On the subamendment, my apologies for that.
I am speaking directly about the subamendment and the question of having Alto executives, specifically the CEO, appear, and I'm going to continue to do that. We are in a meeting right now, without notice, and where resources have been requested for 16 hours today. I think it is fair to say that I'm within my domain and my speaking time to canvass the reasons we oppose the subamendment on this side of the table.
I was speaking about the substantive disagreement we have about calling Alto employees—any of them, or any Alto executives—to the committee to reflect on this particular topic. That includes Mr. Imbleau. The reason is that, as I was describing, the inquiry here itself has been brought before the Office of the Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner. The commissioner, independently, as that office is designed to do, has already weighed in on this topic and actually confirmed that Minister Champagne is not in a position of conflict, that he has respected the rules that have been set out for ministers, and that as Minister of Finance he has no decision-making authority over matters of human resources at Alto and therefore does not have the opportunity to further the interest of any specific Alto employee.
When we're talking about bringing the CEO of Alto to committee, the real question here is, why? Why are we taking up the time of the CEO of Alto to weigh in on a matter that is properly within the scope of the Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner, and a topic which the commissioner has already made comment on to say there isn't an issue here and that the Minister of Finance has no decision-making authority. Now the fact that the minister went above and beyond the guidance of the Ethics Commissioner to establish a screen within his ministry is a reflection of the seriousness to which our government takes the conflict of interest regime. It doesn't change the fact that the Ethics Commissioner has said there is no conflict here.
When I take a look at Mr. Imbleau, he is an executive who brings to Alto a wealth of experience from other organizations. Before joining Alto, he was the CEO of the Montreal Port Authority. He's been at Hydro-Québec as vice-president of corporate strategy and business development for Canada and the United States. He has worked for Énergir as a vice-president in several roles. He holds a master's in law from the Université de Montréal and a bachelor's in law from the Université du Québec à Montréal. He has been a member of the Quebec Bar Association since 1997. He is chair of the board of directors of the Université du Québec at Montréal's Raoul-Dandurand Chair of Strategic and Diplomatic Studies.
This is someone who has the experience to guide a project like Alto, but bringing an executive like Mr. Imbleau to this committee to testify on this matter seems to be nothing more than a dressed-up fishing expedition. Not only do we have that substantive disagreement, that it is improper to call Alto executives to this inquiry because the inquiry itself is improper, but, Mr. Chair, to your very specific point, we also have a procedural disagreement with this which is if the interest in having Mr. Imbleau here is to actually talk about Alto, then that is probably better referred to the Standing Committee on Transport.
What we'd be expecting to hear from Mr. Imbleau, if he appeared at this committee, would be about the project itself, it's progress, its advancement, its community consultations, its timelines for building the route, items that are probably specifically and properly within the scope of the CEO's role.
I ask my colleagues opposite, with their intention to call a very senior executive from Alto, what is their purpose in having Mr. Imbleau testify?