Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I'd like to make some observations. Probably 30 years ago people sat on non-profit boards and it was easy in those days to recruit people to sit on boards. Nobody even knew about directors' liability insurance in those days. I started hearing about people 20 years ago refusing to sit on boards unless the directors' liability policy was in effect. So non-profits went looking for them, and they were astounded when they realized how much they cost and how many hoops they had to go through to get them.
Very few insurance companies sell them, to begin with. Deductibles are $5,000. You have to submit financials every year. That goes well when the insurance markets are reasonably priced, but every three to five years the insurance markets get themselves into big trouble and your premium can turn in the space of just one year from $5,000 to 20,000. You tell me how a small non-profit is supposed to pay for these things. It's totally impossible.
So we have to find a way to limit the liability of non-profits. I don't know how possible that is, but we should certainly look at that option. We're going to be scaring people off. People will not sit on the boards.
Compliance costs are also a big issue. We've run into this even in our own province of Manitoba in our election laws. We practically strangled ourselves with compliance costs of the parties, trying to get it right. The laws had to be brought in, but this is one of the realities of bringing in these types of laws. So we saddle you with compliance costs that almost shut you down, and we're not really accomplishing what we want to do.
I'm familiar with a non-profit fiddlers club from Ontario that had 83 members and a couple of thousand dollars in the bank. They were senior citizens. They were having a meeting of their fiddlers society and one of them tripped and fell walking out of the building. That person hired a lawyer. The lawyer decided they were going to sue all 83 members of the fiddlers club, and that's what they did. They had to go to their home insurers and collect.
Most people don't know about these issues, but when they do hear about them it certainly scares them.
I'd also like to ask the members whether anybody made an effort to contact these 161,000 charities. Were letters sent out to let them know about this? The witness mentioned that a lot of small charities wouldn't even be aware that we are going through the third version of this bill.
I'd like to address it to Mr. Reid, because he was talking about the directors' and officers' liability issue.