Mr. Chair, the reason I voted no is that I want to speak to this. We had a study, a tour across Canada, that went to 13 different meetings, and the Conservatives failed to show up for 11. They talk about rolling up their sleeves. I can understand individual circumstances surfacing, Mr. Chair. We have that all the time. We've had colleagues lose family members and had to find subs. We have 25 members. They have 118 members, Mr. Chair. However, I find it interesting that the Conservative leader held a press conference in Vancouver with other MPs during one of the days of study at HESA. They were able to find time to do a press conference on legislation that actually already exists, and then they favourably showed up at a meeting that was held by the Alberta government and provincial-run facilities, but not at the rest of the meetings across Canada.
Mr. Chair, I will say this. When the Conservatives go and meet those 11 organizations that took time out of their lives and days of saving lives—because that's what those organizations and people do—then I'm willing to talk about this motion; I'm willing to work with them on getting back to continuing the work we need to do. However, before any further conversation about more meetings, I think the Conservatives owe it to those individual organizations and individuals and Canadians to go and meet with those organizations and listen to them. That's rolling up their sleeves, Mr. Chair.