There's obviously an interest by some members to not remove both the Ghaoui Group representatives and the other Randy. I know the timing of the meeting is something members perhaps want to prescribe, and the duration of the meeting is of interest so that this isn't a multi-day event.
To Mr. Brock's point, if it's 60 minutes and we have three witnesses on one panel and potentially 15 minutes of opening statements, that would be a challenge for productivity. We'll have spent many orders of magnitude more time on the effort to make the meeting happen than we will expend during the meeting itself.
On the question of supporting the amendment, we heard from Mr. Green, and I appreciate his response. I'm just wondering if my colleague from the Bloc would like to speak to what his interest is.
We support a two-hour meeting. We support it occurring within the regularly scheduled rubric of meetings for the Standing Committee on Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics. We understand that should the clerk extend an invitation to the organization for the individual who's identified as Randy, if they come back and say they can't help, that exhausts the clerk's ability to do that. She executed the will of the committee, and then it can come back to us and we can decide how we would like to proceed. I don't think it further advances our cause to issue a summons for someone for whom we don't have a last name or coordinates, but that would be something for the committee to consider at the time.
To my colleague from the Bloc, I wonder if there is a willingness to advance the issue. If the question is about removing the Ghaoui Group, we could support that. That's obviously not our preference, but we could accept that as an amendment to resolve the discussion. Then we'd have Mr. Anderson and Ms. Poon come, who are in the amendment, and leave the invitation to the other Randy in, and it would occur over two hours during a regularly scheduled meeting of the committee, with one witness panel for the two hours. Then it's not a multi-day affair and we can put the issue to rest.
I want to give an opportunity to my colleague to speak. I want to hear him out if he's interested. I spoke to Mr. Villemure to that effect prior to the meeting, and he seemed to think that was interesting. I'm curious if his colleague is of the same view. If he's interested in responding, I'd appreciate that.