Mr. Chair, we spent some time organizing our work at our last in camera meeting. We only received your notice to the effect that Bill S‑203 would be on the agenda at 10 a.m. Do you think it's acceptable, at only an hour's notice, to add an agenda item to study a bill for 15 minutes when a political party is trying to introduce some amendments? Do you believe that's acceptable?
You assumed, on the basis of information from I don't know who—surely not an official representative—that there had been an agreement between the parties, which is not the case. What I am challenging is not the outcome of the agreement, but the fact of introducing a clause-by-clause item on the agenda of the committee meeting at only one hour's notice. I've never seen that.
It has nothing to do with obstruction. I know that Mr. Lake is keen on this bill. I think that if we were to begin this study on Tuesday, when we return from the break, there would be enough time for him to achieve his goal, which is to have his bill adopted prior to World Autism Awareness Day.
However, I disagree with the fact that we should have taken time to organize our work, only to find that on only an hour's notice, after having been contacted unofficially, you should ask us to begin a clause-by-clause study. That's not in keeping with the usual practices.