Mr. Chairman, I'd like to switch the channel a little bit.
We've been talking about corporate tax avoidance, but it's come to my attention that there are grassroots tax avoidance schemes. One was in the media last week, I think; donations were funnelled through a particular church group, and it turned out not to be a legitimate arrangement.
Another one came to my attention. It was, again, donations to a charity. Participants were largely people of faith. The result was that families paid no tax, actually. Then there was another one that came to my attention through a colleague, another sort of charitable arrangement, which I got an opinion on through the department.
If I have recently come to know of three of these kinds of arrangements, there seems to be a proliferation of these tax avoidance schemes through good, well-intentioned charitable donations. How do you try to advise taxpayers not to get caught up in these schemes?
These are good people. They're well-meaning people. They've been told these are legitimate schemes. Do you just wait and nail them after the fact, or are you proactive in trying to get them not to get involved in the first place?