What I want is the investment to increase, which it already did.
Now, if we say to compare it to English and French, I'm not sure what we're talking about in terms of comparisons, because the plan for official languages is around $500 million, I think—the whole plan. In this case, we're close to $1 billion for indigenous languages. It depends on what we compare.
What I want—I don't want to get into too much detail on official languages, as my friend who is the minister there can answer—but what I want is more money.... On that thing of saving three of them—no way. There's no way. Since the start, we've invested in I'd say about a thousand projects. That touches 77 languages.
That's 77, and if we can go higher, we'll go higher, but I think the key for us, regardless, is to transfer the decision to indigenous groups—to first nations, to Métis, to Inuit—where they will sit down and make decisions based on their own needs and what's most urgent: what's more strategic to preserve the language, what's more strategic for the youth, and what's more strategic in the long term.
It's their decision, not ours, and, to be honest, the negotiations are going extremely well and we hope to get deals this year, which would pretty much take all the roles away from PCH and give them to them, because that's how it should be.