Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I wanted to go back quickly to a committee request. Following the submission of a partial and incomprehensible electronic document from Canadian Heritage two weeks ago, we asked for a complete and comprehensible document. Following the meeting, could you tell us where that situation stands so that we can see whether there has been any progress?
Thank you and welcome to each of our guests. You represent everything necessary to prepare a francophone citizen to participate fully and completely in this society.
My first questions are for Mr. McRoberts and Ms. Lalonde.
If we are still to believe in linguistic duality in this country, it seems to me the leader should be the Parliament of Canada. We are having all kinds of problems these days, first with the many appointments of unilingual anglophones, which I won't go back over, but you are aware of them as well as I am.
I also have some serious questions about all the language programs there are for public servants in Ottawa who want to learn a second language in order to rise through the ranks in the course of their career. It seems to me, first of all, that the amounts invested are colossal. Second, it's too late. Furthermore, learning French in Ottawa, for example, in an environment where one can work in English, doesn't really give us an opportunity to practise it.
Unless I'm mistaken, you obtained a modest contribution under the Roadmap. Could we include in the next Roadmap a mandate to train the future workers of this Parliament so they are bilingual when they apply, and not subsequently? Could that kind of mandate be assigned to our universities?