I believe Mr. Rosenberg mentioned in his presentation our network of official languages coordinators. Every quarter, representatives from our missions, our 12 regional offices and every division at headquarters meet to take stock of where official languages stand. And each year, one of those meetings is dedicated solely to a discussion with representatives of linguistic minority communities and their input.
In October 2010, we asked Ms. Bossé, the director general of the Fédération des communautés francophones et acadienne, to speak to the network. She spent a lot of time discussing internal concerns regarding Canadian Heritage's roadmap for linguistic duality. We were also able to identify needs in three areas.
First, there is education: our linguistic minority communities need to be supported. Within the department, we have a program to address that need, designed to carry out promotion and education efforts abroad, to attract francophone and anglophone students to regions with linguistic minority communities. They are on board with this initiative, as are the Association des universités de la francophonie canadienne and the Réseau des cégeps et des collèges francophones du Canada. We had an excellent discussion with Ms. Bossé on the matter.
The other area with a high level of participation—