Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
To begin, I'd like to thank Ministers O'Connor and Verner for agreeing to meet with us on such short notice this morning to discuss these important issues.
I'd like to start by telling you that I served with the Canadian Forces for 20 years. I started as an Officer cadet at 17 years of age, and I retired as a lieutenant-colonel.
It's necessary to explain this so that you know I have lived the military system at all steps, from being a junior officer right through to being a senior officer. Unlike my colleagues, especially those across the table, I have a thorough understanding of the system and how it worked and how it did not work.
I've been sitting here listening to my colleagues, and as well-intentioned as they may be, they clearly do not understand the military. They do not understand what makes the military unique, and they don't understand why the previous official languages policy did not work in the military. I look at Monsieur Nadeau. He spoke of many things, but his experience with the military lasted less than one day.
I'd like to tell you that the old system did not work—and it's not just me saying that.
The former Official Languages Commissioner, Dyane Adam, reviewed the former government's bilingualism policy and was very disappointed with the findings. The new Official Languages Commissioner has also described the recent bilingualism policy as a failure.
There's a considerable amount of money being spent on second-language training, $20 million annually, all for minimal results: the wrong candidates were chosen and were not trained to high enough levels, and were assigned to the wrong places. So yes, it was a total failure.
What does our military teach its soldiers and its officers in situations like this? If something is not working, then make the necessary changes in order to accomplish the mission. If plan A is a failure, then develop and implement a plan B. Having listened to the opposition, the opposition says no, continue with plan A, pour more resources into plan A. It's plan A or nothing, even if it's failing.
There's no sense in this. We have had two Commissioners of Official Languages tell us that the system put in place by previous governments was a failure, so let's make the necessary changes in order to accomplish the goal.
Could you remind us what was ineffective and inappropriate about the universal approach and warranted the implementation of the current transformation model?