Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
We remain concerned over symptoms that arise over official languages issues. Perhaps it would be a good idea to get to the bottom of this.
Perhaps it would also be a good idea to consider a third language policy. I spoke about this last year, at a committee meeting during which you were introduced.
If we could examine a policy of trilingualism, in some ways we might address a number of issues that you touched upon in your testimony. It would be a policy where two of the three official languages would be a requirement for graduation from high school, and the third one would be the student's choice. So if you're an aboriginal, it could be a native language. If you were somebody living in Vancouver, it could be Chinese or Japanese. If you were living in Montreal, it could be Spanish.
This policy would obviously be to the benefit of national unity. It would address some of the foundational problems we have with respect to accessing health care for people in both official languages. If you were in the armed forces or the RCMP, it would address a lot of the other problems we might have. It would be good for international commerce. It would be good for cultural diversity
I think it's something you might look at as you go forward in your role in the next six years.