Thank you. I'll begin and perhaps my colleague can continue.
Having worked in education across the province, I can say that you are entirely right about Toronto. There is obviously a greater concentration of francophones in eastern Ontario today, which makes some things easier. However, from the moment you move away from eastern Ontario, that is to say beyond Renfrew or Kingston, you get into remote communities. I often like to say that French-speaking Ontario represents, in the province, all the characteristics of the minority of Canada as a whole. There are remote areas and areas where there is a high concentration.
I often like to say that the francophone community in the greater metropolitan Toronto area is like a rural francophone community. Even though it's a large community, the francophones there are isolated, hence the importance of networking, of creating occasions and of expanding the francophone area in order to promote the language.
There is another kind of isolation in Windsor. One of the main projects of the Assemblée de la francophonie is to create networks, opportunities to work together and to get to know one another, to go home and be proud of who we are and to take our place.
There are initiatives virtually everywhere, but the challenge of distance and isolation remains intact, even in Ontario, where there is a large francophone community. There are francophone areas in the northern part of the province. Hearst, for example, is a dynamic community. Some people call it "Little Quebec", but we say that they're Franco-Ontarians. They've been established there for a number of generations now. There is a francophone cultural, community and economic life there. All those people are contributing to the vitality of their community.
There are examples in Kingston and Penetang, in particular. I'm thinking of La Clé d'la Baie and the AFNOO in Thunder Bay. There are francophone organizations that are becoming partners of provincial governments, and sometimes of the federal government, in providing services in both languages and serving the francophone community.
As regards accountability, these communities have helped meet certain challenges. There are always challenges, in particular the challenge of keeping this area alive.
We were talking about community radio and Radio-Canada. There are weaknesses at Radio-Canada, as my colleague mentioned. I live in eastern Ontario, and when I visit Toronto or Sudbury, I see that local stations really reflect Ontario and are part of everyday life. Although I'm little older than my colleague, I wake up to Radio-Canada. Here in eastern Ontario, Radio-Canada serves both sides of the river, and they may have forgotten us. That's the challenge we're facing.
To go back to the Franco-Ontarian dynamic, we're dispersed and diversified, given the origins of our community. Bringing us together and expanding the francophone space remains a challenge. Our communities are alive and creating events. A whole range of events has been promoted through investments by Canadian Heritage, in particular. The federal investment under the Roadmap has had a domino effect: the Government of Ontario has also become accountable through certain initiatives. We're creating promising partnerships to expand the francophone space and promote linguistic duality.