Yes, agreed; I look at the pass rate for anglophones and it's 3%. In other words, only three out of a hundred people who are in the executive level of government actually pass the proficiency test to be exempt in the second language. These are people with a lot of educational background--with a minimum of, I would assume, a bachelor's degree--and yet only three in a hundred can pass one of the basic tests in the Government of Canada.
Again, what has your organization done over the years, and what have your colleagues in other organizations done, to liaise with universities to tell them they're not producing the graduates we need for executive level positions in the Government of Canada?