I think that's part of the provincial strategy. They've targeted markets and this strategy is very much based on employment for immigrants.
Jobs are obviously a concern for us. One of our challenges is that a lot of Francophone immigrants who come here don't speak English. One of the first things that we have to do—and this is a bit ironic—is to ensure that they learn English so that they can work, in some cases. However, we're trying to put a welcoming structure in place that will ensure they choose to live in the community and send their children to French school, and so on. A lot of Francophones work in English: that's a fact.
If we stopped at the obstacles, challenges and all those things, we wouldn't increase immigration. Our task is to address these issues, to ensure that we make the right choices, to ensure that these people have jobs in one of the official languages, that they make the right choices in order to live in the community and that they stay there.
One of our biggest challenges is housing. We want to work with the federal government on this issue as well. Housing is a very big problem in Saint-Boniface, where most of the Francophones live. They have to go and live in Anglophone neighbourhoods. That's a problem we're addressing. The key to success is not to be afraid and to act.