These days, I believe that the anglophone community in Quebec is affected in a number of ways. First, there is a general lack of understanding of how fragile the community is, especially with regard to established anglophone communities off the island of Montreal. The francophone majority tends to see Montreal as the one and only centre of the anglophone community and to compare the services provided in Montreal to those provided to francophones in Sudbury or Saint Boniface.
If you make the comparison with the situation of anglophone communities in Sherbrooke, Quebec City or the Gaspé, you get a much more balanced picture. In a qualitative study done by Statistics Canada in 2006, it was even discovered that people in the anglophone community in Quebec were rather pessimistic as to their future, even with the significant institutions and services at their disposal. On the other hand, people in minority communities outside Quebec were more optimistic, even with fewer services and institutions, or ones that were just beginning to develop.
I think that the explanation lies in the path the anglophone community is on. If you compare the size and economic strength of the anglophone community today with the situation 50 years ago, you clearly see that there has been a transformation. By contrast, since 1982, the establishment of francophone schools, school boards and health services all across the country has given people in the francophone community the feeling that they have made progress. They are more optimistic than anglophones.
The two groups have common challenges, especially an aging population. There is also an exodus of rural young people to the cities. However, I can attest to the fact that there are young people who left the Gaspé or the Magdalen Islands to go to university or into the military and then, as 30-somethings, they decide to move back home to start families.
The anglophone community on the Magdalen Islands has an organization called the Council for Anglophone Magdalen Islanders. Two members of the board are young women who came back to the islands after university. They are now financial advisors for financial institutions. I know that is a little anecdotal, but there is a visible change in terms of the leadership of those communities.