Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Definitely, I have the same sentiments that my colleague Mr. Thériault has. We always sit in these meetings and we all say that we should find ways to get along, and yet when we make reasonable suggestions, it seems that the government tries to avoid them.
Mr. Chair, we don't have any answers on vaccines, and even though we got to ask a few questions about vaccines on Friday, we still don't have the answers we need to understand how people are going to be getting the vaccines, when the vaccines might become available, or how they are going to be transported from place to place to place.
I thought that in this new era, when Mr. Davies got going, we were actually going to find a way to manage the next few meetings so that everyone could be on the same page. Unfortunately, we're finding that is not the case. We're finding that since they were not able to get their way the last time around when Mr. Van Bynen tried to run the motion on mental health to try to take up the time of this committee and was turned down because of the motion in the House of Commons, here we are again today, with their taking up the four meetings consecutively, except for the PMPRB meeting that is going to be stuck in the middle.
I find it unfortunate that we cannot get along when it comes to the number one issue that comes before us, which is for us to have a vaccine and to be comfortable with how it's going to transported across the country and how people are going to be able to get it. That will alleviate the anxiety that most Canadians have—not all Canadians, but a good chunk of them—because they are worried about the vaccine.
The example is really good here in the bubble, and I know that a number of my colleagues on this call—