Mr. Speaker, again it is very difficult to sort of respond. Yes, in 1987 the Government of Newfoundland and Labrador initiated a constitutional change that included the Pentecostal Assemblies. There is no question about this.
This is 10 years later. I guess if we could predict 10 years in advance on any issue what the situation would be, then we would avoid a lot of the problems, a lot of the very difficult decisions that we have to make in this country and in our province of Newfoundland and Labrador.
While the government of the day in 1987 thought that it was right and proper to include those rights in the Canadian constitution for the Pentecostal assemblies, there has been a lot of change since then.
As I mentioned, there have been a lot of changes in our province. There was the dollar crunch. The student population has declined tremendously.
The government of the province must have the right to govern and to make decisions. If the people do not like the decisions made, they deal with the government the time after.
I guess all I can say on that is that times have changed big time in Newfoundland and Labrador in 10 years, as they will be in 2007 from what they are today.
Maybe we will be changing it back in 2007, who knows. If I could look that far into the future with a crystal ball—