I think it is important for them to come back to discuss this motion. I have nothing against them personally, but I feel some contradiction in the air.
For example, from Ms. Forand's testimony, it was very clear that the administrative structure of the Atlantic region was unilingual. You will recall that I asked her whether it was unilingual French. When she said that it was unilingual English, she was smiling.
Now one of the directors of Service Canada in the Atlantic region has sent a message saying that that was a mistake and the services are bilingual. That is according to Michael Alexander.
Let's not mix up services and administrative structure. We were not talking about the services, we were talking about the administration. There was an administration in New Brunswick, one in Nova Scotia, one in Newfoundland and one in Prince Edward Island. Those four administrations were centralized but the players changed. I realized that the administration was anglophone when I contacted it. The director of the Newfoundland office went so far as to call me to say that she would prefer me not to call their offices any more, but to go directly to the minister. Anglophones can deal with the administration but francophones have to deal with the minister. It makes no sense.
But Ms. Forand seems to say that she made a mistake, meaning that it is apparently bilingual. I would like her to say that publicly. She said publicly that it is unilingual English. So let's have her come and tell us publicly that the administration in the Atlantic region, with its 500,000 francophones, is bilingual. I see it as very important for her to come and tell us that as quickly as possible in order to clarify the matter. Otherwise, it will keep going in the papers and on television and people will be talking about two different things.
I think that francophones in the Atlantic region need to be reassured regarding services and regarding the administration. We need to know and Canadians need to know. Otherwise, people are going to get up in arms about something that the government has already decided, that it is bilingual. So let it say so; it is as simple as that. They always talk about the services, but they have said nothing about the administration. The question asked here was very clear. It was about the administrative structure, the directors of the employment insurance offices, the directors of Service Canada and the directors of the Canada Summer Jobs program. All the people we dealt with before are now anglophone. She also said that it took two years to learn another language. But these are new positions. So why have unilingual people been put into positions that should be bilingual?
I think it is very important for her to come and explain the differences between the two public statements.