Absolutely. In terms of your question, I think that capital of attraction and retention of communities and official language minority communities is exactly the reason an immigrant would necessarily choose to go away from a metropolitan region. Because you're right: that's where the opportunities exist. But its support networks are there and services are in place, and regional associations in different regions of Quebec, in particular, are able to offer services that better support them. That would be a strategy to have immigrants in different regions--other than Montreal.
In particular, Citizenship and Immigration Canada is working with the QCGN and with a professor at the University of Sherbrooke who is looking at specifically this issue in four regions of Quebec. They're analyzing the capital of attraction and retention of immigrants that the English-speaking community has by offering its support system and its network. Soon we'll be able to present an evidence base on that issue and give you more concrete strategies based on that.