If a French-speaking community wants to play a role in their community, whether they're a city, they're a municipality, or what have you, then that should be at the same level as the federal government. Everything should be bilingual. They should work on a way to do that as much as possible.
If there's a community that is 100% anglophone and there are no francophones who will say that they want to be a part of it, that they need to be included in it—for example, where I come from, there's nobody who is going to step up and do that—then there should be something to indicate that if it's not going to be totally bilingual, there needs to be something in there that demonstrates that we're a bilingual country. It could be somebody who speaks French. One of the options could be to have it fully bilingual. It could be somebody who comes and shares their experiences on how important it is to have both languages in our country, on how that duality is reflected and what we can learn from a culture and from our different realities. It could be something along those lines, but something definitely has to touch bilingualism in every single project that takes place across the country.