I don't want to speak for school divisions, but if you have an English language school that has perhaps 100 students, and the next nearest school might be 50 or 80 kilometres away, the element of even being transported to another school for another program is not necessarily possible. That school community has to take a decision whether they want enriched French or advanced French. It's kind of a one-size-fits-all, but the reality is children learn at different rates. If this school community is going to offer a dual-track program, and that's how you address it, that's a function of having additional resources, and that function is having additional teachers to be able to support that. That's one of the issues and one of the concerns.
You just can't write off 100 children who are in an English language school who require French language instruction to be able to graduate high school. In a sense, it's a barrier to their completing high school, and that's a travesty—