You asked whether this service is now available in Alberta. I must admit that I am not sure. I'll look into it. I know that it's one of our projects, but I could not tell you whether it is truly available to the public at this moment. I will check.
In terms of the support for minority language communities, we have dealt with each community. We've worked with a network in each area, because the needs have not been the same. In Alberta that was one of the needs they had flagged. In the Yukon, they flagged a different need. In New Brunswick and parts of Quebec, they have flagged other needs.
I think one reason the commissioner gave us an A in this area of actually supporting official language minority communities was that we didn't assume we knew what those communities wanted in each case. We actually worked with those communities to say, where's the gap?
Where is the gap in your province, in your community? What do you want? We can't do everything, but we can ask what the priorities are, can't we?
If I've understood, in reading the commissioner's report, I think the projects are very strong, but the other thing is that these are not Health Canada's ideas; they are the ideas of the community, which gave us—