Keeping Canadian airports safe from monolingualism

Canada’s language police are going undercover in eight airports to ensure that passengers will hear their flights are delayed in both English and French.

After these taxpayer funded linguistic stakeouts, monoglots will have absolutely no excuse for leaving their bags unattended.

From here:

Canada’s bilingualism watchdog is going undercover at eight major airports to see if travellers are served equally well in English and French.

Official Languages Commissioner Graham Fraser says his office will conduct more than 1,500 anonymous observations this fall at airports in Halifax, Quebec City, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Winnipeg, Edmonton and Vancouver.

He says audits of some of those airports have been done in the past, but this will be the first time so many are done at once.

One thought on “Keeping Canadian airports safe from monolingualism

  1. We have enough snivel-servents that this could be done for almost free by getting government travelors to take notes. This efficiency is modeled after DoiNWM proceedures. Never spend needlessly, unless you can overspend in the process

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