Thank you.
My first comment is just for reference to my friend Mr. Vellacott, who spoke about the fact that there needed to be some balance in the report.
It's not for committee members to determine the balance; it's for us to listen to what we hear. It's what people come to talk to us about that should be in our report. It's not for us to put our personal views in, in order to balance anything. That's not what a committee does.
Anybody could have been invited to be a witness. Minister Clement could have come as a witness. Anybody could have been invited by any member to be a committee witness and bring that point of view forward.
I made this suggestion probably 45 minutes ago, which I think Madame Folco and Mr. Komarnicki have followed up a little.
To be clear, I don't think it makes sense, although I'm not totally against it, but my preference would not be that we go through the report and vote on taking out things that aren't appropriate in it, because there's language before and after all those things that is then going to have to be changed. We have perfectly good writers and researchers who could take this report back, if this were the determination of the committee, and just reflect what we heard at committee. Then we could append the other two documents, meaning the evidence from the industry committee and the status of women committee. It would all be included in the report, but it wouldn't be the “virus”, as Mr. Lessard so accurately referred to it, of taking evidence that had nothing to do with our study and putting it in the middle of our study.
Again, just to remind people, the reason we did this study in this committee is in many ways different from the reason people in the industry committee or other committees might look at it. The purpose of this, and the original wording of the motion I brought forward to the committee, was specific to the people who are affected by the decisions of this committee and this department. That's why it's so important that we not take other evidence, particularly evidence brought forward in a disproportionate way from other committees, and put it in the middle of our committee report.
I know we're discussing a motion, but Mr. Komarnicki—you can give me a nod or shake your head—would you be okay with our asking the writers of the report to go back and take out any references from other committees and then append both of those entire studies to the back of our report?
Thank you, Chair.