Thank you, Chair.
I want to thank my colleague for bringing forward this motion. I offer my regrets to the witnesses who are before the committee today, but we're now in our fourth meeting, I believe, on this particular issue. I have been a member of Parliament for almost 15 years and a member of this committee for a number of those, and this is the very first time I can recall the committee undertaking a study without having department officials lead off by giving the committee members a lay of the land on what the issues before the government were.
Furthermore, we have no assurances at all that the minister has any intention of actually coming to this committee and providing us with a sense of what the government wants or where the government needs to go. She has not asked the committee in any way, shape or form to do any of this work for her. This was brought on by a member of the committee, and it is that member's right to do so. We are basically, for lack of a better term, fishing in the dark as to where this could possibly end up and where it needs to go.
We have a very untenable situation, in that the courts have indicated that the Mi'kmaq and others have certain rights to access the fishery. Nobody at this committee is denying that. We also have an untenable situation for fishers who are following the laws and regulations put down by the Department of Fisheries and Oceans to access their livelihoods, as has been rightly pointed out by some of the witnesses who are here today.
Even Professor Rodon has basically said the government hasn't come to the table yet. The professor is exactly right. The government hasn't even been at this committee table. For those who are watching these committee proceedings right now, I don't recall a committee ever starting a study without first consulting with department officials to set the groundwork, even for studies that are not controversial. Studies that are just there to provide the basis of information and understanding about better governance usually start with departmental officials. Here we have a potentially explosive situation on the ground and on the water off our eastern coast, and this committee hasn't been given the benefit of the doubt.
It's not a slight against the clerk or the chair, but on the motion we're bringing forward right now as Conservatives at this committee, we would like very much to have the departmental officials come in with the minister to let us know exactly what's happened so we can ask the right questions of the witnesses and we can get a sense of the debate going on at government tables. I know they can't disclose all the information, but I feel that this committee is basically floundering in its study right now. It's not because we don't have good witnesses and it's not because we're not asking good questions, but we're actually not able to direct the committee's actions in a way that will provide useful feedback for the government. That's the committee's primary responsibility here: to provide useful recommendations and feedback on behalf of all Canadians so we can have a sense of what questions to ask and what responses would be beneficial.
Mr. Chair, I would encourage the members of the committee who are here to take that responsibility seriously, to take this study very seriously and to support the motion my colleague has moved. As I said, I've been a member of this committee for the better part of 10 years, I'm guessing, and I have never, ever, seen a study start off without at least the departmental officials, and I've never seen a minister unwilling to come to talk to the committee about these issues.
Through you, Mr. Chair, I would ask my colleagues at the committee to support this motion. I want to hear from the minister. I want to know the minister's sense of the issues on the ground so that when more witnesses come, I'll be able to do my job better as a member of Parliament.
I want to ask the department officials some very pointed and tough questions about how they're managing this particular situation. I want to hear from those departmental officials on how they manage the lobster fishery so that I can put that in context with the other witnesses who come before the committee.
Canadians deserve better results and better responses from this committee's work. We can give them those better responses if we do things in a bit of a better order. I support my colleague's motion wholeheartedly.