Thank you, Mr. Chair.
On behalf of the Northern Ontario Coalition for a French-language University, I'd like to thank you for giving me this opportunity to speak to you about the disastrous situation in which university education in French in Sudbury finds itself at the moment, further to unilateral decisions made by the supposedly bilingual Laurentian University, about the repercussions of its decisions, and the solution looming on the horizon.
The coalition has rallied institutions, individuals and organizations active in a variety of sectors in greater Sudbury and northern Ontario. It was established through PlanifSudbury, a francophone issue table, in response to the current events at Laurentian.
In February, as you have already heard, Laurentian invoked the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act on grounds that it was facing unprecedented financial challenges. This announcement sent a shock wave through our community.
As we feared, on April 12,Laurentian announced that it was eliminating 28 French-language programs, accounting for 40% of the 69 programs that were axed. By doing so, Laurentian failed to meet its commitments to the francophone community and lost its confidence. This measure put an end to dynamic programs that played a role in creating the contemporary Franco-Ontarian identity.
Laurentian University history professor Gaétan Gervais, together with Michel Dupuis and Jacqueline England, created our Franco-Ontarian flag, which was raised for the first time on the University of Sudbury campus in 1975.
Programs in French studies, francophone literature and culture, and theatre, also disappeared. They educated generations of young adults who pursued careers in the arts, education and cultural facilitation. The Théâtre du Nouvel-Ontario, the Éditions Prise de parole publishing company, and the CANO-Musique cooperative were born there. They were the pioneers of what we now recognize as the key components of our community and of French-speaking Ontario as a whole.
By eliminating these programs, Laurentian University is depriving the community of its future leaders. By dismissing all the professors working in these 28 programs, it has stripped the francophone community of the sources of knowledge and research essential to its development.
It is also forcing many young francophones and francophiles to pursue their university studies elsewhere in Ontario, with all of the additional expenses this requires. It intensifies the regional exodus of young people to major cities, a problem all too common already in communities across the country.
These events illustrate the limitations of bilingual educational institutions. As federal transfer payments for official language minorities are never accompanied by an accountability framework, it's not surprising to hear that French money is being used to clear our snow-covered sidewalks.
Recruitment and promotion for French-language programs are not always a priority for bilingual institutions. Laurentian has been slacking off in this regard for several years. Despite all the efforts, resources made available to those in charge of these tasks were laughable. That's why francophones in our region have been demanding the creation of a French-only university for 50 years.
It was in the wake of these events that the University of Sudbury announced on March 11 that it wanted to become a university designed by, for and with francophones. It turned over its two available charters to the francophone and indigenous communities so that they could establish their own institutions. Our coalition is working to achieve this objective and has formulated the recommendations that follow.
First of all, we suggest that all French-language programs at Laurentian,that were not eliminated, be transferred fully and immediately to the University of Sudbury.
We would also like federal transfer payments for official-language minorities that were formerly paid to Laurentian to be immediately transferred to the University of Sudbury so that it can begin planning its curriculum.
In addition, the Ontario government needs to intervene and make sure that Laurentian's 2021-2022 programs go ahead and that it should suspend the announced cuts, so that it can obtain the funding required to keep its creditors at bay, and facilitate the transfer of the programs in question.
We further recommend that a provincial implementation board be given a mandate to establish a structure for the delivery of French-language university education in the North, to determine its programming and to design the working and learning environment for such an institution. This board could study the needs and involve future students in its work as part of the process of developing its programming. The board could submit a transition plan between the interim programs available and the opening of a French-language university for the North.
Lastly, we would like recognition for the importance of the indigenous studies programs offered for over 40 years at the University of Sudbury, and for steps to be taken to support indigenous communities to help them become sustainable.
Let's be clear, we do not want Laurentian to disappear. Our community needs this institution. However, we want a university that is entirely designed by, for and with francophones to stand proudly besideLaurentian.
Thank you. I'd be glad to answer your questions.