I was not planning on speaking again, but I want to respond to what I have just heard.
The reality is that people have left northern New Brunswick. You said it yourself, Mr. Dubé. If things are going well in Moncton, it is because people there have taken charge of their own lives with the help of an action plan. The government was part of those efforts. However, it was nowhere to be found in northern New Brunswick. The government supported the arrival of call centres for businesses such as Xerox in Moncton, Air Canada in Saint-John, and CIBC in Fredericton. There is also the Bank of Montreal in Moncton. I can guarantee you that, if the government had had those institutions set up shop in the northern part of the province, on the Acadian Peninsula, we would not be having these problems today.
I do not accept that people from northern New Brunswick are all illiterate and that nobody knows how to read or write. The reality is that 1,300 students graduate each year, but those students go off to the Université de Moncton and do not return home. People in the northern part of the province are not all illiterate. If you went to Moncton and asked people where they came from, you would not have enough fingers to count everyone from northern New Brunswick.
Mr. Dubé, do you agree with me?