It was the same last week, and if I come again, it will still be the same.
Mr. Fast, that was a very good question. First of all, it's not the intention of the CCLA to diminish the income of writers and people who deserve income. The question is, how many times extra do they need to be paid, and do they need to be paid at the cost of educational quality?
As to including the word “education”, it's not a question of whether it goes far enough or not. We've suggested that from the way the court cases are going right now, including the word “education” won't make any difference. I have no idea why anybody's upset about it. If the Federal Court of Appeal decision and the Copyright Board decision stand, the word “education” means nothing, because the Copyright Board has decided that multiple copies or anything prescribed by a teacher doesn't pass the fairness test, so the word “education” is simply window dressing, if it's there.
We suggest that we adopt some of the better practices of the U.S. legislation. In our view, the courts and the board have got it wrong. We should specify that “education” may, if it's fair, include multiple copies in the classroom, and if the professor says you really should read this, that may be part of fair dealing if it meets the six-part fairness test of the Supreme Court of Canada.
So we're suggesting a bit of a narrowing of the word “education”, which should take away some of the irrational fears while overcoming the extremely restrictive condition imposed by the Copyright Board and upheld last summer by the Federal Court of Appeal. The problem with that restrictive interpretation is not that it's going to cost a lot of unnecessary money that does not get paid in the United States or China or the countries we need to compete with, but that it puts a chill in the classroom. Teachers think they can't tell the student to read something, because it's going to cost the institution a fortune. Let us suppose that an important article comes out on the front page of The Globe and Mail; if Madame Des Rosiers in her law school class has to teach something about an important event that happened that day, and it's timely to hand out something from the newspaper, the Copyright Board will say that those are multiple copies and that you can't do it.