I understand. I didn't realize the meeting was to end at 5:30.
I notice, though, that we're losing another hour of discussion, and that's unfortunate. I'm not saying it's due to a lack of preparation or anything like that, but we're talking about a study on a serious matter that would require eight meetings. We might need to push some items back, because we're going to run out of time. We're talking about adding new studies to our agenda, but our inability to keep to the allotted meeting times means we won't be able to conduct as many studies as we would want.
I find our current study relevant and interesting, and I'd like to go deeper, especially with the first nations, but we've already lost the first week, the second and a large part of the third. We still managed to write a report and vote on it thanks to the exceptional work of our analysts ahead of time. This is our fourth week, but we had only one hour, because we had to attend a very relevant training session. I don't like how inefficient we are as a committee.
Moreover, I think adding an eight-meeting study would give a lot of time to the government at the expense of the opposition parties. In the current context, I question the motion, not its principle, but the time we have to move forward on other issues that concern first nations. The committee's agenda is already quite full of government bills, yet we would add a study. Meanwhile, over the last few days, we've lost almost enough time to complete a study.
I would support the motion's principle, but I have my doubts about the schedule, especially since we're dealing with a minority government. No one knows how long it'll stand. I find the subject interesting, but we need to consider the context.
Could we entertain the motion, but discuss the priorities and scheduling so that it's fair for everyone?
