Yes.
First, at Hôpital général Saint-Boniface, where there is a language bank, they do simultaneous translation in some 60 languages in one year. That's somewhat a reflection of the nature of Winnipeg.
However, we note that, with heightened immigration, a lot of old stock Franco-Manitobans are functionally very bilingual. If they go to an emergency room or health service and don't get service in French, the health service obviously takes precedence and their conversation will essentially be conducted in English.
A lot of immigrants don't speak English. In health situations, their presence in the community creates a demand that we weren't really experiencing perhaps five years ago.