Thank you, colleagues. We'll begin this meeting number 44 with orders of the day and committee business. I note that our witnesses are here. After some discussion with government members and others, I want to thank them for taking a seat in the back. Typically we would take about five minutes to do our pre-business, but the chair has been given an indication that we might actually be engaged in discussion of a motion that would take us well beyond five to 10 minutes.
We don't know that for sure, but it might happen, so thank you very much for being understanding. We may be here for a little longer than we had anticipated, but once again, to all of our witnesses, thank you for taking those seats.
Secondly, I think we have before us a group of journalism students from Carleton University who have been assigned to cover a committee meeting.
Just wave. Thank you. Welcome. I think you've already had your first lesson: we never know what's going to happen in committees. So we plan and plan and plan.... And was it Robbie Burns who said that the best laid plans of mice and men—he didn't include women in that—often go astray? So here we are. Anyway, you're all welcome.
Let me try to deal with the easiest things first, if you don't mind, colleagues. Then we can go on to other issues.
First of all, we have the seventeenth report of your subcommittee. Your subcommittee met on Wednesday, February 9, 2011, “to consider the business of the Committee and agreed to make the following recommendations”.
Of those two recommendations, there is an additional document that has been distributed to everyone regarding item 2. That has to do with the invitation to attend the biennial conference of the Australasian Council of Public Accounts Committees taking place in Perth, Western Australia, from April 27 to 30, 2011.
There were three options. I believe the committee gave us an indication to think of the one that's before you.
Mr. Saxton? No?
Mr. Kramp.