Thank you for raising that. It is something our sector asked for, and we are very pleased to see the measure included in budget 2006. We have some hope and some expectation that the measure may be extended in budget 2007, so it would apply to gifts of other types of assets besides publicly traded shares and might apply to gifts to private charities as well as public charities. That's an important distinction. Private charities include 4,500 private foundations, often set up by wealthy entrepreneurs and successful families who decide they would like to give back to their community. We would like those 4,500 private charities to be eligible for those sorts of gifts as well.
That measure has been helpful, and we've seen it's already incented some very significant gifts by wealthy Canadians. We have to understand that tax measures are part of a bundle of instruments supporting this sector. Federal grants and contributions are also extremely important. Tax measures tend to result in gifts to a fairly small number of the 80,000 charities. For example, the John Howard Society in a rural community is not likely to get a significant gift of shares from a wealthy businessperson. We have to look at our rural communities. We have to look at tax measures that result in dollars going into a wider range of organizations.