Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and members of the committee. I want to thank you for inviting us to appear before you today together with our colleagues from the FAJEF.
The Fédération des communautés francophones et acadienne du Canada, or FCFA, is the national voice of 2.8 million French-speaking Canadians living in minority communities in 9 provinces and 3 territories. Our organization heads up a national network of some 900 French-language organizations and institutions across the country.
Our communities are determined to live in French and work hard to do so every day. Over the years, they have established more than 700 French-language schools, some 20 francophone and bilingual colleges and universities, health services, community and cultural centres, as well as media outlets. Those institutions didn't just materialize out of thin air. In many cases, minority francophones had to go before the courts to secure them or to defend their existence.
Even though the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms has established very clear language rights, having those rights honoured has proven to be quite another matter. In many cases, in many places across the country, we have had to take legal action that lasted years.
In 1984, a group of Franco-Albertan parents filed suit because they felt they had a charter right to manage their own schools and doggedly pursued the matter to the Supreme Court, where they won their case in 1990, six years later.
I could tell you about Summerside, Prince Edward Island, where children had to travel two hours by school bus every day to go to school in French. After years spent in the courts, those Acadian parents won their case in 2000.
Then there's the five-year struggle in the courts that was required to prevent the closure of Montfort Hospital, the only francophone university hospital in western Quebec.
Lastly, I should mention the long and recent struggle by the Fédération des francophones de la Colombie-Britannique to restore French-language employment assistance services in their community.
The court challenges program provided the support that made those victories possible. It's thanks to this program that there are now 42 francophone schools in Alberta, and the same is true of the cases brought to provide French-language education in the territories that are still before the courts today.
It has to be understood that court challenges are not simple matters. They require time and resources over many years. It's the individuals and groups, dedicated people, who dream, for themselves and their children, about being able to live in French, who go to bat in these struggles, showing immense courage and tenacity in defending their community's collective rights. The court challenges program enabled those people to go all the way.
Let me be clear: The fact that our communities are determined and thriving today is largely due to the many cases we have brought as a result of the court challenges program. We owe many of the institutions that enable us to live in French, as the charter promises, to this program.
That is why the FCFA has always defended the court challenges program because we know all too well how closely its existence is connected to what allows us to live in French. The court challenges program is linked to our sense of belonging and our francophone identity.
Our communities are now increasingly diversified. Just as francophones still encounter barriers in exercising their language rights, so are many francophones facing discrimination based on race or sexual orientation and identity. Living in French is a language rights and human rights issue, and the court challenges program is now more important than ever. Which is why we have resolutely come here today to support Bill C-316.
Thank you for your attention. I will be happy to answer your questions.