I don't think it is the organization itself that would suffer, but the third parties who would be relying upon or using the audited financial statements of that organization. The concern there is that whether you're a for-profit organization or a provincially established not-for-profit or a federally established not-for-profit, the financial statements have all been prepared in accordance with the same standards and the same requirements, demonstrating the same competencies. I think it's more a question of the ability of the third parties, the users of the financial statements, to rely on those and to understand that an audited financial statement means the same thing regardless of who has prepared it.
On March 31st, 2009. See this statement in context.