Thank you.
I had a discussion with the Commissioner of Official Languages on this very subject recently, in October. It is indeed a challenge that is facing not only Public Safety but all institutions today.
Of course, it comes from a number of sources. There's a heavy reliance on the use of the Internet for research. It isn't just in a technical and an IT capacity. The sources of the information are no longer domestic. We're increasingly able to instantly access information from all over the world and, at the end of the day, there aren't too many countries in the world that are producing it in French--of course, they have no obligation to provide the material to us in the two languages. So that is a challenge.
What we do is make sure that what we produce as an organization--I can't take care of everybody else--is in both languages, and we try to do it as quickly as possible to support this goal. We're always looking for tools—and this is the challenge for the IT community—that are available to make technological information available in both languages, because again, much of the source of this material is not coming domestically.
So it is a challenge, we're aware of it, and we make sure that we are as good as we can be as an organization. But I think we have to recognize that it's going to be a continuing challenge for all of us.