I can appreciate that, but here's where the trouble is in terms of where I see things going. Ironically, as we've lowered our tax rate, right now our charities and organizations have actually gotten less of a tax return for the people who donate. That's just tied to our legislation. So we've actually been reducing the lower income in terms of giving in Canada over the last number of years, because it's tied right to the Income Tax Act.
What's happened is that as we've lowered the lower bracket, we've actually disallowed charitable giving return to citizens and actually clamped down a little bit. It's a small amount of money, but it sends a signal to them that we haven't provided any type of benefit in terms of a stimulus. In terms of the effect, it's 8% of the Canadian economy when you look at the universities, the colleges, all of those that are actually a part of this. They're not receiving anything in the stimulus budget, specifically the not-for-profits themselves.
So what I worry about is what is your government or your department willing to do to help train those smaller and medium-sized organizations that are really...? Right now, a lot of them are either collapsing or they're having problems with donations. They're going to have to seek administrative support for this. Some of the work in here will probably require some technical things, changes in their actual administration processes. I believe they're going to need some legal assistance in this. Where are they going to get that type of support to be able to implement this new bill?