On this point, we've spent some time together as a committee, and I appreciate the efforts of everybody on this committee. We're all representing different parties and have different views on things; however, within Parliament, this is where some of the real work can take place. I hope we come to the committee with an open mind and a willingness to work together, away from the cut and thrust of what happens in question period. Here we can behave in a collegial manner with each other within the rules that this House sets out, within the rules that we establish as a committee.
One of the things that was set out very early when we came together was that the committee would meet from 11:00 to 1:00 EST. I appreciate Ms. Findlay's intervention that eastern time means something different here in the Atlantic region, and it means something way different in British Columbia. I appreciate the efforts everyone makes to participate. We are in uncharted territory as all of us learn to do Zoom.
I appreciate Mr. Maloney's comments. One of the key things—and we hear this from our speaker as well—that is going to enable us to move forward constructively as a House of Commons and as a committee is that we have a rules-based system. Late yesterday I was participating in another committee and received this notice. To be honest, I didn't even realize the time had been changed. There had been no effort whatsoever.
Madam Chair and all committee members, if you have a regularly scheduled meeting and something happens that the meeting time has to be delayed or changed in some way, it's a basic courtesy in the notice that would go out to say, “Members, this is just a notice that the meeting is starting an hour early.” That's without even getting to how this came about. Common courtesy was overlooked. We all have each other's emails.
Last night when this came out, Madam Chair, I sent you an email. I've raised this issue before when the meetings go overtime. We have agreed. We're working constructively on Bill C-7. We had a great discussion at the last meeting on the amendments, and presumably we're going to have a discussion on the bill and the amendments today.
I presume, having been an MP for a number of years, that each and every one of you, as members of this committee, have busy schedules. That's one of the things we accept as members of Parliament. Whether it's with constituents, whether it's our Parliamentary duties, whether you are a parliamentary secretary or a chair or a member of a committee or a minister, whatever role you play in this Parliament, we're all busy.
One of the things we do is we balance that. We balance our personal life, the role we have in our constituencies and the role we have in Ottawa. The way we balance it, most of us, is with our calendar. If my calendar says a meeting is from 11:00 to 1:00.... This is how it works in the business world. It's how it works everywhere. In my experience as a parliamentarian, as a former chair of a committee, as a former parliamentary secretary, 99% of the time that's how it works. The meeting starts when you say it's going to start, and when it ends, everyone usually scurries off, because we all have something else to do.
For example, this morning I had a meeting scheduled for 10:00 EST, which is 11:00 Atlantic time. When that notice came out to bring the change in the meeting time to my attention, I didn't see it when I received the notice in my email. When it came to my attention that the meeting had been changed, my staff—after hours, after some of them had already gone home—had to make adjustments and let the people that I was meeting at 10:00 know that I couldn't have that meeting because something had come up outside of my control. It's just basic common courtesy.
I wouldn't want anyone to be under the illusion that manipulating things at the last minute would somehow move things along faster. I think, if anything, if we can't trust each other around the table.... I get that we have different roles to play. I get that some of us like this bill and some of us don't. I hope that we're all working in the best interests of Canadians, and we're going to get to that. We may be together as a committee for who knows how long. I don't know. We don't know when the next election will be. We don't know how long we're each going to be in our respective roles, but we may be working together as a committee. The only way this is going to work is that when we agree on something like this, it doesn't change at the last minute.
Madam Chair, I want to draw your attention that I've heard from other chairs and I've heard from the whips that when these meetings are set, there are limited House resources, and that when these meetings are set, it's done with the whips' approval. The whips of our respective parties make the decision on when our meetings take place. We abide by that. I spoke personally with the whip of the Conservative Party, who told me that this was the first he was hearing about it. He didn't know that the meeting time had been changed.
I refuse to believe that maybe everyone was in the dark. I don't think everyone was in the dark. I know the Conservatives were in the dark. I know that we just barely would have even been here had it not been brought to my attention that the meeting was starting an hour early. Frankly, I would think that there were discussions among some members of this committee about moving the meeting at the last minute to an hour earlier. That is not respectful of the people around this table, this virtual table, and it's not respectful to one another as colleagues.
I endorse what MP Findlay has said in her question of personal privilege, We can't conduct ourselves this way. This is why we have Marleau and Montpetit. It's why we abide by a certain set of rules. It's why speakers make rulings and we abide by those rulings. It's why we make decisions together. We have a rules-based system.
Am I to believe on days when the justice committee is scheduled, or perhaps even days when it isn't scheduled, that I should book the whole day off, that I won't know when the meeting will start and I won't know when the meeting will end? We cannot operate that way.
I want to endorse what's been said and I want to say that I'm willing to work together with everybody. I think we all have our nation's and our constituents' best interests at heart, even though our views are different on different things. In this committee is where we have the opportunity to put a lot of the things aside that happen in the chamber and in the media and get some real work done. We have a willingness to work together, but we have to abide by the rules and the schedules that we set out.
As of today, my schedule says that this meeting ends at one o'clock, so this meeting needs to end at one o'clock. If there's unfinished business, we could all look at why there is unfinished business. It could be because the House was prorogued. It could be because the government is looking at this deadline that was imposed and that's been extended a number of times.
I know that we, as parliamentarians, have all been receiving.... I've received emails from people who would have liked to have spoken at committee. It became very clear to me as we heard committee testimony on Bill C-7 that it's a complicated issue—we all knew that when we went into it—but we heard some very interesting perspectives from physicians, from people in palliative care, from specialists who deal with people, from persons with disabilities who spoke through their organizations unanimously and who spoke as individuals before this committee. Rather than talking about the fact that we may have had a breach of our privilege as parliamentarians, it would have been good to hear from more witnesses. Instead, we haven't heard enough from witnesses, and now we're spending time on this wrangling.
I think it's important that we have this conversation now, because this is going to impact how we work together going forward. I do want to say that I'm completely willing to work with everyone, but we have to have good faith and we have to have a rules-based system. Sending out a notice without any kind of red flag to take special notice because there's a different time.... If it hadn't been brought to your personal attention, I suspect that many of us wouldn't be logging on for another 20 minutes and then we would find out that the meeting was already taking place. I think there were conversations. I believe there were.
As well, Madam Chair, I would like an answer to MP Findlay's question. Did you have those conversations with either the parliamentary secretary, the whip's office, or the office of your party's House leader and not even make a courtesy call or send a courtesy email or a courtesy text to members of the Conservative Party?
As I mentioned, Madam Chair, I emailed you last night with the suggestion that I was sure that, like me, many people already had things booked. If you ask me about tomorrow, I have things scheduled for tomorrow. So if something came up that I had to deal with, it would involve moving things around. Likewise, most of us probably had things scheduled this morning, unless we knew in advance that this was going to happen. I didn't know in advance.
I ask you to consider that, Madam Chair. I ask members of the committee to work together in good faith and to consider that how we conduct ourselves on this bill is absolutely going to impact how we work together going forward. We have the opportunity, I believe, to do some really good work together, some important work for Canadians and for this Parliament. That's what we've all been elected to do here. Contrary to what we've seen so often in other countries that don't have a rules-based system, that's one of the beauties of Canada. We have the rule of law. Parliament is the keeper of these laws. We make laws here, and we expect Canadians to follow rules. We wouldn't pull the rug out from under a Canadian. We wouldn't expect there to be one rule one day and then a different rule the next day. We expect Canadians to abide by the rules.
Likewise, we as parliamentarians have to abide by the rules. The way we conduct ourselves at the justice committee is to have our scheduled meetings. We don't take advantage of each other's time by extending a meeting without any notice or starting a meeting an hour early with barely any notice. We have respect for each other and we operate under the rules.
Madam Chair, if you or any other member of this committee or, as a matter of fact, any member from any other party, did reach out to me on an issue, I'd be happy to take a call, happy to take an email, happy to respond with my thoughts, happy to have that discussion. But we just can't conduct ourselves this way.
Madam Chair, I ask that you give some type of response to Madam Findlay's question of privilege as well. Thank you.
I certainly do look forward to working with everybody on this and other things in the future.