Thank you. That is a very good question.
The challenge for francophone entrepreneurs in urban areas is that it is hard for them to access funding for their businesses, both for start-ups and to secure working capital and liquidity.
Some specific communities have access to several programs, such as the Canadian Youth Business Foundation, programs for women entrepreneurs and those intended for aboriginal people. It is also possible to obtain funding in rural areas from Community Futures.
However, it is very hard if you are a francophone established in an urban area. You can go to a bank, but you have to do that in English. Some banks and credit cooperatives provide French-language services, but, to file a loan application, you have to complete documents in English and, as a general rule, submit a business plan in English as well. That is a challenge for some entrepreneurs who are not sufficiently proficient in English, and it is also a challenge in day-to-day communications.
The government could facilitate matters for us by requiring the chartered banks to design French-language forms that could be submitted in French outside Quebec.
I also think it would be worthwhile to work together with the Business Development Bank of Canada to facilitate francophones' access to financing.