Thank you for that segue. That was going to be my next point, that the Minister of National Revenue and I are speaking regularly about this, as recently as this morning, to make sure that both Service Canada and the CRA have the human resource capacity to answer questions.
I think specifically the reality is that if someone got the CERB, they're going to get a tax slip that says they earned a certain amount of income and that income is going to be taxed. We're trying to have our tax slips be as accurate as possible for people going into the 2020 tax season so that the receipt of CERB doesn't negatively impact people's entitlement to other benefits like the GST credit or the CCB or the GIS. That would be a double whammy, if you will, if people are then deemed not eligible for the GST or GIS next year because of their having collected CERB, which they're ultimately going to have to pay back, potentially; and they then get neither and they have to reapply.
It's a very complicated tax reality and, proactively, we're trying to get as many tax slips as accurate as possible by the end of December to avoid that for as many people as possible.