Madam Chair, I just wanted to make the point that your point about the discretion that I have as a clerk is true; it's discretionary. The habit of ordering standing catered lunches for PROC was one that came about because there was an interest in doing that when the entire committee was in the same room together. This type of routine motion in the past has also been used occasionally when the committee is meeting in person and sitting late into the evening on a vote marathon, for example, and there is the need to bring food in for the members so they don't have to suspend while they're doing their work. They can continue doing their work and still permit me, after I've been directed to do so, to order in some pizzas or something to allow the committee to continue doing its work.
The motion as it is can be that way. Informally, the arrangement can be changed so that I would only ever order food in when I am directed to do so by the chair, for example. You can also, if you want, change the wording of this motion to explicitly say that—that I would essentially order food in only when I'm explicitly directed to do so by the committee, or by the chair.