Ontario NDP putting forward motion to reinstate French services - Action News
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Sudbury

Ontario NDP putting forward motion to reinstate French services

The Ontario New Democrats wants the Ford government to reverse the cuts to the French language services commissioner and the French language university.

The official opposition will be debating in legislature Wednesday afternoon

Nickel Belt NDP MPP France Glinas discussed the Ontario NDP motion that will be debated Wednesday to reinstate the French-Language commissioner and the French-language university. (Kirthana Sasitharan/CBC)

Ontario's New Democrats will be putting forward a motion Wednesday in the legislature calling on the Ford government to reverse cuts to French language services.

Nickel Belt NDP MPP France Glinas says that the motion is meant to give the government an opportunity to step back.

"You have an opportunity to give back to the Ontario community a full, French language commissioner, who is an independent official of the legislative assembly. And you have an opportunity to give back the French language university that had been promised," Glinas says.

She says there is no financial benefit to losing the commissioner and stresses that the investment into the Francophone university is a small price to pay in the grand scheme of the budget.

"For the Francophone university, we are talking $4.2 million a year for the next 10 years on a budget of a $132 billion dollars. It is such a small investment that always pays off huge dividends when you have a university educated bilingual workforce that istrained in Ontario and that the Ontario economy is based on a knowledge economy."

Glinas says the motion will give other politicians the opportunity to voice their concerns and addressethe concerns from both sides of the table.

More than a dozen Franco-Ontarians gathered outside a Cambridge school near Kitchener-Waterloo on Monday to protest cuts to French services in Ontario. More rallies are being planned in 41 cities on December 1. (Colin Ct-Paulette/Radio-Canada)

"The motion is an opportunity for politicians to be on the record. If they are still against it, then we will hear their arguments and we will look into their arguments to see if they're valid or not. If there are no arguments to continue down this path, then don't."

Glinas also touched on the rallies this Saturday, stating there will be rallies in 41 communities where Francophones and people who support Francophones will gather.

"We live in a democracy when...people speak with one voice, and call on the same message, it is pretty hard for a politician to ignore that," Glinassays.

Gelinas was joined by some local constituents from Sudbury and stressed that she wanted their voices to be heard.

"We want Mr. Ford and his government to listen to the people of Sudbury, we have to support the people of Sudbury, and we want them to vote for this motion."

'I think it's important not to just wipe out history'

Lorie-Ann Rainville, originally from northern Ontario, and now lives in France as a literature professor, was in Sudburyvisiting. She says the cuts to the French language services hithome for her.

"I take this to heart, saving cultural heritage." Rainvillesays. "I think it's important not to just wipe out history, which I think is what the Conservatives are attempting to do."

Coming from a bilingual family, Rainvillesays having French and bilingualism is what identifies Ontario and Canada from the U.S.

"We don't want to be just a mediocre copy of the United States."

Rainville says she hopes by putting this motion forward, Franco-Ontarians will come out stronger out of a sense of solidarity.

"It's when you feel that you're threatened, that you react."