Thank you for the question. I guess we can demonstrate it. We can demonstrate that through the activities we participate in and support and engage in across the province.
I'm not going to speak from an economic development or from the education perspective, but from a realistic participatory.... There are communities across Quebec where people engage in community. They engage in community organizations, just as they may engage in school support or in parishes or churches and whatnot. Our organization can demonstrate healthy communities across the province.
I guess if I were to speak for them, which is my responsibility, our member organizations require the same input, the same support as minority language groups, as we aspire to look for at the provincial level, so it's a matter of ensuring the proper funding.
It might sound like a lot to provide $120,000, for example, to a regional organization. I can speak to that because I was president of one for a period of time. There are challenges of maintaining identity with respect to funding. Maintaining visibility and an office and all of that comes tremendously from the volunteer component.
To answer your question, you demonstrate that through volunteerism. The English-speaking community has demonstrated across the province its ability to participate, if you want to, in community activities that are not identifiable as anglophone, as English-speaking activities, as well. I think that's the concept of community vitality that we aspire to. It's to participate in community vitality at the local level as part of that community.