Again, thank you for your question.
When it comes to the Parliamentary Budget Officer, he has to schedule his budget accordingly. He has a budget, just like any other department in the House of Commons.
I guess when I look at the type of work he's doing and the priority he puts on it, I would probably put this at a higher priority because it has such an impact on the treasury, possibly, in a private member's bill. I would put that into a higher priority than a forecast that he may or may not do, depending on his free time.
I suspect that he would have the ability to do it. Again, not every bill would need extensive analysis. If you had a simple bill, such as we had come forward on the flag, that's not going to have a huge analysis attached to it. But if you had a bill that was going to, let's say, extend unemployment insurance for another year or two years, then there's some dire--not dire, but serious financial consequences to a private member's bill such as that. As a member, I would then like to know what it would cost, versus the benefit, versus what's in the bill. I need to have all that information in front of me so that when I vote on that private member's bill, which again is not a whipped vote--it's a private member's bill, so the members vote independently--I'd like to have that information. I'd like to make sure all my colleagues have that information too.