Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I want to thank the witnesses for coming forward today to share their thoughts and knowledge with us.
I have been sitting here now for 13 hours or so listening to a great deal of very interesting testimony. I don't think I've heard anybody say anything contradictory about the four principles of resource development in terms of streamlining the process, that is, being predictable and timely, reducing duplication and regulatory burden, strengthening environmental protection, and having meaningful consultation with aboriginals. I don't think I've heard anybody say they disagree with those.
Right now, we have a process and we need a process that allows for a debate and discussion of how that development is going to happen. So you have the proponents—that is, Mr. Toner and others—coming forward and presenting what they want to do, and you have the others who are affected and who also have knowledge bringing fact-based science to the table, where you would have a discussion and then a rules-bound process for determining how to move forward. What we need to do is to make sure that is streamlined and that everybody's interests are properly taken into consideration.
There are different interests on how we protect the commons that need to be fully aired, and yet we're engaged in a process here that's based on power, I would humbly submit. The government is unilaterally bringing forward changes to 70 pieces of legislation, some extraordinarily impactful pieces of legislation that we're talking about—the Fisheries Act, the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act, and others. They are bringing them in. They are jamming them through an omnibus bill where we get to talk about it for a full 12 hours. We already had 2 hours, so it's 14 hours altogether.
It's not setting a good example for how we're going to sort out the different interests that come forward in the future, because now, it seems to me, that with the unilateral changes that we're making in this legislation, which are not taking into consideration what we've heard here and are completely one-sided, this is not setting a good example. It means that when we go forward it's very much going to be a power-based system.
Mr. Toner—and I only refer to him because he's Nova Scotian, which I want to point out—and other proponents are going to come forward and propose the development of projects, and others will come in and raise questions about those, but in the final analysis it will be the minister or the cabinet that will decide.
That simply blows me away. In terms of setting an example for how we talk about being cooperative, working together, and making science-based decisions in protecting natural resources and so on, everybody wants to do it in a timely, efficient, and effective way. Why don't we sort those problems out together and achieve it that way, rather than following this power-based process where we'll come out the other end with the same people for and against it?
What do you think is going to happen when the first project comes forward under these changes? Do you think there is going to be any uncertainty? Do you think there are going to be any challenges? Do you think there are going to be any delays? And that is simply based on the process we have gone through here. That is a huge concern of mine.
I'll shut up now and ask a question. I'm sorry.