Thank you, Madam Chair.
I very much appreciate your raising the issue right off the top. This is a serious matter, and it's not the first time we've had this issue with this department, and with other departments too. At the risk of it looking like we're having some kind of bureaucratic power play, where there has to be a protocol followed and we just don't do business unless we have high enough figures here, to speak to your issue, the law says that the deputy minister is the accounting officer.
I was here before that was in place, and some of you have heard me go on and on about it. I can do that again if you wish, but I don't think it's necessary. We know the importance and we know the difference between having that law in place and not. However, it only works when the accounting officer is actually here.
As much as the last thing we want to do is to waste any time or be any less efficient than possible, we cannot do our job the way Parliament expects us to do it if we don't have deputy ministers here in their lawful capacity to be responsible for the department and to speak for the department when we ask questions about the Auditor General's report.
I am going to move that this meeting be adjourned, that we reschedule, that the meeting happen before Easter, and that the deputy minister be present.
I'm quite prepared to debate it if necessary, but the reason is understood. You, in your capacity as chair, did the right thing in raising this right off the top. I, as one member here, and the longest serving member, feel that we need to bring this to a halt. It's starting to get a little bit loose. These things happen, but it's our responsibility to rein it back in and make sure, when there is a commitment made for the deputy minister to be here, that the deputy minister actually shows up.
I move that we adjourn, that we reschedule the meeting to a date when the deputy minister can and will be here, and that the meeting happen before we rise for the Easter break.