Thank you very much Mr. Chairman.
Ms. Therriault-Power, Mr. Paquet, thank you very much for testifying before us today.
Please excuse me if I don't plan to be hostile while asking you these questions.
Over the long Labour Day weekend, my family and I came back to Canada at around one o'clock on Tuesday at the Thousand Islands. There was only one border officer there. I thought that the Thousand Islands border crossing was an important one, but there was only one officer there and he was a bilingual anglophone. My son was driving our car and therefore he was the one who answered the questions. He thought he would answer in French in order to move things along faster because the bilingual anglophone—who was a little round—might feel like simplifying his life. Perhaps the best advice is to always address border officers in French in anglophone regions.
I listened very closely to the claims that Mr. D'Amours made and I felt his passion. However I did not appreciate the hostile tone of his questions. If there were any truth in the complaint that he raised, then this has to do with a behavioural problem on the part of at least one of your employees, and this is rather serious. We are there to help people, not to make their lives more difficult.
I listened closely to Ms. Guay's questions, that were asked not in the least bit angrily or confrontationally. However, even though these were quite reasonable questions, no replies were forthcoming.