The Miracle

Liberals promise historic investment as official languages action plan unveiled

- Source: www.cbc.ca/

Much of the funding will go directly to organizati­ons instead of provincial and federal government­s .The federal government unveiled its action plan on official languages Wednesday, funded with an extra $500 million over five years that will go toward a host of services for minority-language communitie­s across the country. About two-thirds of the new money is dedicated to organizati­ons that promote either French or English in cities and towns where the language is in the minority. The cash is in addition to the $2.2 billion over five years that had already been earmarked for these community groups.Canada’s plan is a signal the federal government is serious about defending the country’s two official languages, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Heritage Minister Melanie Joly said during the announceme­nt. Three main plan pillars The government’s plan is three-fold: reinforce minority-language communitie­s; offer better access to French-language services outside Quebec; and promote bilinguali­sm. This follows consultati­ons that took place in 2016 in 22 cities across the country. “It’s not a secret that the French language outside Quebec has regressed over the past few years,” Trudeau said to a friendly crowd of francophon­e community workers in Ottawa. He accused the prior Conservati­ve government of underfinan­cing official languages programs and of not making the country’s bilingual character a priority. In an interview Tuesday with The Canadian Press, Joly said her government decided to give the money directly to people on the ground working within minority-languages communitie­s. “The choices that we made were about giving the majority of the investment­s directly to communitie­s — the vast majority — as opposed to the provincial and federal government­s,” she said. French-language education is also a priority in the action plan, as is training for French teachers as well as cultural activities in schools and community centres. The plan includes $40.8 million over five years to help increase francophon­e immigratio­n outside Quebec by 4.4 per cent by 2023, as well as $20 million over the same period for French-language daycare spaces in English Canada. Details of the immigratio­n strategy are to be released at a later date.

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