Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I would like to highlight three things.
First, we are preparing the list of witnesses. Those who have been mentioned will, of course, be invited.
It's fairly evident or obvious that you would invite the ministers.
Apropos to what Mr. Brock has suggested, I would raise a couple of points.
One is that there is some utility in having ministers in the room at the same time, and I say that only because sometimes it can be frustrating. I say this as a guy who has been frustrated in court at times when you don't have the right person in the witness box. You ask them a question, and they defer to, “Well, that's not under my knowledge; that's in the knowledge of person X”, so it would be useful to have person X or minister X in the room at the same time so that people aren't shifting responsibility for answering a certain question.
Just on crude mathematics, and, again, math is not the forte of most lawyers, so work with me here, but Mr. Brock has suggested dates and for two hours each. Hypothetically, if you had each minister on one of those dates, you might have four meetings of two hours, and that's eight hours. The original contemplation was two hours in total.
Perhaps there might be a compromise that could be achievable where, since we're now in the world of three-hour meetings, instead of a total of eight hours, we have a total of six hours with two three-hour meetings with all of the ministers present. Maybe in the committee's infinite wisdom, you might want two ministers for one of the meetings and two ministers for one of the other meetings.
I just put that on the floor as a suggestion.
Thank you.