I can clarify. I was expecting you to come for quite some time. I had this in my agenda long before the agenda changed.
I was really surprised. You know, here we are, talking about a motion with an unprecedented scale of request. It mirrors a similar motion that was introduced at the public accounts committee last week. Members there are still debating amendments because of the sheer volume and complexity of what is involved.
When we have motions, I think we have to make sure that they're smart, that they are specific, that they are measurable, that they are achievable, that they are relevant and that they are time-bound. Frankly, I feel like we dealt with similar motions on the science committee. There were enormous document requests, and once we really looked into things and saw the breadth of what was being asked for, how many pages of documents and, importantly, what the cost was to translate—because it's very important that all this information be available in both official languages—we ultimately changed our minds on that and had something very scoped instead, a motion that was much smarter, so to speak. It wasn't only that; in terms of time, the translation was going to literally take years.
Producing the material that's being requested in this motion will cost millions of dollars. It is simply not feasible to complete within the time frame proposed, just 30 days. Expecting public servants to comb through millions of documents across multiple departments in a matter of weeks is simply not realistic. These individuals are already working at full capacity to deliver services Canadians rely on every single day.
That brings me to the impact. Every hour that's spent compiling documents is an hour that's not spent processing claims by the department, answering inquiries or delivering timely services to Canadians. This is at a time when Canadians expect efficiency. We see that. They're asking for that and for responsiveness. This motion really diverts public servants from their core responsibilities, and it slows down service delivery at a moment when we can least afford to slow down.
While I do respect that committees have a right to request information, it's important that we look at the broader context of what those implications are. The requests have to be targeted, and they have to be reasonable. If adopted, this motion sets something that's really unprecedented. It's unfocused documents across government, likely needing many thousands of hours of translation, and it's just not a sustainable or responsive approach to oversight.
I'll come back to what I was getting to at the beginning. This is taking away from equally important work here on this committee as well. We should be working on Bill C-20, Build Canada Homes. Last Thursday, this committee was unable to hear from witnesses who had taken time out of their day—some of them rearranging schedules, some of them travelling here—to appear before us on the important Bill C-20 legislation. Two of those stakeholders wrote to me personally and said how disappointed they were that they were unable to answer questions and fully convey what was important to them in this important legislation, Bill C-20, Build Canada Homes. Their testimony matters; their perspectives matter. We had to cancel because this committee was consumed by procedural wrangling related to this motion.
We owe it to those witnesses. We owe it to Canadians to stay focused on legislative work before us and not to go down these rabbit holes. Bill C-20, Build Canada Homes, is significant, and the committee has a responsibility to give that the attention it deserves. Continuing down this path of broad, unfocused document demands only delays that work further. Other committees have realized this and have backed off from things like this.
I want to acknowledge that we already have seen a lot of transparency demonstrated on this file. Minister Hajdu, Minister Lightbound and officials from both offices have appeared.
Officials provided technical briefings to critics. They supplied regional breakdowns and costing at the committee's request. There has already been substantial engagement, substantial openness.
Given all of this and the important work we need to be doing on Bill C-20, Build Canada Homes, coupled with the fact that this is not a smart motion—because it's not specific, measurable, achievable or relevant, and the time that's been allotted to it is just simply not realistic—I really think this will have a tremendous impact on service delivery by our public servants, who are very busy working for Canadians.
I'm very worried about the precedent it sets, especially in terms of how this could be years' worth of translation for something that may not even achieve the outcome people think it will. It's also a huge disruption to the important work for Bill C-20, Build Canada Homes.
That's why I am not in support of this motion. I wish we were talking about Build Canada Homes today, but I think it's important that I speak to how it can really be an ineffective use of, frankly, taxpayers' dollars to go down the road of this motion. We could use our time to be responsible, to be targeted, and to really focus more on the work that Canadians expect us to do.
Thank you, Mr. Chair, for the opportunity to be here. I hope I will be back one day on Build Canada Homes and those important matters of housing and infrastructure that I'm so privileged to work on for Canadians.