You guessed right, Mr. Chair.
I just wanted to come back to something that Ms. O'Neill-Gordon said and what Mr. Godin has just said on the question of what young people want. It's true, but the parliamentarians of all political parties must want it too to make it happen with legislation that is complied with and implemented. We must ensure that the government in place, regardless of its party stripes, has the will to ensure that French is a language on equal footing with English in all federal institutions. This is very important. We cannot keep putting it off to the next generation. The act has existed for 40 years.
I have a question for you, Mr. Fraser. I'm using a specific example, but it could apply to a more general situation. The contribution agreement between the Department of Canadian Heritage and VANOC is a document that was signed. It is only in English. We were the ones, on the Standing Committee on Official Languages, who asked to have a copy in French. You may recall that the government was reluctant to distribute it to the media, but it did agree to give it to the committee. It could have given it to the media as well, because we would have made headway more quickly.
The contribution agreements were drafted in English only for an organization called VANOC, which was responsible, among other things—even though it did not honour this responsibility—for the equality of French and English in the organization of the Olympic Games, which have an impact throughout the world. Is this normal, or should we point out to the government that, at all times, contribution agreements should be drafted in both official languages?