Official languages commissioner weighs in on French immersion debate - Action News
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New Brunswick

Official languages commissioner weighs in on French immersion debate

New Brunswick's official languages commissionersays it's important for the province to help people become bilingual.

Don't 'throw the baby out with the bathwater,' Shirley MacLean urges government

A portrait of a woman wearing a headset.
Shirley MacLean, New Brunswick's official languages commissioner, said she's 'keenly interested' in French immersion because her mandate includes the promotion of both official languages. (Zoom/CBC)

New Brunswick's official languages commissionersays it's important for the province to help people become bilingual.

Shirley MacLean says her office takes precedence over alllegislation in the province except the Education Act. So she doesn't have a direct say over pending changes to French immersion in the province.

Education Minister Bill Hogan has said changes are coming next year, and different programs are still being considered.

MacLeancontends immersion is a "very important, very vibrant part" of contributing to bilingualism in New Brunswick. It has allowedmanypeople in the province to be able to speak in both official languages.

"If there are changes to the system that will facilitate more access, in my view that can't be a bad thing," she said. "But also my view, I don't think we can, as we say, throw the baby out with the bathwater, because there's been positive, very many positive things that have come through the immersion system, and those cannot be forgotten."

In addition, immersion is an important mechanism for the government to meet its obligations under theOfficial Languages Act to provide services to the public in both official languages, said MacLean.

"Obviously, the more of us that are bilingual, the more readily government is going to be able to hire people to be able to provide those services."

Awaiting response to review of act

MacLeansaid it's concerning there are no details available about the new plan, given the looming implementation date.

It "hearkens back" to her concern that theHiggs government still hasn'tresponded to the independentreview of the Official Languages Act, completed last December, she said.

"It leaves the public with the impression that there's a lack of importance given by the government tothe Official Languages Act."

On June 10 Premier Blaine Higgstold reporters:"We'll be responding in the month of June. We are committed to having a response this monthand we will do that."

But on June 30, he announcedan extension on his self-imposed deadline to decide how to update the act.

Following that review, thecommissioners filed a report in February onsecond-language training in the province. Former deputy education minister John McLaughlin andprovincial court Judge Yvette Finn concludedFrench immersion is serving fewer than half thestudentsin anglophone schools andshould be replaced with a program for all students.

Although90 per cent of students who stick with immersion through Grade 12 achieve a conversational level of French,more than 60 per cent of anglophone students aren't in immersion for one reason or another.

"We anticipate that if the above recommendation is approached strategically and with careful planning, it may take a number of years to be fully implemented," the report said.

A man wearing a blue blazer and a blue unbuttoned shirt stands in front of a bookcase in a school classroom.
Former education minister Dominic Cardy has said 'the premiers emotional connection and opposition to the French immersion program has become his overriding and singular concern.' (CBC)

Former Education minister Dominic Cardy'sdramatic resignation last week was sparked by the premier's insistence that immersion be replaced next fall by ayet-to-be-defined new program.

Cardy said cabinet approved a 2024 timelineand a more cautious, detailed process, and Higgs was overruling it on his own without any substitute program on the drawing board.

Higgs told reportersthe fall of '23was the original target date, "and then it got moved."He's frustrated that, in his view, the program isn't working for everyone and that Cardy and his department were not moving fast enough to change it.

With files from Alexandre Silberman