There are different kinds of challenges, I would say. Some challenges are actually common to the whole population, in the sense that you're struggling with people leaving some regions and moving to bigger centres, for example. That will affect both majority- or minority-speaking communities per se.
That being said, we are much more interested in making sure that we focus on the minority communities per se. That's our mandate. It's not that the other issues are unimportant, but other programs and departmental initiatives try to deal with the rest of the issues.
We do have issues, therefore, that are specific to minority communities that are addressed as such. There issues are part of a broader trend that we're trying to address as well at the government level.
Of course, when you're dealing with accessing employment with revenue levels and so on and so forth, we observe that people who are bilingual are actually doing better in general, and that's at the individual level. In going from community level to individual level, we observe statistically that those people are usually faring better in finding employment and getting better remuneration.