Mr. Alary, I appreciate that you raised the childcare issue.
Ms. Boucher said earlier that the people in her riding were glad to receive the $100. This amounts to $1200 a year. Let me tell you that in my riding as well, people are glad to get this money. On the other hand, it does not solve the childcare problem.
You mentioned the fact that anglophones are ahead of us, that they have childcare centres in their schools and that we are behind. In your opinion, how could we quickly catch up?
Mr. Simard raised the issue. In fact, everyone is discussing it. We agree that parents whose children go to a childcare centre in a francophone school will be more likely to enrol them in that school, because they are already there and they are used to the place. This is a gateway for the children, but it also spares the parents from having to send them to an English-speaking school.
Currently, when the child comes home, it spends an hour or two with parents who speak more English than French. This is how assimilation goes on. The $1200 paid by their government is more than welcome. In fact, if the sum were $4000, no one would complain, but that is not the point. The point is, we need childcare.