This goes right back to our first meeting: individuals can submit motions. They can submit three or four motions. Mr. Dewar, the very first day, had two or three motions that he presented. In the past I've seen some people present five motions, and say that when they want to bring them up they'll bring them up. What they do then is just let the clerk know they want to deal with their motion on Tuesday. That's the way we've always done it.
Once it has 48-hours' notice, the clerk will then say we need the time for committee business. Then we can go to it. Now, if the motions that are in are ones you want dealt with ASAP, then we will start every meeting saying that at 12:45 we're shutting down the committee and going to committee business.
If the motions are there and there's no rush to deal with them.... From a political perspective, I may think, you know what, they have their motions in here in a timely fashion, and they're in order. Maybe they're doing other work and want to have the proper ability to communicate the motions out in the news or media, and then they will let our clerk know and we will see that they're on the agenda.
But I'm not going to have.... If you want to have committee business every committee meeting, then just get hold of Angela and say yes, we want to deal with our motion, and then we'll do these every meeting for 15 minutes. But if no one brings them forward....
Mr. Wilfert's motion is actually on today's agenda. Is that the only one?