I found it very disappointing when we were told that advocacy, administration, and levels of bureaucracy needed to be cut out. For the last three years, 60% of the time I was the only staff in my office.
We don't believe that advocacy is our major role, because we see ourselves as educators. We're educating all partners about literacy. We're educating not just government but labour, community-based sectors, and health care. We believe 110% that it is a holistic approach; it's the only approach that's going to solve this problem.
Literacy is so multifaceted, with so many layers to it, that there is no silver bullet. Claudette Bradshaw found that when she did her round table discussion before she left. We do advocacy, but we do more awareness. The real role of literacy coalitions is to provide the only piece of infrastructure that exists in a field where there is no infrastructure.
We do everything. We are the direct link for all the community-based organizations when it comes to getting resources. We are the link to resources coming into this province that get spread out to the communities. We are the link for learners finding literacy programs. We are the link for helping resources be developed. If anything happens on a national basis and they're going across the provinces and territories looking for information. we're the first line of contact. We are the ones who sit and share our expertise throughout the year on research and practice. Whatever kind of survey is being done nationally, we're the first line of contact. We're the information source for the province.
So we go way above and beyond advocacy. In fact, all our time right now is being spent on advocacy, and we feel really bad because this is energy that could have been spent much better somewhere else.