I will try to answer your question, Madame. The situation of Anglophones in Quebec is different from that of Acadians or of Francophones living outside Quebec. Anglophones living in large urban centres— Montreal for example—manage quite easily to obtain services in their language. When they live in more remote areas, their experience is quite similar to that of Francophones. And relative to the people around them—if we refer for example to the Gaspé and the Côte-Nord—they are less educated than the average. This also reflects to some degree the experiences of Francophone minority communities. So the situation is the same, except in large urban centres like Montreal where Anglophones are able to obtain services in English.
There are one million Francophones living in Quebec, and a million people living outside Quebec whose first language is French. The funding for Francophones is greater, however, because their situation still ultimately more problematic than that of Anglophones, since not all Anglophones live in remote areas.
A recent CROP poll—conducted I think in 2005 and organized by Anglophone groups—showed that only 48 per cent of Anglophones in Quebec are able to access the services they need in their mother tongue. So there are always major shortages in Quebec, whatever one might think.