Yes, of course.
This actually gives me an opportunity to finish what I was saying earlier. Without that networking, nothing would have happened. The health care sector is a fairly technical, specific area. Had there not been networks there to act as a catalyst or foundation, a rallying point for the people actively involved in ensuring that health care services could be provided in French in Ontario, nothing would have happened. We would have services that lack oxygen, we would have health care professionals with nothing in their environment to remind them that they are Francophone, that they should be proud of being Francophone and proud to be able to provide services in French — in other words, that this is value-added.
The institutions are doing nothing to make people aware of that reality — nothing at all. In fact, as far as they are concerned, it's a problem.
But the winds of change are now blowing. If we weren't there, the situation would be really sad, because the health care sector is comparable to the mining industry, I'd say: it's Anglophone, very Anglophone. In leading sectors of the economy, such as technology and international research, everything is done in English.