Thanks, Mr. Chair.
Thanks, Ms. Kusie, for that intervention.
I've been thinking a lot about this motion, and it creates a few difficulties. I'd like to go through them and make sure that all members from all parties on the committee understand the challenges in the motion.
First and foremost, the motion is asking the Canada Infrastructure Bank to violate its own enabling legislation. The CIB Act has a section entitled “Privileged information”, and that section lays out that all information obtained by the bank in relation to project proponents or project investors is privileged. It states that the CIB “must not knowingly communicate, disclose or make available the information, or permit it to be communicated, disclosed or made available.”
The CIB Act is not a long act, and I encourage members to have a look at it if they haven't. This particular section is laid out in detail, because it's important for an entity like the CIB to maintain the trust of investment partners and project owners that it will keep that commercially sensitive information confidential. This is potentially market-moving information, and this act exists for a reason. The motion is kind of a non-starter based on that, but there's a little bit more.
The next point is that the investment agreement for the Erie connector is not yet finalized. The CIB has not financially closed with the proponent, and it's not a done deal. Bringing this kind of uncertainty, exposure and political risk into a deal is simply not a responsible thing for our committee to undertake.
In fact, many members of the committee from all parties have said that they wished to see the CIB getting more deals going and more projects completed. This motion would throw cold water on that, slow things down, and erode trust in the process.
Third, members have also sometimes questioned the independence of the Canada Infrastructure Bank and have argued that the CIB needs to be fully independent so that it can get deals done free of political interference. Again, this motion is about political interference, isn't it? It goes against that argument.
To wrap it up, I'll go back to my first point. I don't think it would reflect well on our committee to pass a motion telling the CIB to violate its own legislation and, in fact, break the law when we don't really need to do that.
There's a wonderful alternative that would respect the intention of Ms. Kusie's motion, and I'll lay it out. It's very short, but in essence it would be a simple amendment to the motion presented by Ms. Kusie in which we would strike all the words after the first word “that”, and replace them with, “The committee invite Ehren Cory, the CEO of the Canada Infrastructure Bank, to appear before the committee to discuss the Lake Erie corridor and full transparency and open communication with this committee.”
I'll hold my comments there. I'd love to hear what other members have to say.