Thank you, Chair.
I want to thank you all for coming, some for the first time and some of you after many times. I'm sorry that you have to come back and keep working on it, but I'm glad you're persistent folks and willing to do that.
It's interesting, Mr. Veeman, in regard to the specific case you raised, we spent a lot of time in the committee when we were looking at Bill S-2 talking about what to do in the circumstance where someone was a Canadian but had a criminal record. I remember some of us saying very clearly that it shouldn't matter, if they were a Canadian they were our criminal, in that sense. That may be a blunt way of putting it, but I think we have to deal with the fact that there's no reason to discriminate against that person on that basis, and we already made that decision when we were looking at Bill S-2 and trying to decide what the ramifications were. Citizenship does imply that you will make mistakes and won't lose your citizenship because you've made that kind of mistake.
Mr. Bosdet, you ran out of time in your presentation, and I just wonder if there were other things you wanted to cover. You were talking very specifically about some suggestions about administrative law panels. Mr. Veeman made that suggestion as well, but did you have other suggestions or issues you didn't get to that you'd like to speak about?