I have a lot of sympathy for our witnesses, Mr. Chairman, because it's difficult for them to speculate at all. They can't. Their advice is to the government, and some of the questions should be better addressed to the government representatives, not the administration--perhaps the minister or even the parliamentary secretary. I have a great deal of sympathy with the position they're in, and I don't think we should be pushing them in a direction they can't go in.
But to answer the concern with respect to my last question of why we'd want information on who has been met, it's quite simple, quite straightforward. Whenever the legislation is tabled in the House and referred to a committee... First of all, I'm not even sure which committee is going to get it, whether it's heritage or industry or a joint committee. That is something that has yet to be determined, unless it has been determined. But what the government's wishes are there, I don't know.
Actually, that might be a question, but it would be a question directed--