Some provinces had very strong AJEFs, but they are no longer as strong because they no longer have sufficient funding to keep them going. That is another issue though.
The other issue is that there are no AJEFs in some places. Newfoundland and Labrador, for instance, has never had one. There are many Francophone legal communities, but often their members are so busy giving advice to their community and being involved in other community groups that they don't have the either the time or the energy to create an AJEF and focus on it. They dabble in everything. They do everything and often have to rely on other resources to organize the francophone legal community.
One possible solution is to use the FAJEF, which has tools that can be transferred from one province to another. We have to use the francophone community, the organizations offering general services to the francophone community. We have to use jurists from neighbouring provinces. We have to coordinate the work of all these stakeholders in order to create synergy and sufficiently fertile group for an AJEF to be created later on. This facilitates access to justice in French in those provinces and gives the francophone legal community visibility in that province. This in turn increases the chances that young people will go into legal professions. It is about creating synergy.