In my opinion, in that case, we can't call this growing pains. There is a problem with transparency and democracy at the source.
I also understand your frustration. You talked about special general meetings. I put the question to the president of CSIC when he appeared before us, whether it was possible, under the bylaws, for the members to call a meeting. His answer was that this was in bylaw 11.7, I believe. After hearing his answer to my question, I went and checked the bylaws, and it turned out that this was not it at all. It says that the President can call a special general meeting, and the Vice-President and board can, if there is a majority. That was last week. If an official committee of the House of Commons isn't able to get clearer answers than that, I wouldn't like to imagine what information a lone member of CSIC can get. The same thing happened when I asked those people why they had come to Winnipeg to testify rather than Toronto, where their head office is — you mentioned that they travel a lot — and they couldn't answer my question.
I think there is a major governance problem. There is also the entire problem of oversight of the profession, of illegal practice. Plainly, the people who are in office now do not have the necessary skills for this, but even if they did, there is also a problem with the statutory framework. The current Act provides that in order to do business with the government a person has to be a member of CSIC, but without really taking that farther, without allowing the organization to discipline people who practise illegally.
Since we began our travels, I have been exploring possible solutions with people. I would like to know what the situation is in the Atlantic provinces. There are now self-disciplining, self-governing professional bodies all across Canada. Without exception, those bodies are accountable to the provincial governments. The only professional body at the federal level is CSIC. I think the results show that this was not a very good idea.
Under our constitution, oversight of professions is under provincial jurisdiction. In French, jurisdiction is also referred to as "compétence". There is a question of jurisdiction here. It seems to me that if immigration consultants were subject to oversight at the provincial level, these problems would not exist. The current governance problems would not exist because in the provincial regulations, which are very complex, very elaborate, the result of years of work, there are oversight mechanisms that mean that the professional bodies have to self-regulate, but there is also, for example, a office or body responsible for professions that oversees all that.
So these governance problems would not exist. There would be an opportunity to intervene directly if there were problems. In terms of illegal practice, there is also a regulatory framework that enables a professional association to take action directly against people who practise the profession illegally.
Do you think it would be more effective and more logical for the government to ask people to be members of their provincial professional association, which would be automatically created, rather than members of CSIC?