Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Federal funding to Quebec represents a substantial fraction of university budgets. We're talking about some $900 million a year, which is a lot of money. The federal government invests in English-language universities to a disproportionate degree.
The federal government also provides funding through the Canada-Québec Agreement for Minority-Language Education and Second-Language Instruction to anglicize programs offered at French-language educational institutions. That money is therefore used, for example, to establish English-language programs at francophone CEGEPs and universities. So it seems to me the original mission of that funding has been changed in order to anglicize French-language universities and educational institutions.
The federal government has also invested heavily in Quebec's health system in order to anglicize services provided. Between 2008 and 2013, $32 million was granted to McGill University to establish a program to train health workers to provide health services in English in defiance of the Charter of the French Language, which theoretically guarantees the right to work in French in Quebec.
I also took a look at bilingual and francophone universities outside Quebec through the prism of institutional completeness. I found that, in Ontario, for example, approximately 3% of the revenues of French-language and bilingual universities came from French-language programs, whereas, based on mother tongue, francophones constitute 4.7% of the population of Ontario. French-language educational institutions are thus chronically underfunded in that province.
That's also the case in Alberta, where French-language educational institutions are 80% underfunded.
As we establish profiles for all the provinces, we realize that all French-language educational institutions in Canada are underfunded, including those in Quebec.
In so saying, I don't mean the federal government is responsible for this situation, but rather that, through its investments in research and certain agreements such as the Québec Agreement for Minority-Language Education and Second-Language Instruction, it invests a great deal of money that doesn't support French-language educational institutions.
I think that funding invested to support the vitality of English could simply be withdrawn and invested in French-language educational institutions outside Quebec. The $50 million paid annually to support the vitality of English in Quebec could be invested in educational institutions outside Quebec because English has no need of it in Quebec. If you're looking for money, that's where you'll find it. Here's at least $50 million that you could get your hands on in short order.