Yes...in light of what you just provided to the committee in terms of some of those statistics.
What would you say, however, to respond to Professor Bala, who submitted a brief to the committee, who asks, first of all, why have a presumption, inasmuch as it's really quite artificial? It doesn't really reflect the situation in most families, where parents don't have shared or equal parenting time. Sometimes there are vast differences in the amount of time that parents spend with the child.
Why not just take the interests of the child approach, as opposed to imposing at the outset this presumption? What's the benefit?