That's correct?
Evidence of meeting #121 for Canadian Heritage in the 44th Parliament, 1st session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was subamendment.
A recording is available from Parliament.
Evidence of meeting #121 for Canadian Heritage in the 44th Parliament, 1st session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was subamendment.
A recording is available from Parliament.
Conservative
Conservative
Philip Lawrence Conservative Northumberland—Peterborough South, ON
Mr. Champoux, I'm sorry, I just didn't follow it, and I apologize for that. Why did we not put in the (a) part of the amendment?
Liberal
The Chair Liberal Hedy Fry
Ms. Thomas, I just wanted to mention to you that Mr. Champoux did not move only (b); he added a little bit of (a) in there as well. The part that says, “qu'un aperçu”.
Conservative
Rachael Thomas Conservative Lethbridge, AB
I'm sorry, Chair. That's not being translated for me. I don't know exactly where that fits into the change.
Conservative
Liberal
The Chair Liberal Hedy Fry
The change in English is—just a second, I'm trying to find it in English here—where it says, on line 27, “an overview”, he's saying “a list”.
Conservative
Bloc
Martin Champoux Bloc Drummond, QC
Madam Chair, regarding the concern raised by my colleague Mr. Lawrence, let me just clarify that the subamendment does indeed include the two provisions of amendment BQ-4, including the requirement to produce a list rather than an overview.
I would also like to clarify something. While we demand greater transparency, we also think it is important to protect the confidentiality of cases that have not yet been made public. This is an important exercise that has to be conducted seriously. I think incorporating amendment BQ-4 into amendment G-2 in this way is a good compromise.
Liberal
The Chair Liberal Hedy Fry
Are you integrating the whole of BQ-4? I'm just trying to find BQ-4.
Instead, you want to take away “an overview” and add “a list”. Do you want the list so that confidentiality is respected?
Bloc
Martin Champoux Bloc Drummond, QC
No. It is exactly as it was distributed. That was simply an explanation in response to Mr. Lawrence's question. My subamendment is unchanged.
Liberal
The Chair Liberal Hedy Fry
Good. Thank you.
Having no one else discussing the subamendment....
Ms. Thomas.
Conservative
Rachael Thomas Conservative Lethbridge, AB
Thank you, Chair.
I do need to understand something from the officials here. I understand the desire for a list; however, the second part of the subamendment says that it would be the “cases that have been made public”. If they've already been made.... The cases have been made public. From the officials, what is the significance of that as opposed to leaving that part out?
Director General, Strategic Policy and International Affairs, Department of Canadian Heritage
We've been seeking to try to quickly understand that ourselves. I would say that we were a little more focused on the language around the publication of names of cases and whether that's all cases or, as envisaged per the current practice of the program, cases that have exhausted all avenues of appeal.
I wonder if that might be what's being alluded to. I'd welcome clarification myself on that, if that's what's being suggested when a case reaches the end of all avenues of appeal and is made public at that time.
Bloc
Martin Champoux Bloc Drummond, QC
Madam Chair, I am very sorry, but I missed the start of Mr. McMurren's question.
Could I ask him to kindly repeat it?
Director General, Strategic Policy and International Affairs, Department of Canadian Heritage
Of course.
As public servants, we have a question.
Regarding the cases that have been made public that are mentioned in the subamendment, have they been completed and have all avenues of recourse been exhausted?
Bloc
Martin Champoux Bloc Drummond, QC
Absolutely, that's correct.
That is already the current practice for the overview of cases that have been processed. Those cases are public in nature, of course. So it's the same principle. We simply want a list of those cases rather than an overview, and that list may only contain the cases that have already been made public. If memory serves, the Federal Court ruled on that in 2000. So we cannot deviate from that.
Cases that have been made public are therefore those that have been completed and are public in nature. We want them disclosed in a list rather than as part of an overview. I hope that answers your question.
Liberal
Director General, Strategic Policy and International Affairs, Department of Canadian Heritage
Yes. Thank you, Madam Chair.