Thank you.
I do have the amendment. If this is the way we can do it, that's good to know.
The amendment I have from the clerk now says, “The Minister must, 30 days after it comes into force, make any exemption granted under subsections (1) or (2) accessible to the public through the Internet or by any other means that the Minister considers appropriate.”
This could mean putting them at the front desk of the Transport Canada office in Ottawa and saying anyone who wants can walk in and get it. By putting “by any other means that the Minister considers appropriate”, I think that completely renders the intention useless. A minister could.... Whatever he deems appropriate may be very inaccessible and not on the Internet. It says, “or by any other means that the Minister considers appropriate.” It doesn't say, “the Transport Canada website.”
I don't know why it's this vague. If Mr. Barsalou-Duval understood that we're going from the Gazette to the Transport Canada website, then the amendment should say that. Instead, it gives incredible latitude to the minister to basically do whatever he wants.
We would have had no problem supporting the original. The Transport Canada website we could have perhaps lived with, but giving the minister the ability to determine what is appropriate when we're talking about public information and increasing transparency, I think, makes the amendment completely useless, and we would vote against it.