Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'm flattered at all the interest in hearing what my priorities are, and I absolutely look forward to putting those forward.
To be quite frank, the reason I haven't moved any motions on a study right now is that, as I said, we had a fulsome debate a month or two ago and set the calendar to June. That's why I didn't move any motion today. I think what we're doing today is really re-examining a schedule that's already been set. Again, I haven't heard any things that would cause me to disrupt the agreement that we came to about the schedule between now and June, as important as they are.
The other thing is that it's a little bit premature for me because one of my three motions was to study substance abuse and addiction, but, of course, my colleague Mr. Johns has placed a bill before the House that deals with that subject. So if that passes—and it will be coming up for a vote, I understand, in May—it will be going to a committee for a study, whether that's ours or justice, and that's why I've held off on that.
The issue of childhood nutrition, which was in another motion I moved, has been kind of incorporated into the motion we passed on children's health, so that's been subsumed.
I also have one on breast health, which is still on the books.
I just thought it was premature to be talking about the fall. I'll certainly revisit and move some more motions and then at a certain point I'll give all of my colleagues a heads-up about which one I would like to proceed with.
I don't think we have to decide that today. Again, I'm pretty sure we're going to have to have a meeting in early June to see where we're at, because we may not be finished the children's health issue by June either, so I don't think we need to set the calendar for October and November here in the first week of April. I still think the calendar we have, as we've set it, is broad enough to encompass the concerns of everybody I've heard today.
I must say that I don't think having a watching brief on COVID is a waste of time or that we're not learning anything at all. I think there are a lot of aspects of this that are still fascinating. For instance, where are we at in terms of domestic vaccine production?
We're coming to the end of our boosting. We've heard some evidence about boosting not being a viable long-term mechanism of dealing with this. We have 45% uptake on boosters. I'll tell you that one thing I'm hearing a lot about now is long COVID, which I don't think our committee has heard any testimony on.
I could list 25 different aspects of COVID right now that are current, pressing and important to Canadians and that the committee hasn't plumbed yet. I must say for the record that I can't agree with any of my colleagues who suggest that studying COVID is a waste of time or that we have nothing left to learn.
If anybody is running out of witnesses to put forward, just fire your list over to me and I'm happy to fill up the witness spots because I have a million of them to put forward if we need to.
I think we should just stay the course. Again, I think if we stay with COVID being once a week, that gives everybody the flexibility to call witnesses on any aspect that they wish, including on children. Then we can finish off these two very important studies, which are on human resources and on children's health. Maybe we can squeeze in the Bloc Québécois study. I'm not optimistic that can be done before June, but we could.
Mr. Lake's excellent suggestion on the suicide-prevention hotline is something that obviously we can get at in the fall. I have reason to suspect that it may even be legislated before we study it because of the unanimous agreement we had in the House on that idea.
I just think that given the volatility of COVID, I don't think it's worthwhile planning much beyond June at this point.
I think we should just agree to adopt the current calendar as we have it, finish that off, and be nimble, if we have to, over the weeks and months ahead.