Thank you, Chair.
Thank you for appearing here today. I have a quick question. The opposition was asking something about auditors going out, and I'm curious about the procedure. I think that generally we have a fairly good reputation. If you were to compare us, say, with the United States, there isn't the same level of fear—although as Mr. Adler said, there is a little trepidation.
The reason I say this is that when the Ontario government did away with the PST and adopted the GST, an army of auditors went out and targeted certain areas, the result being that many businesses were hit with.... And they can argue these and can take them to court, but it's very costly, and so they generally.... I was one of those. In the car business, for instance, we were just handed a bill: “Here's what you owe”.
My first question is, how do you guard against that? I understand that there's a fine line between.... Obviously, if you owe taxes, everybody understands that. How do you guard between being a fair institution governed by the rule of those laws that we put in place in Parliament and, by getting out there and.... For instance, sometimes we've had allegations by police officers, who say they need to go out and get a quota of tickets.
How do you guard against that? How do Canadians know that the revenue agency is operating in a fair and equitable manner?