Thank you, Mr. Chair. I'm going to split my time with Daniel Petit.
The first point I want to make is that when I look at the funding breakdown across the country, I see that the four western provinces receive about $11 million, groups in Ontario receive about $5 million, and groups in New Brunswick receive about $3 million. What seems particularly odd to me is that there are 200,000 francophones across the four western provinces, yet they receive $11 million in support, while 500,000 francophones in Ontario receive only $5 million in support and 250,000 francophones in New Brunswick receive $3 million in support. So on the one hand we have a group of francophones in the prairies, 200,000 strong, who receive $11 million, while in Ontario and New Brunswick there are 800,000 francophones who receive $8 million--in other words, only one-fifth of the support per capita that francophones in the four western provinces are receiving.
That seems to be a very incongruous and disproportionate amount of support for francophones in certain regions of the country and not in others. It seems to me we're putting francophone communities in New Brunswick and Ontario at a disadvantage vis-à-vis those communities in the four western provinces.
My second point is that when I look at the funding for the anglophone community in Quebec, I find a similar pattern. There are 1.4 million anglophones in Quebec, and they receive only $4 million in funding. Maybe it's because we don't think allophones are really anglophones, and they don't deserve support as a minority community, in more than one sense of the word, in the province of Quebec. I hope that's not the case, because I think when we're looking at funding minority-language communities, we're looking through the lens of dividing the Canadian population into anglophones and francophones; we're not playing the game of anglophones, francophones, and then allophones, but the allophones really don't deserve the support because they're not really of the two official languages. I would hope that in the province of Quebec, or elsewhere in the country, that in calculating the distribution of funds for minority-language communities, the allophone population, for example, in Montreal, would be treated as an anglophone community in a minority situation.
So these numbers seem completely unbalanced in terms of support for official language communities, and in particular for official language francophone communities in Ontario and New Brunswick and for anglophone minority communities in Quebec.