If I had a magic formula, I'd be a rich man.
The next generation consists of young people who are under their families' influence for a certain time, but early childhood services definitely have a role to play. I'm going to let my colleagues talk to you about that subject. The availability of those services is definitely a contributing factor in fighting assimilation.
Young people can attend French schools all they want, but when they meet their friends in the street, when they play hockey or when they're in the school yard, they're no longer just under the family's influence, in a preschool or school setting. They're in the community. So they talk about what's part of their world.
We could also expand the subject. For example, if you go to a hotel in Whistler, the French Radio-Canada signal is probably the one from Montreal, with a three-hour time difference. No mention is made of the fact that there is a Francophone community in British Columbia. The Olympic Games will be broadcast in French on RDS, which is a pay TV service, or TQS, which isn't available in British Columbia. I know that the Olympic Committee is working on this issue, but, for the moment, there's nothing.
For someone who wants to talk to a friend, who wants to talk about music or culture, that's fine, but MusiquePlus is no longer part of the cable service in Vancouver. It will eventually be available on Telus, on Web TV, but that too will be a pay TV service combined with other television stations that aren't necessarily family-oriented. So it's not specifically available. The idea is to be able to benefit from things that are available.