We'll make sure that the clerk connects with you, Mr. MacGregor, because presumably it will be your amendment. We'll make sure that we move on that, but anyone else can go forward. So, we'll make sure that gets sorted out, Mr. MacGregor. It is by November 9 at noon that we need that amendment.
Colleagues, I want to assess your thoughts on where we are on the global food security study. We've heard from quite a few witnesses now. I would suggest that we're probably getting to the stage of the game where we could start to move to actually drafting a report and reporting back to the House.
I did have a conversation today with the clerk about possible scheduling moving forward. I've proposed, at least internally...and I would like to seek your feedback on whether or not the last session that we would have on this would be on November 16. For the first hour, it would be three or four witnesses, whoever we have left who has not been called, at the discretion of the analysts. That would be for the first hour. Then the second hour would turn into the opportunity for us to provide reflections back to the analysts on recommendations and key themes and to then really let them go to work to write the report. Does anyone have any issue with that? I'm curious to seek your feedback.
We're good. Okay. That's how we'll proceed. November 14 will be Bill C-234. The first hour on November 16 will be panellists; the second hour will be our feedback to the analysts.
The third thing—and Mr. Drouin reminded me—is that the supplementary estimates have not yet been tabled. I presume they will be at some point. I guess what I primarily will ask committee members is this: When the supplementary estimates are tabled, is it our wish to have the minister appear on the supplementary estimates?