No, we're not against producing documents, but doing so in 30 days, under multiple different ministries and multiple different platforms, is way too much.
It's also worth noting that a very similar motion was introduced publicly in the public accounts committee yesterday. They're currently debating it to bring that request into a more workable and realistic scope. That's something we should be doing here. That context matters. It shows that even in another committee, one that routinely deals with larger volumes of documents, there is a recognition that requests of this magnitude are carefully collaborated in, with partnerships forming.
I'd also like to talk a bit about the feasibility of what this motion suggests. The timeline simply does not align with the reality of how government operates. Producing this volume of material requires public servants to comb through millions of documents in multiple departments. This is not a process that can be completed in a matter of days, or in this case, 30 days.
This brings me to the financial implications. I don't think we can ignore the fact that this kind of request could potentially cost millions of dollars to fulfill. Every hour spent on a public servant's trying to review these documents is an hour funded by the Canadian taxpayers. When you multiply that across teams—in this case, across departments and across weeks—the cost very quickly escalates.
It's not just financial. There's also a very real opportunity cost. The opportunity cost is what we saw today with the witnesses. We had almost a dozen people lined up to provide testimony on Build Canada Homes, the report we're studying right now. That's lost. For every dollar spent and every hour dedicated to compiling documents such as these, that's time, money and resources wasted when we could be working on some of the things we had previously, as a group, agreed to work on.
When Canadians are rightly expecting timely access to benefits, faster processing of applications and responsive government services, this motion counteracts everything you're trying to do. It redirects the public servants away from those core responsibilities. Let's think about that for a moment.
On top of that, during question period our minister diligently reported multiple times that they are working with the groups of people who might have been affected through this technology—people 60 years old, whom they are now trying to onboard and realign. They said that if any of us, the 343 members of Parliament, have constituents and seniors in our ridings who are affected by this, we should reach out.
We're also asking the same public servants who at this time process EI claims, who support seniors accessing benefits, who help newcomers navigate immigration systems and who ensure that programs are delivered efficiently to pause and do this work. Making them do this is not efficient. At the least, it's significantly slowing down other services in other areas in order to sift through millions of pages of records.
That's the trade-off. It's what they're asking for today. I don't think Canadians would support this trade-off right now. Our focus as parliamentarians, in this room and on the Hill, should be on improving service delivery, on ensuring that government works better for people and on holding the government to account in a way that is effective and proportionate. Our team went through the motion. In its current form, it does not achieve that balance. Instead, it creates an administrative burden that risks undermining the very services that Canadians rely on.
Let's be clear: Committees absolutely have the right to request information. This is a fundamental part of the role in ensuring transparency and accountability. However, with that right also comes responsibility, which I don't think they've taken into account today. In terms of making requests that are targeted, relevant and feasible, this motion does not meet any of those standards. It is not targeted. It does not clearly define the scope in a way that would allow departments to respond efficiently. Instead, it casts an extremely wide net, capturing vast amounts of material that may have only a tangible connection to the issue at hand. That lack of focus is not a practical problem. It's a procedural problem. That's a huge concern.
If we adopt such motions without careful consideration, we also risk setting a precedent for unlimited, unfocused document demands across government. Today it is this file; tomorrow it could be another. Over time, this approach overwhelms the system, making it harder, not easier, for committees to get information they actually need and to hear testimony from experts to develop and strengthen our programs that we need.
A well-crafted request that zeroes in on specific documents or a specific time frame, working with all committee members and our public servants, will provide information that a blanket demand for everything under the sun.... That's what this motion is. A well-crafted request allows departments to respond quickly and more accurately, and it enables committees to do their work more effectively.
That's the standard the people in this room. It's especially important to keep that standard in mind when we consider the work that we're doing and that's also been done on this file already, such as what our ministers talked about when the Bloc was broaching the subject of Cúram.
Multiple times since way back in October, our minister has said that, yes, we are onboarding a program that is old with new technology. I believe it's 30,000 or so people right now—of the millions of people who were being onboarded—who are affected. She said, to all 343 MPs and reaching out to our senior populations, that if there is anybody who is still affected by this, they can reach out to the minister directly. This is something she has said diligently, multiple times, during question period in public for everybody to hear and see.
There has already been quite a bit of transparency within this engagement. Minister Hajdu has appeared before committee. Minister Lightbound has also appeared. Officials from their offices and from relevant departments have already provided testimony and have answered questions. I'm wondering if my Bloc member was actually there before initiating this type of motion.
If they've already offered technical briefings to critics and have already offered to ensure that members have a detailed understanding of the issues, I don't see why producing millions, potentially, of documents and large amounts of paper is going to do anything except prove a point: that, at the will of whoever wants to, they can stall our public service.
At the request of the committee, officials have also been provided regional breakdowns and costing information into this program. That's not insignificant either. That is substantive. It is detailed information that helps inform our understanding and that supports our oversight role here as a government. The idea that there has been a lack of transparency simply doesn't hold firm.
There has been engagement. There has been disclosure. There has been a willingness to provide information and to answer questions.