There has been a clear decrease in the number of people from different provinces who have gone to western Canada. I don't have all the numbers with me, but it seems to me that 700 people arrived in Saskatchewan in 2012. However, I would be surprised if we met with 50 of them.
Again, this comes back to the capacity of a francophone organization in a minority situation to provide services to all citizens. We also need to meet with these people who are in our communities. We don't know them, and vice versa. For the community associations in Regina and Saskatoon, which are the two largest cities in the province, only two individuals have been hired to take care of overall development. By this I mean cultural development and assistance related to health and education services.
As for the research capacity, it is clear that we don't have the means to do the same thing as the other stakeholders. As in any network, we help each other but, at the same time, we have to meet certain requirements of our funders. Often, we cannot get out of this context to provide certain services. As for whether we can reach people who come to our province, I would say that we lack the opportunities to do so.
For a few years, we went to Quebec to recruit with representatives from Saskatchewan. We were there to act as a liaison because they couldn't provide the service in French. We weren't the ones who paid for it; it was officials in Saskatchewan who wanted help. This was the first time that they went. It was a little different for them. Often, provinces like Saskatchewan, with the exception of Quebec, don't have the capacity and don't have the immediate reflex to invite us as stakeholders into the region to participate in meetings like this.
When it comes to recruitment, there are costs associated with it, such as air travel and accommodation. We didn't have the capacity to do these things. If we are there from the beginning to pair employees and employers, there would be a better chance for us to be able to integrate them into the community. If we aren't with them from the start, we risk having them arrive here and be completely outside the community. Too often, we hear people say that they have been in Regina for 10 years and didn't know that there was a francophone community there.
They come to Saskatchewan to work and they integrate. Sometimes they wonder if there really are francophones in the region. I'm surprised every time I visit Quebec City, Montreal or other regions—and I'm there often—and people ask me if I'm francophone. When I tell them I am, they ask me how long I've been in Saskatchewan. I tell them that I was born in Saskatchewan, and people are astonished that I speak French.
People who come mainly from east of Quebec and certain other regions of Canada don't know that there's a francophone minority in the other communities. Because of that, they will not have the normal reflex to learn about whether there are francophones.