Thank you for mentioning the aerospace industry.
As you know, I come from Manitoba where we have a very strong aerospace industry as well. We just met with them in fact yesterday. They were on the Hill. It is one of the industries that frankly is really putting Canada on the map. They do need people who are equipped to work in both languages. It benefits their industry.
We all know, as members of this committee, how knowing both national languages helps us to reach out. Trade is improved. Our ability to connect with people is improved. Our connections lead to long-term plans and contracts that benefit our economy.
In our efforts to educate young people in these languages, we do provide funding. We have bilateral protocol agreements with the provinces and the territories. It's about $259 million every year that is provided. We also have partnerships with le Réseau des cégeps et des collèges francophones du Canada, which also assists in making sure that we provide the best possible quality education for these students.
We have to work in concert, obviously, with some of the other universities and colleges as well. I have to mention that MITT, in Manitoba, recently partnered with la Division scolaire franco-manitobaine to bring students to do their first year in the trades together. It's a technical college, but they're bringing in grade 12 students. It's an innovative process.
These are the types of things that we see happening. Partnerships are what we're all about.