It is a big issue. We have what we call early childhood, la petite enfance. We do a lot of work with that, because research has shown us, and it's well documented, that it is a time to learn languages. The best time is before you go to primary school, so we put a lot of effort there. For French youngsters, if they have to go to day care in English, it doesn't help them to learn their first basic language. So having French day care would be the best thing. And also helping the parents, when the child goes to school, to have enough basic education themselves to teach the child in French. That is also the challenge we face in the monetary environment.
We do offer it. Actually, in the west we call it family literacy. That's all we can offer right now. We don't have enough money or support to deliver adult education, which we should be doing. This is what we need across the country. Right now, we see a lot of French from New Brunswick and Quebec going to work in Ontario or Alberta because there is work there, and they need to follow up on their training and, again, find that training out there.
I just want to say that I do applaud the funding of post-secondary education. What I meant is that it doesn't help the clientele we get from among those six million people. We need to reach 58,000 adults within the next 10 years to make a little dent, and we don't have the money to do that. We have only 1% of that.