Thank you, dear colleague.
Orleans has the highest concentration of Francophones in the City of Ottawa. The proposed boundary change could remove francophone communities from the electoral riding of Orleans. They are strongly attached to their identity and their francophone schools, which we are still building. In Orleans, we also have the highest concentration of young students in francophone schools. The francophone aspect must therefore be taken into account.
I just want to come back to one point. At the very least, in your final proposal, I ask you to leave St‑Joseph Boulevard in our riding. It's at the heart of life and history in Orleans, as well as our Francophonie. I'm thinking of the Société franco-ontarienne du patrimoine et de l'histoire d'Orléans, or SFOPHO. It's a heritage society that set up historical plaques all over the community of Orleans. They highlight points of historical interest, like the Orleans Fruit Farm I mentioned earlier.
I therefore ask the committee and the commission to take this essential aspect into account in the final proposal. By arbitrarily dividing St‑Joseph Boulevard, a boulevard that is quite central to our feeling of belonging as Francophones and as proud Franco-Ontarians, you're taking away a rural component, which mostly includes land.
I beg you, dear colleagues, to at least take into account the importance of St‑Joseph Boulevard, which is part of our cultural and linguistic identity and could remain in the riding of Orleans.
If it is absolutely imperative to cut down the riding of Orleans to balance the ridings' demographic weight, I ask the committee not to divide St‑Joseph Boulevard. That way, the riding could keep the lands, institutions and landmarks that represent it, as well as maintain its link with the Greenbelt. They are an undeniable part of our proud heritage.