On June 17, 2019, the Canadian government released a model to assess language maturity in the public sector. Called the Official Languages Maturity Model (OLMM), it is “fully tailored to the business language of federal institutions” and “provides a roadmap for continuous and steady improvement in integrating official languages into an organization.”
As previously mentioned, Commissioner of Official Languages Raymond Théberge has called linguistic duality (i.e., the parity of the country’s official languages, French and English) “a fundamentally Canadian value” — and sees the OLMM as a “useful and effective” tool to support it.
The OLMM will be implemented through an electronic platform that enables institutions to assess “the extent to which official languages are part of their activities.” In other words, their language maturity. The model involves three steps: Self-assessment, Validation, and the drafting of an Action Plan.

