Okay. I appreciate your intervention there, Mr. Christopherson. As I indicated earlier, in order to make this official we have to put a date. So we've put down the very first date we have available. I gave you an indication of the schedule. When we get a response we'll be able to make an adjustment, but if we start to pick the ideal date today for the bailiff logistics individual to get back to us, we could be playing with the calendar for a long time.
Madame Ouimet may not be available on the eighth, but we have at least given our logistics and bailiff people an opportunity to work on that schedule. This isn't the time for somebody to be personal or partisan. I don't think anybody around this table is going to be so rigid as to say the bailiff just gets hold of her on Sunday and we want her here. I don't know where she's going to be—let's suppose he does. Can we make an adjustment? I think I can come back to the committee and say, “Colleagues, we finally have Madame Ouimet. It will be on this day that best suits everybody, what say you?”
I don't want you to go away from this discussion thinking we're going to nail somebody on the eighth and all of us are going to be here on the eighth. We're all going to be here on the eighth, but Madame Ouimet will be given the opportunity, once we locate her, and I don't know whether that's going to happen by then. That's why I said to Mr. Saxton that I'm hoping to be able to give you some kind of report on Thursday. Maybe then we can make some adjustments.