We will suspend this part of the procedure then and get back to that in a few moments. Thank you.
That's a bit out of order in some respects, but I'm sure you can tolerate that.
I'd like to move to the issue of in camera now.
Colleagues, in front of you there is an options and issues document. This is dealing with the in camera proceedings.
While you're looking at that, I want to be very clear that there are two issues before this committee. So that we're not confused, we're dealing with the deliberate releasing of in camera information and under what circumstances a committee would choose to make public in camera proceedings.
This is not to be confused with another motion before this committee to deal with sanctions for leaked information from in camera meetings. That, colleagues, is a separate event. We are not dealing with that today.
What we're dealing with today, then, is under what circumstances should, would, and could a committee make in camera information public. The paper in front of you summarizes the issues and indicates some of the precedents that have been set when this has occurred in the past. These were discussed at the last meeting as well.
I'll encourage colleagues to have a look at that, if you haven't already, and then we can begin that discussion immediately.
I see colleagues are still reading a little bit there, but we're going to have to come to some agreement as to how to proceed.
It would be my suggestion that we look at the options, of which there are three, and then there are questions regarding some of those options. But ultimately, colleagues, there are three things that this committee could choose to do.
Option number one suggests that we amend the Standing Orders and prohibit the publication of any document, in any in camera meeting, by anybody, in any circumstance. That would require that the transcripts be destroyed, the tapes be destroyed, and so on and so forth.
I'm only going to throw my opinion out to begin the discussion. I initially thought this is the way it should be. That would have been my opinion in the first place, because if it's in camera, it's in camera.
However, in reviewing the history through the House and the precedents that have been set, there are seemingly reasonable times when this particular option doesn't work. Whether it's with the permission of witnesses, after the fact, and so on, there are ways that a committee or this House could move forward in doing the right thing in making in camera....
So I'm proposing that option number one is probably not going to work. And now I have my discussion going.
Mr. Hill, please.