I don't believe we have to invite him, so if we're now making a decision as to whether the steering committee decides to invite him or not, then case closed. If he's not invited, that's it. If we don't incorporate the discussion of his paper into our draft report, then I can't support the amendment. I don't mind having the steering committee decide whether we either invite him or we don't invite him, and the researchers can incorporate some kind of discussion about the issue in the report, in the same way they're going to have to update their report to discuss Dr. Schindler's paper, which was a follow-up to his appearance in Alberta, and in the same way they're going to have to incorporate new information on Dr. O'Connor, which we didn't have back in the spring. I'm just saying let's open up a subheading in the paper to discuss this. Now, we don't have to take a strong position in favour of Mr. Thomson's paper or against Mr. Thomson's paper, but there should be some kind of balanced discussion, led by the researchers, in the draft report on this issue. To not talk about this issue at all, to pretend it doesn't exist, I think makes our report less credible.
So I'd like us to vote on this motion, and the motion will give the steering committee a choice about whether to invite Mr. Thomson. If we don't feel we should have any more witnesses because we want to get on with the job, then the researchers will have a brief discussion of the issue and a brief review of Mr. Thomson's article in the drafted committee report.
It's quite possible that we won't have any recommendations flowing from that discussion, but somehow it needs to be addressed and recognized that this issue exists. I don't want to send it to steering committee, where we're going to decide we don't have time for more witnesses and we can't invite Mr. Thomson and that will be the end of it.