Thank you. I'll be brief.
I think the motion is self-evident. I think the evidence in this report and the previous one the commissioner referenced is shocking, and there's the frustration. Here's the 2016 report, with a plan to get a plan for having integrated fisheries management plans. The department said they would have a plan for that plan on how to get there in 2017, a year later, after that report. I suspect they haven't done that, since we have virtually no more integrated fisheries management plans now than we did then.
These reports keep getting done by the commissioner of the environment, and they keep getting done by this committee on other aspects of this situation. The department says, “Yes, we agree.” The minister says yes and signs off—actually, it's six ministers who have said yes, they agree—and then nothing happens. Nothing gets done. Successive ministers clearly hope that this just goes away.
There will be another report, and it will get one day in committee. They'll never call the minister on it, because the minister only comes for estimates, and he or she will never have to answer for it. Well, that time is over. The minister has to answer for her and her predecessors' not fulfilling their duties to Parliament, to the fishing community and to Canada's environment by ignoring these reports, setting these false deadlines knowingly, sending these reports in response to Parliament and then actually not doing anything about it.
I think it's time. Enough is enough. There's the time in that famous movie when they say, “I'm not going to take this anymore.” Well, we're not going to take it anymore. The minister has to come and be held accountable for the actions of her department in ignoring all these reports.