Everywhere. For example, only one out of every two francophone students attends our schools, and that's because too few schools have been built. Where I live, in Mississauga, a secondary school already has 850 students and is overpopulated. We cannot build another school for an additional 800 students at the secondary school level. However, this would be very beneficial in South Mississauga.
But the students are now attending English schools, and we know full well what happens when teenagers study in English: they become anglophones; they lose their French. Yes, we need a program in order to legally challenge the fact that we cannot build schools when there are enough students to justify the need. We already have the numbers. We know that 5,000 students could be attending our schools but they are not.
Yes, it would be extremely practical and really important to continue these efforts. Parents do not have the means to invest $25,000, $30,000 or $40,000 in studies, much less the time needed. Before cases are heard by the courts, students are no longer at high school, they're in university.