Thank you Mr. Chair.
I can appreciate where the member opposite is coming from; however, if we go back to testimony we heard during our study of this particular bill, there are already provisions.
First of all, all departments carry forward regulatory plans so that they communicate in advance of any proposed changes with interested parties. They can go and see what the proposals are for regulations to be reviewed or looked at, so they can contact the department from there.
Then as a part of the regular process, a regulatory analysis impact statement is let out that basically addresses all of proposed paragraph (b), all of (c), and all of (d), so that people can have that kind of transparency. If someone in my riding goes and reads the Canada Gazette, they can find out what consultations have already been done with stakeholders. They can already find out what exactly in layman's terms the benefits and the costs of the regulatory change will be and why it's even being brought forward.
Again, the Canada Gazette prepublication—that's the Canada Gazette part I—will allow someone to be able.... It doesn't matter who you are in this country, you can bring forward your suggestions, and then those suggestions are accumulated and produced in the second Canada Gazette. So the government actually says what it will do and what it heard, and if there were any changes because of that.
Finally, once this particular one-for-one rule is applied, it is part of the score card that is put out by Treasury Board every year. It clearly lists all regulations that have been amended under the one-for-one. All that information is clear and available to taxpayers, to business owners, and to the average citizen. So as far as I can see, at best, all of this is redundant and it is indicative that either the NDP does not understand the bill or they do not understand our current processes.
Mr. Chair, I would just like to suggest that no member should vote for this, because, again, adding more of the same is redundant. I thought we were here to try to end redundancies.