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Action Plan for Official Languages

Action Plan for Official Languages

7. CONCLUSION


For any Action Plan to be successful, two ingredients are required: specific objectives and corresponding resources. The Action Plan for Official Languages combines these two ingredients. Annex B indicates the resources that will be available to various departments to enable them to attain the objectives set out in this policy statement.


In all, the Government of Canada will allocate $751.3 million to this five-year Action Plan. This will surely have a ripple effect among other governments, the private sector, communities and other partners, prompting them to initiate complementary action.


But the strength of this Plan lies not so much in the funding per se but in the entire set of measures it includes. Each one taken in isolation would not have the desired impact. But, combined within an integrated plan, with the contribution of communities, the provinces and territories and all Canadians, these measures complement one another and create a synergy for success.


If the Plan succeeds, all Canadians will benefit. Within 10 years, the proportion of eligible students who attend French-language educational institutions will rise from 68% to 80%. Anglophone and Francophone minorities will benefit from better public services in their own language and will be better supported for their development.


If the Plan succeeds, the proportion of high school graduates with a command of both our official languages will rise from 24% to 50%. When one out of two high school graduates can speak both our official languages, and in fact some of them will master a third or even a fourth language, Canada will be even more open to the world, more competitive and better positioned to ensure its prosperity.


If the Plan succeeds, the federal public service will set an example in terms of respecting our linguistic duality. The culture of official languages will be better grounded than ever. The Government of Canada will be better able to play its leadership role. We can count on the President of the Treasury Board to undertake without delay the measures provided in the Action Plan, working closely with all federal institutions.


From now on, we will have an accountability and coordination framework that presents each federal institution with its responsibilities, an accountability framework that establishes unparalleled coordination so that the work of each benefits all. The accountability and coordination framework provides for more communication between the federal government and minority official language communities than ever before.


The Government of Canada is resolved to play its own important role together with all Canadians, communities and its constitutional partners to ensure this Plan succeeds. The Minister of Canadian Heritage, in particular, will work closely with her provincial and territorial counterparts so that the best initiatives are chosen in each province and territory of our country.


Our best guarantee of success is the support of Canadians. The message they — in particular young people — are sending to governments is crystal clear. They want to benefit fully from their country’s dual linguistic heritage. The Government of Canada is responding to Canadians through this Action Plan. It is inviting them to write the next act in the fascinating adventure of our bilingual country. It is giving new momentum to our linguistic duality in order to assure Canadians a better future.


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Last Modified: 2003-03-12  Important Notices