You understood why I wanted the committee to proceed with the second round, Madam Chair.
I am going to play devil's advocate. I support the bill, but I want it to move forward for the right reasons.
Mr. Lemieux, you just said that the bill is not perfect. For it to achieve perfection in your eyes, would retirees have had to be ranked before the banks? That is my first question.
Moving on to my second question.
I have been a mayor in the past. Earlier, you mentioned the City of Baie-Comeau or the City of Sept-Îles, I don't remember. You said that a company owed $10 million to that city and that it had been paid before the pensioners. As a creditor, that city is acting as the representative of all of its residents. In a city like Sept-Îles or Baie-Comeau, $10 million in unpaid taxes represents considerable lost earnings. Are you saying that this is less important than the pensioners' money?
I am trying to understand what might have been included in the bill to mitigate the repercussions on both sides. Clearly, even if the pensioners receive 100% of their money, they are still city taxpayers, and if the city has $10 million in lost earnings, the pensioners' municipal taxes are inevitably going to go up.