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| | Franco-Ontarian - Enpsychlopedia |
 | | Ontario has two exclusively francophone community colleges, La Cité collégiale in Ottawa (with a second campus in Hawkesbury) and Collège Boréal in Sudbury (with additional campuses in several Northern Ontario communities, and one in Toronto.) A third college, Collège des Grands-Lacs in Toronto, ceased operations in 2002. |
 | | The Franco-Ontarian population is concentrated primarily in Eastern Ontario (41.3 per cent - 226,705 francophones), in Ottawa, Cornwall and many rural farming communities, and in Northeastern Ontario (25.2 per cent - 138,585 francophones), in the cities of Greater Sudbury, North Bay and Timmins and a number of smaller towns. |
 | | For example, although Louise Charron was the first native-born Franco-Ontarian appointed to the Supreme Court of Canada bench, she was preceded as a francophone judge from Ontario by Louise Arbour, who was born and raised in Quebec but had her professional career as a lawyer and judge in Ontario. |
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