You were asking about future challenges in health care. We face every possible challenge you can imagine.
Our job is to ensure that ultimately we have proper health care services for people in their own language, and there is no doubt that this is urgent.
If a person is French speaking and ill, it is no easy matter to go somewhere and ask for healthcare and to end up speaking a language that is not one's own and trying to explain or discuss matters to ensure that one gets proper health care. If there is a translation service, there is a danger of misunderstanding. It is also no easy matter to consult a doctor and to explain the problem through another person. That is not what we feel like doing when we are lying on a stretcher. So, as I say, we face challenges.
We want to give priority to the west coast for a number of reasons, one being that the population there is very old, as I was saying earlier. The situation is quite alarming. We think that if we can succeed on the west coast, we could definitely set up other French-speaking locations in the rest of the province, and the west coast would become our model.