I'm honoured to be on the traditional territory of the Mi'kmaq, Maliseet and Passamaquoddy peoples.
Wela'lin.
I'm now very much looking at ways to achieve greater transparency. In the same spirit, this would require that “the Minister...make available to the public all information...relevant to the project and that can...be publicly [reviewed and] disclosed, including a detailed description..., any information received” and so on so that the public can be informed. As well, of course...that indigenous peoples know that the information and knowledge that is described that could be considered confidential as it is gleaned from indigenous knowledge holders....
Again, it is important that this bill have additional work in addition to the Conservative amendment on greater transparency. This would make information far more widely available to the Canadian public. Certainly, anything “that can reasonably be publicly disclosed”—obviously, not confidential business information or, as I mentioned earlier, indigenous knowledge that is not to be publicly shared.... However, certainly the Canadian public is entitled to a lot more information than that which is currently described: the name of the project, its location and minimal other information.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.