Thank you, Madam Chair.
I'll just point out to Mr. Turnbull, for his information, that despite his colleague's lack of willingness to rescind his lack of consent for the Simms protocol, he's more than able to grab the floor with a point of order anytime and indicate that he's willing to rescind if he'd like to do that. In the meantime, I hope I don't bore everybody too much. This principle is that important.
It is really unfortunate, and I don't want to be in this position in any way, Madam Chair. I want to make that really clear. This is not my preference. This is not what I came here to do today. I'm shocked that we're in this position. I was shocked and frankly horrified by the suggestion that was made. It kind of came out of nowhere. I'm not sure if there was an intention all along on the part of the Liberals, the governing party, to do this, and this was just a way of doing it as a sneak attack, or whether this was something that was just conceived in Mr. Turnbull's mind as something that he thought might be a good idea, and he is maybe just too proud to admit that maybe it was a mistake, or maybe he feels this strongly that it's not a mistake.
I don't know where he is, and I guess unless he chooses to make a point of order or his colleague chooses to reconsider his ill-advised lack of consent for the Simms protocol, we won't know this, so we'll continue to speculate on what the motivations are here and what the reasons are. That's unfortunate, because I don't want to be speculating on those, and I don't want to be speaking for any length of time to this either. It's unfortunate that we're in this position.
As I said, I do disagree with the idea of going down the road that we're going down and making recommendations for future sittings. I'm just going to read the motion again to remind members, because, even though Mr. Brassard read a portion of it earlier, it seems as though there was still some confusion amongst members. I heard in some of the comments that were made by a few members that there still seems to be some confusion on what we're actually here to do.
I'll read from the motion that was passed by the House. It starts with “notwithstanding any standing order, special order or usual practice of the House”, of course, and there's a series of clauses. I'll read a few that are relevant to us. I won't read the whole thing at this point. Clause (l) states this:
(l) during the period the House stands adjourned pursuant to this order, the Standing Committee on Health, the Standing Committee on Finance, the Standing Committee on Government Operations and Estimates, the Standing Committee on Human Resources, Skills and Social Development and the Status of Persons with Disabilities, and the Standing Committee on Industry, Science and Technology may hold meetings for the sole purpose of receiving evidence related to the COVID-19 pandemic, provided that, at such meetings, (i) committee members shall attend and witnesses shall participate via either videoconference or teleconference, (ii) committee members attending by videoconference or teleconference shall be counted for the purposes of quorum, (iii) proceedings shall be made available to the public via the House of Commons website, (iv) notices of membership substitutions pursuant to Standing Order 114(2) may be filed with the clerk of each committee by email, and further provided that these committees (v) shall each meet at least once per week, unless the whips of all recognized parties agree not to hold a meeting, (vi) may each receive evidence which may otherwise exceed the committee’s mandate under Standing Order 108, (vii) shall meet within 48 hours of the receipt by email, by the clerk of the committee, of a request signed by any four members of the committee;
Then it goes on, in clause (m), to talk about our committee. This next part is very important. It's on what we're here to study: “the Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs be instructed to study ways in which members can fulfill their parliamentary duties while the House stands adjourned on account of public health concerns caused by the COVID-19 pandemic”.
I'll stop there and just give some parenthetical statements. What you didn't notice in that was anything about direction regarding what we would do in future circumstances that might arise and be similar to this or other emergency-type situations. That's important for the purposes of what we're discussing right now, because what we're talking about in these three motions....
I'm just going to read them quickly as well, before I get back to reading from the Standing Orders.
Recommendation LIB 1 is “We should establish an alternative set of Standing Orders to be used in extraordinary circumstances to enable a fully functioning virtual Parliament.”
That is not talking about the current circumstance, that we need to have revised standing orders, an alternative set of standing orders. It's talking about “extraordinary circumstances”, which could mean the current circumstances, one would assume, I guess. Again, I'm not completely clear on that. There hasn't been a lot of indication by government members on exactly the rationale behind this, and that's unfortunate, but one would have to assume that it would also pertain to future circumstances. That's where I have an issue with it, because I really think this is a mistake.
When you're in the middle of a crisis.... I've been through this and maybe I'll come back to it in a minute, but I'll just touch on it briefly. In my riding, in 2013, we faced very significant floods. I'm sure some members will remember them. They were in southern Alberta, and they originated in my riding. They affected a number of constituencies, but mine was certainly one of the affected areas. I know that many of those communities, after the fact, of course reviewed their procedures and their protocols around how they dealt with the situation. They looked at ways they could shore up their communities, with better armour along the banks, for example, things they could do to be better prepared if this situation were to arise in the future.
But what they didn't do during the crisis, while they were trying to deal with the crisis and everything that went with that.... They set up emergency operations centres, and in those operations centres—