I'm just making this up. The cruise was on the St. Lawrence Seaway and it was an overnight thing. They were on this vessel, and they were treated to dinner and breakfast. It has to be worth more than $200, let's say. Maybe it's worth $500. Do they declare it as a gift? Do they have to declare it as a gift?
This kind of stuff could be discussed at a meeting like that. If changes in the rules are needed because some opportunity like that is given or a gift like that is given, then sure, maybe the public should have some knowledge of it. Maybe it should be declared if it isn't already required to be declared. It's that kind of discussion, I think, that could happen on this and should continue to happen.
All I'm saying is that I don't think you need to lower the value to $200, $100, or $30 for declaration purposes. It's stuff like that. I don't think the public is that concerned about little gifts that various organizations give to members in the form of maybe a book, maybe a paper, maybe a meal, maybe a reception, maybe a bottle of wine, maybe a photograph album, or whatever it might be. I think we need to say that there are rules in place and that members can't accept a gift of more than x without declaring it, so the public hears that they got that.
I think most members of the public would say, “That's fine by me. I don't want to hear that you went to a reception and had a glass of wine and a piece of cheese and spoke to the people there”.