Thank you, Mr. Miller and Mr. Chair, and thank you to our guests. Mr. McArthur, I'm sorry for taking you away from the poolside. I appreciate your bringing your experience and your wisdom to the table.
For those around the table who have had the opportunity, we've been discussing this for about five meetings, I guess, so far. We've had different witnesses bringing different perspectives. So just to clarify some of the comments for the sake of those who weren't here for the other witnesses, we've had Mr. David Plunkett, who's the chief trade negotiator for this EFTA agreement. He works for the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade.
With regard to Mr. Pugh, to respond to your comment about the aspect of supply management, it isn't compromised. It's not affected. I quote Mr. Plunkett's comments, “I should note that Canadian supply-managed programs are maintained under this EFTA and were exempted.” So if there's some miscommunication along the way, those are the comments from the chief negotiator. If there's some other information we should know, then I appreciate that, but that's what we've been told around the table here.
Also, an agrifood negotiator with the strategic trade policy division of the Department of Agriculture and Agri-food, Mr. Frédéric Seppey, says:
We mean that an essential element of the supply management system is the predictability of imports. That is achieved by having low duty apply on the volume coming in that is within the access commitment—which is the tariff quota we have in place—and having very high tariffs on the volume coming in that is beyond this tariff quota. In these negotiations the over-access tariffs are not affected. We maintain our over-access tariff on all supply-managed products. Hence, we are maintaining the effectiveness of import control for supply-managed goods.
Our government's very concerned. I know that negotiators had spent....This agreement started about 10 years ago. It's the first free trade agreement Canada has entered into for the last six years, so it's not that it's taken, I guess, like a storm overnight. There's been a lot of consultation and a lot of toing and froing to make sure we get a fair and balanced agreement.
I know there are some challenges within certain sectors.
The other aspect that needed clarifying was a question Mr. Risser asked about the process, and this is something new that our government brought in. It's a treaties-in-Parliament process. How it works is that basically there's a 21-day provision for any of the opposition parties to use one of its opposition days to debate, in this case, the EFTA agreement.
We're just nearing that 21-day period, and the NDP hasn't exercised that option. They said it was of very significant concern to them. They wanted to have more oversight and input, but they haven't chosen to take that option.
There will be an opportunity to debate this in the committee as well as in the House once legislation is tabled by the government. We'll have a full and open debate both at the committee level and in the House, so there'll be ongoing opportunities for parliamentarians to provide oversight and input. I just needed to make sure that's on the record to clarify the process.
I have one specific question for Mr. McArthur. You've been in the industry for a long time. Have you been involved in these ongoing discussions over the years this EFTA agreement is taking to come to fruition?