Well, I'm learning from the best, Mr. Chair.
First of all, on the amendment, what the Liberal amendment would do is give it to the Department of Finance. It would never come to this committee. He wants to go directly to the House.
Let's face it; I don't think that was the purpose of Mr. Mulcair's motion. I'd like to hear the witnesses come and talk to us about the issues. Whether I agree or disagree with their ability to resolve that issue and with some of their solutions, doing it in a committee format would be better.
So I would not recommend, as the motion says, that the Department of Finance look at it. I would rather see the first two paragraphs and then go to the next paragraph. So paragraphs one and two would basically stay the same. We're studying it. The third paragraph--and just leave everything else off--would be about examining “the number of taxpayers placed in undue hardship through the treatment of the unrealized gain at time of acquisition as an employment benefit while the losses on the eventual disposition as a capital loss, not offsetting the employment benefit”.
We're going to get right to the issue of employees who take the stock option at a discounted rate, then the stock goes in the tank, and they're stuck with a tax bill. What do we do for them? I'd like to see them here. These motions don't see them here. And I think the committee should study it, not the Department of Finance.
So I will not be supporting this under Mr. McCallum's current wording, because it doesn't affect this committee.