I'm in agreement with most of what Mr. Volpe has said, but I want to add another factor to it.
We heard a lot from the airline industry about how they were going to do this voluntarily, when the bill was in front of us. Have we heard much about that in the intervening time since we put this motion forward before Christmas? No, they just shut right up. I don't see that the voluntary response was very sincere. They've had plenty of time now to come up with their voluntary response to air passenger rights and they haven't done it.
By taking this off the table now, we're not putting any pressure on the industry at all. We're not making them do what they said they wanted to do. So not only are we rejecting what Parliament said we should do, we're taking all the pressure off the airline industry to do what they said they were going to do.
This committee should take heed of what's happening and recognize that this is an important issue and that we don't play games with this issue and we don't try to ignore it. This is an issue we should deal with. We should keep it on the table, and over the course of the next while we can start to talk about how this works.
Maybe we'll bring the airline industry back in and ask them what they did over the intervening six months to give the voluntary consideration to airline passengers' rights, where that has gone, how far they have moved in doing that.
I think in that regard we'll do our job here. If we simply ship this back to Parliament the way it is, we haven't done our job.