Commissioner, to continue along the lines of what Ms. O'Neill-Gordon was saying, I would say that, as a New Brunswicker, I'm not that happy.
It will be remembered that, with regard to education in New Brunswick, in the immersion schools, it went from grade 1 to grade 5, and 350 anglophones demonstrated in Fredericton. So I don't know what she can see, as a teacher, that makes her so happy, considering the setback that represents. In the health field, all the equipment is in the anglophone hospitals, whereas the francophone hospitals have nothing at all. We can monitor all the efforts that are made in the health field in New Brunswick.
I may be a little less happy than she is. I know she represents the government, so she has to speak for the government.
When you consider the Roadmap and the funding that has been allocated to immigration, you see that $10 million was allocated to New Brunswick. And yet we were told last week that the announcement was made two years ago, but that the program is only starting—