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Point of Order June 21, 2005

Business of the House: notice requirement for Government motion during late night sittings

Hon. Peter Milliken

Hon. Peter Milliken

Speaker of the House

Ruling Text

The Speaker: I am now prepared to rule on the point of order raised earlier today by the hon. Opposition House Leader concerning the notice period for Government Business No. 17. I would like to thank the hon. Opposition House Leader for raising this matter. The hon. Opposition House Leader argued that Government Business No. 17 could not be taken up until, at the earliest, 12:25 a.m. on Thursday, June 23, because the text of the notice had been embargoed until the Notice Paper became available at 12:25 a.m. this morning, June 21. Only then, he maintained, would the 48 hours' notice required by Standing Order 54 have been met. However, as Marleau and Montpetit states at page 470: In practice, the 48 hours' notice requirement is not exactly 48 consecutive hours, but refers instead to the publication of the notice once in the Notice Paper and its transfer the next day to the Order Paper. This practice has been confirmed by a ruling by Speaker Lamoureux on October 6, 1970, which can be found on page 1417 of the Journals. As hon. Members are aware, Standing Order 54 states that 48 hours' notice shall be given for any substantive motion, and on Mondays, notices must be laid on the Table or filed with the Clerk before 6 p.m. for inclusion on the next day's Notice Paper. This is to provide Members and the House with some prior warning, so that they are not called upon to consider a matter unexpectedly. The time-honoured practice followed by staff in the Journals Branch in respect of embargoed items placed on notice is that those items are made available upon publication of the Notice Paper, invariably after the House adjourns. In recent times this has meant that items are available a relatively short time after the adjournment hour, often less than an hour after the adjournment. I should point out that in the days before technology allowed electronic publishing, it was not uncommon for interested parties to have to wait until the next morning to read the text of items placed on notice on any given evening. This practice has served the interests of all parties in the House fairly. In other words, each party has benefited from it at one time or another. That being said, very often Members furnish copies of the items they are placing on notice to other Members as a matter of courtesy, and that is certainly a practice to be encouraged. With regard to Government Business No. 17, notice was given prior to 6 p.m. yesterday and the motion was placed on today's Notice Paper, pursuant to Standing Order 54. It will be transferred to the appropriate section in tomorrow's Order Paper, thus fulfilling the notice requirement according to our practice. The Chair has concluded that no breach of the rules or practices of this House has occurred. Accordingly, it will be open to the Government House Leader to move Government Business No. 17 at the appropriate time tomorrow if he so chooses. Postscript On June 22, 2005, Mr. Valeri moved Government Business No. 17. It was debated that day, and debated and adopted the following day. [2]. [1] Debates, June 21, 2005, pp. 7543-4. [2] Journals, June 22, 2005, pp. 960-1; June 23, 2005, pp. 978-80.
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AI Summary

The Speaker ruled that the 48-hour notice requirement is met by publication on the Notice Paper one day and transfer to the Order Paper the next, not by 48 literal hours.

AI Analysis

Holding
"The 48-hour notice requirement under Standing Order 54 is satisfied by a motion appearing on one day's Notice Paper and being transferred to the next day's Order Paper, not by the passage of 48 literal consecutive hours."
Outcome
Denied
Tone
Educational
Procedural Stage
Government Orders
Significance
Low High

Cited Authorities

  • House of Commons Procedure and Practice (Marleau and Montpetit, p. 470)