I'm reluctant to wade in at any depth, but I will take the opportunity to say I think it's regrettable that the Conservatives appear to be trying to run down the clock in this.
For a matter of record—I have the floor and I have an opinion—it does seem to me that the Conservatives are trying to run down the clock to avoid bringing this matter up for a study.
On Mr. Stanton's idea that nobody will give you any information anyway, we can't predict whether a witness will be productive or not until we get the witness here. That, in and of itself, is not a good reason to not undertake a study of this kind.
The one amendment that I would have looked at as being productive, possibly, and even more useful is that Madame Lavallée's motion calls on us to consider the matter, gather evidence and report on the apparent violation of the Access to Information Act.
We could have put a date, that perhaps we should call on the committee to undertake this analysis and submit a report to the House of Commons before June 8, 2007, for instance, to serve notice to the government-side members that we don't intend to drag this out forever. I don't think it's our wish or our interest to humiliate the government by exposing all kinds of wrongdoing.
We want to get to the bottom of this one issue, that somebody denied this report ever existed. That's a criminal offence, and it undermines and devalues the whole freedom of information regime if that's taking place in one government department.
I don't think the government-side member should be so self-conscious about this. This isn't a condemnation of the whole new Conservative government. We've stumbled across the bad administration of the access to information regime in this one instance.
It's a unique instance, I pointed out, and I don't think Mr. Van Kesteren understood my point. It isn't unique that big chunks of this were blocked out. That's quite common in documents, for any number of legitimate reasons. But this same access to information coordinator gave the entire document to a university professor a couple of weeks earlier. So we have the unique situation of being able to examine what the whole document said and what sections were blocked out and then use our judgment as to whether this was in fact within the 13 legitimate reasons.
So the two questions that need to be addressed, that are crying out to be addressed by this committee, are: did they deny knowledge or did they deny that this document existed at all, in which case it's a very serious offence; and secondly, are they using good judgment or are they working within the parameters of what's allowed in what paragraphs they choose to black out?
That's entirely within the mandate. I think we have an obligation as the access to information committee to ensure the proper administration of our access to information laws or freedom of information laws. It would be irresponsible of this committee not to undertake this study, because it's a rare thing, as I say, that we get such an egregious example with all the evidence clearly accessible and available.
I move that we put the question.