Speaking for the Red Cross, we are a national organization that is incorporated under the Canada Corporations Act. And although we have 300-odd branches and zones and regions, that's all internal organization. So we are one corporation, and we respond as one corporation to the act.
That said, we're a large not-for-profit organization. There are vast sections of the act that don't apply to us. It's a matter of sorting through and finding out what applies to us and what doesn't.
I think what's going on here is that Parliament is enacting a law that covers a very broad range of corporations. It's giving us the package and leaving this, potentially, to everybody by saying, “Sort out what applies to you, and do what you have to do under the act. What you don't have to do, don't do.”
I don't see an obvious solution to this at the legislative or parliamentary stage, but I do see—this is what we tried to emphasize in our brief—a tremendous role for education. I think with anything, or with any new policy you put out, education and training are vital components. We often fall down on that. I would like to see the government put some resources into Industry Canada and get them to help people with sorting this out. Industry Canada could help administratively in terms of parcelling this thing out so that people could work with it.
I also see roles for Imagine Canada, organizations like that, to help their constituents. I'm sorry to put that on you, but....