Yes, that is a task that falls to several stakeholders. The Canadian Association of Second Language Teachers has worked and co-operated with the Council of Ministers of Education for many years. However, if we want a national consensus, the Department of Canadian Heritage, the Council of Ministers of Education and associations such as CASLT have to meet and discuss the issue.
However, we do not have the upper hand in those discussions. We can encourage the various parties to try to achieve that, but we will really need the federal government's money and the co-operation of the councils of ministers in order to put the issue of second languages on the agenda.