Chair, again we've heard numerous comments by members of the committee that the testimony was very brief. The typical opportunity to question the witnesses is a 10-minute first round and a second round of 5 minutes. What did we have today? Two minutes. We heard four opportunities, two minutes each. That's eight minutes of questioning. So the comment that we did not have an adequate amount of time spent on this today is true. For us now to forge ahead without the facts is beyond belief.
Chair, I'd like to read a comment that was the government's response from the CEPA review in 1995, noting that they didn't want to single out cleaning products. They said it was inappropriate. This is what they said, and I quote:
We cannot commit to further regulation of phosphates in cleaning products such as automatic dishwasher detergents, or to regulation of other nutrients in other products such as water softeners and fertilizers, until we have studied to what extent nutrients from sources other than laundry detergents are causing damage to the environment.
Chair, that is a reasonable approach where you do not try to kill a fly with a hammer; you look at science, you listen to witnesses, and then you provide a motion. If the committee wants to move forward before we hear from the witnesses, it's politically motivated. It's not based on science and it's not based on fact. It's the wrong direction. We need to hear from the witnesses.