What we did at the health committee last year—not that it had 100% success, but it had some success, if we had only had more time, and I hope that committee continues it—was have the staff circulate a bit of a questionnaire, very simple, to all the members asking them to indicate the areas of study members would like to have. Let's say we do that and we come up with 14 or 15 areas of study—sometimes they can be bunched into two or three general areas—then we have a working committee and name the vice-chairs, and they can make a plan for how we deal with it.
You can't achieve as much as you'd like in the committee on that stuff, because the priority is government bills—I don't know that there are any government bills pending, or private members' bills—and then you get to the areas of study that you want. You can't achieve 1,000 of them, but sometimes you could do two or three areas that are priorities in common as much as possible around the committee. That might be a way to get us started, by circulating that type of simple questionnaire.