Okay. Thanks, Mr. Chair.
The reason I was doing that was because I thought maybe we could figure out.... I'll just go by a guess that it might take another meeting in terms of looking at.... I'm trying to work through here in terms of the time frame for this motion because we do have a Liberal amendment coming up on this bill, as well as an NDP amendment. We have a two-year, a three-year, and a five-year potential review of the bill, so I want to get the time frame of when this actually takes place because I think it's really important, and I'll get to the reasons for that later.
As we walk through this, though, it's clear that the minister proposed this bill with no time frame at all. That's problematic because when you've only reviewed something of this significance two times over 40 years, especially given that they've had substantial majorities in that time period, the bill has received very little interest, in general, by the Liberal governments of the day. In fact, aside from some Conservative years, who were in power in the last decade, the vast majority of this bill's history has been under a Liberal government, which was under the Chrétien regime when I first arrived here.
My point is that if we're going to take a pass on dealing with it later the problem is that there has been very little interest by the governments to actually deal with it, and that's a criticism also of my Conservative colleagues. I know they have thick skin but at the same time we haven't dealt with this bill.
I wonder whether or not it's going to be a priority. Hence, when we look at the issues that we've dealt with here, be it gender equality for women, racial descriptions, or the issue over shares and things that have been isolated from this, I find the timeline for review one of the biggest concessions that we have to the minister to actually have some empowerment.
The empowerment comes through the comply or explain. If the comply or explain process fails us during this time period, which I want to go through here, then we're stuck, as opposed to...and this is where I want to highlight to members that we have had this happen. Bills for review have popped up on industry and other committees and they can take a matter of minutes to deal with, or they can be scoped as well, so it depends on what is proposed.
We don't have to deal with this entire amendment or entire act when it comes up again. We can deal with sections of it. It could be one meeting, it could be one hour, or it could be full hearings if we find, for example, that the comply or explain model isn't working, or maybe it's working very well and then we don't have to do anything.
The problem we have here with the time frame—and I'd be curious to eventually see what the Conservatives have with regard to this—is that it comes into force and every five years the Senate and House committees may be designated. It's within three years after the day on which proposed section 172.1 comes into force and every five years after that.
Let's be clear on what is being presented to us here. It is three years and five years after that. The five years is very consistent with that of the Liberal proposal that's being amended.
Sorry, which amendment number is that?