Yes, we noted earlier recommendations from previous witnesses that you should be examining a sliding scale based on the actual job that somebody had and how long they had it, instead of a one-size-fits-all cooling-off period for everyone, or a series of one-size cooling-off periods for everyone. Right now, the same individual can be subject to a one-year, a two-year, and a five-year cooling-off period with respect to the department they worked for, departments they dealt with significantly, and the entire federal government in some combinations. That's a lot of cooling-off for the junior analyst from the bureau of weights and measures.
There are proposals on the table to apply the full cooling-off period to everyone. We think that has probably gone too far. There are proposals to reduce it for everyone. We think that's probably going too far in the other direction.
There is a lot of merit, I think, to tailoring the cooling-off period to how long someone has been in the job and what the nature of their job actually was. We think the appropriate vehicle to introduce that would be the Conflict of Interest Act.
We think the five-year cooling-off period in the Lobbying Act should be removed when you examine the amendments to the act that the government will bring forward to respond to last year's report. That five-year cooling-off period for designated public office holders should be removed and put into the Conflict of Interest Act, and the concept of a sliding scale should be carefully examined by the committee to see if it couldn't be better tailored to the specifics of somebody's employment rather than trying to capture everybody with one tool or oftentimes a multitude of different tools.
The other thing that I guess we'd mention that goes to the concept of a cooling-off period is the 20% rule. We mention that in our remarks, I believe. We're on record as saying that you should eliminate the 20% rule as it applies to corporate in-house lobbyists.
Right now, if I determine that I lobby 20% of the time, I can't work for a trade association, and I can't work for a consultant lobbying firm, but I can work for a publicly traded company as long as I self-determine that I only lobby 19% of the time. I think that is meant as a guideline. It has been treated as a loophole. Again, I know that I'm talking about the Lobbying Act here, but that will be one of your next projects. We can't recommend strongly enough that this loophole be closed.