and as you might expect, there seems a bit more enthusiasm among anglophones than francophones. There are historic reasons for that, and perhaps that shouldn't be surprising. What is surprising is that new Canadians, those people that we define as allophones—whose first language was not English or French, who for the most part came to this country from somewhere else—were even more enthusiastic than anglophones. Even though this was their adopted country, they were feeling that this was a very important event to celebrate.
We asked Canadians what they thought about Canada was worth celebrating with this birthday. This was an open-ended question. We didn't want to feed ideas ito them that they would just parrot back to us on the survey. We came out with a number of key themes. The one theme that was front and centre in what ought to be celebrated were Canada's beliefs and values, however those were defined; followed by people in history, notable achievements, role in the world, and finally, natural resources.
These were the broad types of issues that people came up with out of their own minds when we asked the question. What's important here is that people weren't studying for this before we called them for the survey. This was their spontaneous reaction. As for some of the specific things that were mentioned in response to this question, number one was multiculturalism and welcoming people from other countries.
It may be surprising, but maybe not. When we asked Canadians how this birthday should be celebrated, that was one of the things that came out. It's consistent with other research that we've done indicating that this is one of the strongest sources of pride in this country today. They cited the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, natural beauty and resources, aboriginal history and culture, and a peaceful country.
Some of the things that we might have expected to be sources of pride in Canada, and sources of celebration, weren't quite so significant. The heath care system was mentioned by 4%; peacekeeping, 3%; bilingualism, 2%; social programs, 1%; hockey, 1%. It's not that people don't embrace hockey, but it was not very closely tied to celebrating our 150th.
Also on the survey, we wanted to present a number of concepts to get people's reactions to things that the country might do to celebrate. We had a list of 10 to 12 different items, or different ways, and we basically asked people, “Do you think this is a great way to celebrate, an okay way, or not so good”?
I won't go through all the details, but the one that garnered the most interest was scholarship programs to help students go to college and university. About 51% thought that was a great way to celebrate the 150th. Community events, local culture, new improved infrastructure, travel programs, national events—most people thought these were all fine ideas, but some generated more excitement than others.
Finally, who is responsible for making sure that an appropriate celebration takes place? We presented about five different key actors, and asked what role they had to play. All five were seen as playing an important role, but front and centre was the federal government, most widely seen as having the biggest role to play. This is not at all surprising, given that this is something that's of national scope, and something that Canadians have typically looked to governments to play a leadership role in, if not a sole role.
If I were interpreting these numbers, I would conclude that it's not that Canadians are looking for just the federal government to take this on, but they're looking for the federal government to make sure that all the pieces are in place and the supports are there, and that the other partners are brought on board.
Are people interested in participating? We're talking about something happening seven years down the road. They have no idea what it's going to be, but 37% said they were very interested in participating in whatever it is, sight unseen. Most of the rest are somewhat interested.
It's striking that, given how vague and long-term this is, there is some clear interest. Similarly, in regard to interest in volunteering, we know something from VANOC, and probably from Expo, where perhaps there were a lot of people volunteering. Over 50% felt that they would in principle be definitely or likely willing to volunteer in some capacity over time. It suggests that many Canadians are not simply looking to be passive.
To conclude, there are four points I want to close on that I think we've learned from this rather modest piece of research. The first is that 1967 centennial is still alive for many Canadians in a very meaningful way. It has not disappeared into the distance of history.
The second point is that Canadians grasp that 2017 is something important. Even though they haven't been thinking about it, spontaneously they're thinking, “Yes, that's a big birthday. We really ought to do something, and we want it to mean something.”
Third, the Olympics have demonstrated that even in this age of globalization and skepticism and everything else, Canadians know how to celebrate something and do it right.
Finally, for the most part, for the average Canadian, or even most people, 150 is still kind of a blank slate. People haven't thought about it. They know it's important. When they hear about it, they want something done. But there are very few fixed ideas about what that ought to be.
There are two implications. One, don't go looking for input or direction from the public now to tell you what to do, but there's a certain openness to seeing how this will unfold. There's an opportunity to create a vision for this that people will buy into, but if you do create that kind of vision, people will buy into it.
Thank you very much.