Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Just as a point of information, I think that somebody asked before whether or not the public sector unions had been consulted. My understanding is that they weren't, but at the same time they also never requested to be consulted. They never submitted anything and they did not ask to be part of the consultations. I just want to put that on the record.
Monsieur Lord, you referred to one of the challenges I think we will be facing as a society, and that is the increasing diversity of the country. Statistics Canada last week published a study indicating that one in six Canadians now is what they term not just a minority but a visible minority. So we're going to have a challenge and work to do in reconciling this increasing diversity--what some call this galloping heterogeneity--with the country's most cherished institutions, such as bilingualism, the need to have two official languages.
I've always thought that one potential solution is for the governments to work with provinces and territories to create a system where we graduate students who are not just bilingual but trilingual. Two of the three languages would be our official languages and the third language would be one of the student's choice. This would be a way to preserve our institutions like bilingualism, the need to know both official languages, while acknowledging the country's increasing diversity. As a first-generation Canadian whose father was Chinese and whose mother was European, I can tell you from first-hand experience that we're not inventing the wheel here. In Europe most students have knowledge of three languages, if not four, and in many parts of Asia, such as Hong Kong or Singapore, most people know at least two languages, if not three.
I would like your thoughts on an idea like that.