I'll start by thanking you for coming out today and taking this time.
It's interesting; I was looking through your report here, and in appendix 1, it lists the National Nonprofit Sector Task Force. The first name on that list is Jacqueline Biollo, one of my constituents. It's been my pleasure to have an ongoing and productive discussion with her on some of these issues.
I have a couple of questions. I guess the time issue has come up. Mr. Reid mentioned this. The political reality is that we're in another minority Parliament. My colleagues across the way might be able to indicate when the next election's going to be. They may have some knowledge of that, I don't know. It seems to me that it's constantly around the corner. This bill has come up time and time again and not been passed.
You have 161,000 people whom we're talking about consulting with, potentially. The danger in this sector is that if you invited 161,000, there's enough passion out there that they would probably all want to come. Obviously there's only so much time that we have to dedicate to consultation. We had 350 members of the public take part in the consultations between 2000 and 2002--many of them probably part of your organization. There was an additional round of consultations in 2005. The committee studied this between 2004 and 2005.
This question is more for Imagine Canada. Mr. Reid can comment, although I think I know the answer from Mr. Reid.
If you had the choice right now between the bill as it is or no bill at all because time expires again, which would you take?