I totally disagree, and here's why. The role of the committee is as an independent arm from the government. The mandate letter is an important and useful tool for the direction the government takes. The provincial and territorial meetings that are going to go on will not produce technical results for seven, eight, or nine months.
In terms of the expectations of the process that we're engaging in now and that the government's going into in Vancouver, you have to look at what the role of the committee is. It is not some adjunct of government or of the minister's office. This is an independent body that is meant to provide leadership. The idea that the minister's mandate letter says such and such, or that the government is engaged in conversations with the territories and the provinces, is all excellent and important and relevant to the committee. But it is not directional to this committee.
The purpose of this committee is to provide leadership on topics that Canadians are interested in. The government is going forth and having conversations, and we encourage those conversations, but the independence of this committee is paramount. Leadership is required of this committee, and in the past it has played this role. It has acted as a tent peg for the government's actions. Whether it was Liberal or Conservative, that didn't matter. This committee in the past has maintained a fierce independence over what it does.
We are informed by outside forces. We are informed by what the minister's mandate may be and by what comes out of Vancouver. But to say that, on the one hand, this is an interesting topic to all of us and to the Canadians we represent, while saying that, on the other hand, there's this other conversation we don't want to jump in front of, is absolutely the wrong way to approach this matter. If this is something that is important, then the role we get to play can actually be helpful. It can be quite influential on other conversations that are going on.
If we think it's important, if we think this is worthwhile, if we think we can get something out of it, then we ought to sally forth. If the provinces and the territories are meeting with the federal government, good for them. But what I hear from my constituents, what I hear from the people engaged in environmental issues, is that they want more activity on this. They want to see leadership and there's not anyone around this table who can disagree.
I've seen too many processes in the federal government in which you could knit a lot of sweaters waiting for results. I have great hope for the minister. I hope that all of her conversations are productive and come out with meaningful timelines, but we're 120 days into this mandate and we don't even have a sense of when Canada will have a new target, not even a deadline on the mechanisms or the plan to follow. It might happen six or eight months down the road.
This committee is a free actor in this. This is the opportunity for all of us to engage in things we care about deeply, things that are going to be helpful to Canadians. We are informed by other matters. The mandate letter that you just read part of, the minister's plans, the Prime Minister's meetings—those are all great. But we should be very cognizant on both sides of the table about how instructional these matters are, because they're not. They're absolutely not.
Our role and the fierceness with which we take on these issues will after four years determine whether people judge us to have been effective or not.