Mr. Speaker, the hon. member has an excellent approach to the subject. It is definitely something very personal for each of us. I know myself, with my mother's passing, we had some very difficult conversations at that time.
This goes beyond what we do in the House here. However, one of our responsibilities is to provide guidelines for the conversations.
Let us look at the role the provinces play in this conversation. I was personally struggling with recommendation 11 from the committee, as a member of a Catholic community within my riding and having a lot of Catholics reporting to me that they were very concerned about Catholic institutions being mandated to perform services against their conscience.
The current legislation is leaving some very important details up to regulations with the provinces and those who are reporting to the provinces. We have a tight timeline. We have to provide some guidelines that may be seen by some as not restrictive enough and by others as too restrictive.
Could the hon. member comment on the need to have some flexibility in terms of getting this to the provinces for further discussion?