It's a very important question because it's not just a question of attracting French-speaking immigrants to contribute to the vitality of French-language communities, but also retaining them there so that we don't lose them to secondary migration. According to IRCC's evaluation of the immigration to official-language minority communities initiative, communities outside Quebec gained more French-speaking principal applicants from Quebec than they lost between 2003 and 2014, but that's not enough. As I said on March 2 this year, the ministers responsible for immigration and la Francophonie endorsed a federal-provincial-territorial action plan for increased francophone immigration outside of Quebec. This plan will target areas of collaboration, including accessibility of services in French—this is really important—and the development of inclusive francophone minority communities to retain newcomers. It's about having the facilities and the capacity and the critical mass of newcomers in a particular community so they can be retained through the provision of those services, but also providing the services in French to attract them in the first place.
A lot is being done. There's money to make sure that we make those investments. Horizontal policy coordination within the department through the francophone immigration hub will certainly help in that regard.