I've gone back and forth on this. I think it's important to have the minister appear, because ultimately, the accountability sits at his desk and on his shoulders.
However, there's a new minister responsible for Canada Post. Based on my meetings with the last minister responsible for Canada Post, I'm not convinced that Canada Post is the top priority. I know; it's surprising.
Therefore, my preference would be to hear from witnesses throughout the course of the study, and then decide near the end whether the minister should be invited separately to address the topics that have been raised. I think that allows us to survey the issue and decide which aspects of the issue are really the responsibility of the minister and which questions we want to ask.
I've been part of other studies for which we had the minister appear at the first meeting, when the committee hadn't really dug into the material and heard from the witnesses who were the most affected.
That would be my preference. I think the deputy minister will have been with the department longer and is going to have more familiarity with the issues at hand. If we hear from the deputy near the beginning and then, when we get near the end of the study, decide whether it warrants having the minister appear, that would be my preference.
Speaking to the other parts of the amendment, I like the other parts, because they allow us to get through this in a fairly timely way.
Thank you.