Welcome to meeting number seven of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Official Languages. This committee meeting is for the purpose of committee business.
I would like to start by reminding members to turn off the ringers on their cell phones for the health and safety of the interpreters.
Next, I want to welcome our new committee member, Ms. Martinez Ferrada.
I also have a few reminders, and I'll be reading some excerpts from the House of Commons Procedure and Practice.
Please raise your hand if you have a question or would like to speak. The clerk and I will do our best to maintain the speaking order, but that is, of course, easier when we are all together in the committee room. I will tell you when you can put your hand up, either electronically, if you are participating virtually, or by letting the clerk know, if you are on site, in the meeting room.
The last few times we met, members had many points of order. Often, they weren't so much points of order as requests to speak. Going forward, I would ask committee members to clearly state which rule was broken. Nevertheless, in the event of a technical difficulty, do not hesitate to raise a point of order. As regards suspension versus adjournment, I feel it's important that I read out a few paragraphs from our procedural guide, the House of Commons Procedure and Practice.
A committee meeting may be adjourned by the adoption of a motion to that effect. However, most meetings are adjourned more informally, when the Chair receives the implied consent of members to adjourn. The committee Chair cannot adjourn the meeting without the consent of a majority of the members, unless the Chair decides that a case of disorder or misconduct is so serious as to prevent the committee from continuing its work.
Committees frequently suspend their meetings for various reasons, with the intention to resume later in the day. Suspensions may last a few seconds, several hours, or span even more than one day, depending on the circumstances, and a meeting may be suspended more than once.…Meetings are suspended, for example, to change from public to in camera mode, or the reverse; to enable witnesses to be seated or to hear witnesses by video conference; to put an end to disorder; to resolve a problem with the simultaneous interpretation system; or to move from one item on the agenda to the next.
Pursuant to the Standing Orders, the Chair of a standing, special, legislative or joint committee is required to suspend the meeting when the bells are sounded to call in the Members to a recorded division in the House, unless there is unanimous consent of the members of the committee to continue to sit.
At the end of our last meeting, I suspended the meeting. However, given what I've just told you, I cannot suspend last week's meeting indefinitely, because all the technicians and staff must be on site when the committee is ready to resume the meeting. Therefore, the meeting was adjourned, but the debate was suspended so that Mr. Beaulieu could resume debate this afternoon.
What's more, this is our seventh meeting on committee business, and like you, I would like to see the committee get to work on its studies. We have tried a number of times, but to no avail. There is nothing preventing us from holding one last meeting on committee business today, but if we do manage to establish a meeting schedule for the studies, we will not be able to invite witnesses to appear on Thursday.
Since we did not reach a consensus last Thursday, I gave a directive to the clerk to start the study on Ms. Lattanzio's motion this Thursday, since it was adopted. Further to the motion, we are to invite witnesses. She is trying to reach out to witnesses who are more likely to be available to appear soon. Members from all parties proposed a total of 35 witnesses, two of whom have already agreed to appear this Thursday. The clerk will continue reaching out to witnesses.
If we decide—