I think there's often a misunderstanding about the challenges the English minority in Quebec faces. When people think of the English minority, they tend to think primarily of the people in Montreal. There are 600,000 anglophones in Montreal. If you have a critical mass of 600,000, it is possible to have employment and social institutions, and there's no problem in maintaining your educational institutions.
The other 380,000 anglophones are scattered around the vast territory of Quebec. Those communities face much greater challenges and the challenges are very similar. They're challenges that are faced by francophone minorities in western Canada.
It's an aging population. It's a population that is particular, in that the anglophone seniors in Quebec are people who made their living when it was not as necessary to speak French as it is now. They now find themselves needing to deal with social services, the hospitals, and the state, and they often don't have the language skills to be able to do that. So there's a particular kind of vulnerability that seniors in Quebec have, which is one of the reasons why we produced a document that pulled together all the federal services available for anglophone seniors in Quebec.