Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
As folks read these transcripts, which will be distributed across the country, particularly to lumber remanufacturers in British Columbia and elsewhere, it will be interesting for them to note that we have two arguments here. One argument is the NDP argument, based on what's actually in the agreement, what's actually in Bill C-24, and the egregious errors made in the drafting of the bill. The other argument, that comes from the government, is completely personal. Rather than defending any aspects of the deal, I guess because it's indefensible, they simply go for personal attacks.
That's very interesting, Mr. Chair, but it begs the question: are they well informed about what they are adopting?
Mr. Harris made a comment about companies awaiting their money. There are two problems with that. Number one, as of last Monday the taxpayers were picking up the tab of $950 million. Tembec received $242 million of that. This is through the EDC, so it's the taxpayers picking up the tab. The companies have received their money through the EDC process.
Last Friday, Mr. Chair, we actually had a situation where customs and border protection in the United States started to make the payments that came from--and I'll cite this--the New York City decision, October 13, at the Court of International Trade, that:
...all of Plaintiffs' unliquidated entries, including those entered before, on, and after November 4, 2004, must be liquidated in accordance with the final negative decision of the NAFTA panel. Judgment shall be entered accordingly.
So Judge Restani, Judge Barzilay, and Judge Eaton said Canada won. We're entitled to all the money back.
What is the debate around Bill C-24 right now? What is the debate around clause 13, where we tried to limit the punishment, the self-imposed punishment, this government is imposing on our softwood industry despite the ruling of October 13? What's at stake?
What is at stake is about $1 billion and thousands of softwood jobs. We've lost 4,000 already, and we apprehend further losses of jobs, because this agreement is not, as every witness throughout the summer has attested, commercially viable.
Companies were bludgeoned into accepting a deal. They expressed their opinion by having only 25% support for the EDC program. If that does not show a lack of confidence by the industry in this government, I don't know what does. I mean, 75% said no to EDC; 75% did not sign up for the EDC process. Why? Quite simply, they are getting 100% of their money back through customs and border protection. If you're getting 100% dollars, why would you go through this bad bill and get 67¢ back--with the double tax here, which we'll be talking about later, maybe this evening--through this process? The folks in the softwood industry have said no, and they've said no very clearly.
The smoke and mirrors from the government does not--