Right. In terms of charity transparency, if you take a look at a site in America called GuideStar, you will see that GuideStar has the Form 990s for each of the American 501(c)(3)s that have to file there. You can see that sometimes it's 100 pages, 200 pages of material. It's a lot of material. There are lots of questions.
Our Canadian charity return is about nine pages, and most charities are filling in about two or three pages' worth of stuff, which is very little. In the end, I think that I'm doing it because I think that it's good for the charity sector to have more questions. I'll give you an example: There are no questions on volunteering, which is very important.
The T3010 gives too much preference to financial aspects. It makes big charities, in terms of budgets, look big, but a little charity with $100,000 and 1,000 volunteers can be a very important charity. I think that it'll be a fairer form if we ask more questions, even if they're voluntary questions or they're done on alternate years or whatever to keep the burden in check. The amount of time it takes to put in the Form 990, I understand, is about 10 times longer than it takes to put in the T3010.