Well, I am very concerned about the language issue, Mr. Tilson, particularly at the 55-to-64 level.
I mentioned that I was citizenship adviser to the Ontario government for a while. I was in charge of services to English teachers for immigrants, and then spent five years on the island of Borneo with the Canadian International Development Agency setting up an English program for Chinese schools. Really, I've had eight years' experience in this area.
We do know that learning English and having competency in English is critical to how well someone does in the workforce. That's one of the main reasons that it costs us $30 billion a year, because immigrants are not doing as well and are not earning as much as they did in the past.
I think the erosion of the English-language requirement is a very bad move, frankly. I think we could have a much longer discussion. As I've spent eight years in an English-language training career, I have a lot to say on it, frankly.