Thank you, Mr. Chair.
First of all, we've limited this motion to Canadian Forces Base Gagetown. Are there other Canadian Forces bases that have had spray applied? Who knows?
So I really think the amendment.... If you're going to look at this with a broad brush, you should eliminate the word “Gagetown”. But you know, it's always disappointing to me when colleagues use issues like this one to bring political conflict into public policy.
The policy with regard to Gagetown resulted from consultation and professional recommendations by ministerial staff. It's public policy. Not only was the process followed, but it ensured that the terms and outcomes are sound. It also has the approval of elected representatives as a component. This issue's not new. We're not looking at something new. This has been looked at before. And the purpose of an inquiry is to find fault in either the principles or the process or the policy, and I do not believe there is any fault in the process or the policy. So I can't support any part of this motion because of that.
One thing that I have found in this job that is really difficult to deal with is that 80% of my work is to explain to people the word “no”. The fact is, eventually there have to be decisions that we stand by, and we have to say no. This is the policy. This is the decision that was made by your government, regardless of which party is dealing with it. We find people who are not necessarily happy with these policy decisions of government. What they do is they wait until there's a new government or a new MP. I found that after I was elected I had all the old files coming back to see if they'd get a different answer, and I'm sure all of you have experienced that in your political careers.
Ultimately, I found out that the word “no” was expressed because this had all been looked into by professional staff. It was a determination by elected people, and we have to stand by that. Really, that's all we're going to do here--rehash all the information, all the material that was dealt with previously by those who have had equal knowledge and common sense to what we have around this table, and by the same competent staff who deal with these issues. They will look at the same issues and listen to the same witnesses, and ultimately we're going to come up with the same conclusions, I believe.
If we go to some of the comments by Mr. Stoffer, when he talked about there being 3,000 children who could be--