Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the committee.
I would like to come back to education and the royalties that are paid through collectives. If this bill passes, the potential loss for copyright holders is estimated to be approximately $40 million; that is $40 million in relation to a total budget of $72 billion for education in Canada.
As far as I am concerned, the contribution made to copyright by the educational and university communities is not out of line. I don't intend to talk about ancient history, at the time I was in university, but we paid for every book that we used. We paid the full cost. Sometimes I even wondered whether the amount we were paying for books, which obviously included copyright fees, was not actually higher than our tuition.
If we're talking about the copyright legislation, I think it's important to think about protection for copyright, rather than proposing changes to the legislation that will impoverish authors or perhaps even take away their desire and motivation to write for the education community.
I would like to find out what your underlying motivation is. The fees are not that high, considering all the other things that you have to pay. Sometimes parking a car at university costs a lot more than copyright. What is the relative importance of the potential savings you will realize, to the detriment of copyright royalties?