Briefly, these things aren't mutually exclusive, and nothing prevents you from doing both: you could ask officials to give people more leeway, and you could also bring in amendments. I quickly looked at the proposal we have before us, Ms. Jennings' motion; it seems excellent to me, and it could solve a number of problems.
I would also like to get back to what this gentleman was saying earlier on, in that some people are working under the table. Some are self-employed by choice. They decide to be self-employed, it is a choice, and they proceed. The information they receive, with respect to legislation, labour standards, the CSST, the Income Tax Act, and the definitions are not the same. It creates a problem for the revenue agencies. In other cases, it is the person offering work who finds a way for people who should be employees to operate as though they were self-employed. However, the fallout always affects the self-employed individual, never the person trying to conceal the situation.