It’s still done through the province, but I’ll tell you something. Three years ago, I worked with the Province of Nova Scotia, and we were able to put pressure on the Canada Lands Company to buy the land we wanted in downtown Halifax. We had been looking for land for 20 years. It’s very important to know about that option. We need to talk about it at the Fédération nationale des conseils scolaires francophones conference. It's being held this weekend, and you'll be attending. Let’s discuss that, because it’s very important.
Second, I want to congratulate the Province of Ontario, because it gives 68% of the federal funding under the protocol for agreements for minority-language education to francophone school boards and only 32% to anglophone school boards. In that regard, it is the best province in the country. In Nova Scotia, 51% of federal funding goes to francophones and 49% goes to anglophones. In Newfoundland and Labrador, 33% of the funding goes to francophones. You can imagine how difficult that is.
Can we say that, in Ontario, 80% of students who enter kindergarten don’t speak the language of the institution? That’s the case in Nova Scotia.