Thank you, Mr. Chair.
We thank you for the cooperation in holding the meeting. I know there's not much choice under Standing Order 106, but you and I have chatted, and we thank you for that cooperation.
We will be looking to see if there's unanimous support to table a motion. The issue relates to what was reported in the media about a secret document at the Canadian Food Inspection Agency that talked about cutbacks at the agency.
Now, there are some facts that we know. We know that a scientist happened to come across such document, or partial document, and because that scientist was concerned, he sent it to his union. For informing the public about a safety risk based on cutbacks at the CFIA, the scientist was fired. I believe that firing is now under appeal.
We know that the document, although we haven't had access to it and we believe this committee should have access to it, was approved by Treasury Board in November. The government's stated reason for not releasing it so we all know, as should be proper under parliamentary procedure, is due to significant communication problems.
We believe--and that's why we requested the meeting--that the move will cut funding for the Canadian Food Inspection Agency and that it will download inspections to industry itself. Therefore, it goes in the opposite direction, which every member of this committee knows we have talked about, of there being more inspections to ensure that imported products meet the same standards as Canadian standards and that the public treasury should pick up more of the costs of inspections, as is done in other countries around the world. If the government doesn't do that, it makes our farmers less competitive.
It's a serious matter. It really goes in the opposite direction to the way we believe, and we think the committee actually believes, we should be going.
The key point is on foreign product coming in. We know, as we talked about at committee, that Canadians are greatly concerned about the safety of foreign product coming in. There was the paint scare on Chinese toys coming into Canada. That set off basically an avalanche of concerns over whether foreign products, food or otherwise, were meeting Canadian standards.
Farmers have asked, as this committee well knows, that the border be strictly controlled and that products coming in meet the same standards as our producers.
Basically, the bottom line is that this secret document, we're led to believe, is all about cuts and transferring responsibility. We're concerned that it could jeopardize our food inspection systems. Instead of imposing less cost on farmers, it could actually impose more costs, either directly or indirectly.
I don't want to get into a whole lot of quotes, but it was quoted by University of Guelph professor, Ann Clark.... I want to outline this. If we transfer inspections from a public authority to industry, does anybody in this room really believe that industry is not going to transfer those costs back to primary producers and maybe, in the process, instead of operating at cost, as we expect a public agency to do, add in a little profit for themselves?
I've seen the potato industry operate when they have control of processing grades of potatoes at the plant level. They can put undue influence on a producer and say, “Look, if you don't toe the line, if you speak out in public against us, maybe your grade may not meet standard.”
Those are the kinds of games that are played out there. And the government, in terms of transferring inspections to the industry, puts at risk the farming community, puts at risk food inspections, and gives more control over to companies that already have too much control in the food production industry.
Ann Clark, who is a professor at the University of Guelph, states this, and I quote:
The proposals are illogical. Companies are in business to make profit, pure and simple, and we, as a society, have fully accepted and bought into that, but with the understanding that somebody will be riding herd on them--minding the shop--to safeguard societal interests. Otherwise, history has shown that we are at risk.
Professor Clark cited industries such as tobacco and asbestos.
The point is that I think by transferring it to industry, it possibly puts greater costs on producers, takes control out of the public sector and gives it to companies, and the bottom line is that it could put the health of the food supply for Canadians at risk.
Before I close, Mr. Chair, I want to mention this. Canada is seen as one of the most reliable suppliers of food around the world because our inspection system works, generally. It's one of the better ones. If we had even one incident, and Canada being an exporting nation where we export so many of our products, imagine what one incident would do in terms of our international reputation abroad and how it would impact, as was seen with BSE, on primary producers on the ground.
I guess the point is that this proposal could be perceived as the government cutting corners. We know, it's been stated, the government has managed to manage the fiscal situation of the country into a deficit, so are they cutting corners because they have basically made the country broke financially, or is it for other reasons? What the proposal is basically doing, as far as we understand it, is asking the industry to police itself. We believe it could put public safety and consumers at risk.
For all those reasons, we basically asked for this committee meeting so that, number one, we could put forward a motion--and I'll ask for unanimous consent on that--asking that the committee have the so-called secret report put forward to the committee so we can see first-hand what that report does say. I talked to the chair earlier, and he suggested that the Canadian Food Inspection Agency might be available today to appear, and certainly I think we would be in agreement to hear from them, as an initial step.
We've talked through my office to the union, PIPSC, and they would certainly be willing to come as early as eight o'clock tomorrow morning, so that would give us the agency's side of the argument. We know they can't speak out against the government, so it would give us the union's side of the argument. Then maybe we could determine where we meet down the road.
The motion that I have, Mr. Chair, would read as follows, and I put it forward for your consideration:
The Committee demands that government provide the Committee with the plan to abandon critical food safety inspections as was reportedly approved by Treasury Board in November 2007 and that the committee begin a study of the plan to abandon food safety inspections and report the results back to the House of Commons.
I don't know if others want to speak first before I move that motion. I think maybe it would be appropriate.