Thank you.
Yes, that funding is vital in order to truly be competitive and meet the needs of Franco-Manitobans and those who choose French immersion programs.
To give you an idea, I can tell you that, over the past six years, enrolment in the school system has gone up 1.4%. Compare that with 2.4% for the Franco-Manitoban school division, or FMSD, and 9.8% for French immersion enrolment. Nevertheless, the dropout rate between kindergarten and grade 12 is pretty high, and the same goes for the period between grade 12 and Université de Saint‑Boniface.
We have to build that French education continuum, right up to Université de Saint‑Boniface, which needs to be the target destination. We need to be able to work with the school boards on linguistic security issues, among other things. We have to work on a host of issues.
I know you've talked a lot about the teacher shortage. In Manitoba, Université de Saint‑Boniface is responsible for training francophone teachers, and we've actually increased that capacity in the past few years. Three years ago, the university received a one-time federal investment of $350,000 to support a cohort of up to 70 students, up from the 35 or 40 we had. Then the province stepped in with funding, and in the past two years, the number of students is up to 90. The university received recurrent funding from the province to achieve that target.
Federal funding is often leveraged, but there are other areas we need to focus on. This falls under the official languages banner, and that's why we need federal funding.