First of all, New Brunswick is a province that does not take in a lot of immigrants. Last year, there were 2,300 immigrants, 2,000 of whom have integrated into the anglophone community.
We have minor internal problems to solve because bilingual organizations were previously created. However, everything bilingual leans, somewhat like the Tower of Pisa, toward the anglophone side. So historically, the immigrant intake societies have been quite bilingual, and therefore anglophone. There is a bad reflex whereby even francophone African refugees are transferred to English-language schools. We're in the process of resolving that internally. That's why we need this kind of program so that we can take them in ourselves.