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Notice Paper

AT DISSOLUTION

Saturday, March 26, 2011


Introduction of Government Bills

Introduction of Private Members' Bills

March 25, 2011 — Mr. Martin (Winnipeg Centre) — Bill entitled “An Act to amend the Criminal Code (forfeiture of proceeds of crime)”.

Notices of Motions (Routine Proceedings)

Questions

Notices of Motions for the Production of Papers

Business of Supply

Supplementary Estimates (C)
UNOPPOSED VOTES
March 23, 2011 — The President of the Treasury Board — That the Supplementary Estimates (C) for the fiscal year ending March 31, 2011, be concurred in.
Interim Supply
March 23, 2011 — The President of the Treasury Board — That this House do concur in Interim Supply as follows:
That a sum not exceeding $26,500,769,995.25 being composed of:
(1) three twelfths ($16,706,538,109.75) of the total of the amounts of the items set forth in the Proposed Schedule 1 and Schedule 2 of the Main Estimates for the fiscal year ending March 31, 2012, which were laid upon the Table Tuesday, March 1, 2011, except for those items below:
(2) eleven twelfths of the total of the amount of Atomic Energy of Canada Limited Vote 15 and Treasury Board Vote 5 (Schedule 1.1), of the said Estimates, $781,131,083.33;
(3) nine twelfths of the total of the amount of Canada Nuclear Safety Commission Vote 20 (Schedule 1.2) of the said Estimates, $19,842,852.00;
(4) eight twelfths of the total of the amount of Justice Vote 1 (Schedule 1.3) of the said Estimates, $177,697,997.33;
(5) seven twelfths of the total of the amount of Canada Council for the Arts Vote 10 and Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety Vote 25 (Schedule 1.4), of the said Estimates, $108,274,826.34;
(6) six twelfths of the total of the amount of Statistics Canada Vote 105 and Military Police Complaints Commission Vote 20 (Schedule 1.5), of the said Estimates, $332,328,347.00;
(7) five twelfths of the total of the amount of Canadian Grain Commission Vote 30, National Arts Centre Corporation Vote 60, National Battlefields Commission Vote 65, Finance Vote 5, Human Resources and Skills Development Vote 5 and Indian Affairs and Northern Development Vote 10 (Schedule 1.6), of the said Estimates, $3,404,348,939.17;
(8) four twelfths of the total of the amount of Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Vote 15, Public Service Commission Vote 100, Citizenship and Immigration Vote 5, Environment Vote 1, Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency Vote 15, Health Vote 10, Indian Affairs and Northern Development Vote 1, Industry Vote 1, Canadian Space Agency Vote 35, Natural Resources Vote 1, Library of Parliament Vote 10, Office of the Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner Vote 15, Marine Atlantic Inc. Vote 35, Office of Infrastructure of Canada Vote 55, VIA Rail Canada Inc. Vote 70, Treasury Board Vote 20 and Veterans Affairs Vote 1 (Schedule 1.7), of the said Estimates, $4,970,607,840.33;
be granted to Her Majesty on account of the fiscal year ending March 31, 2012.

Government Business

Private Members' Notices of Motions

M-680 — March 25, 2011 — Mr. Goldring (Edmonton East) — That, in the opinion of the House, the government should initiate a discussion concerning the construction of a national Holodomor monument in the National Capital Region that would educate Canadians about this tragedy and work to prevent its repetition.
M-681 — March 25, 2011 — Mr. Cotler (Mount Royal) — That, in the opinion of the House, the government should ensure that the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) upholds its mandate to protect the victims of major human rights violations and hold the major violators of human rights to account by: (a) introducing country-specific resolutions against the major human rights violators, such as Iran and Libya; (b) convening special sessions to address urgent situations of gross human rights violations in the world; (c) protecting freedom of speech and opposing campaigns to silence any discussion of the targeting of vulnerable minorities or women's rights by characterising it as a form of "defamation" and "racism"; (d) protecting equality before the law at the UN and putting an end to the prejudicial practice of singling out one UN member state — Israel — for selective and discriminatory treatment; (e) protecting international due process at the UN by ending the discriminatory practice whereby one member state is the object of more condemnatory resolutions than the rest of the states of the international community combined; (f) remove permanent Agenda Item Number 7 that institutionalizes such discrimination and thereby denies equality before the law and international due process in the UNHRC; (g) defending the rights of human rights NGOs at the council, and preserving their historic role as independent voices that can hold governments to account; (h) opposing the election of human rights violators such as Libya to the council, while encouraging countries with the strongest human rights record to stand for election to the council in their respective regional groups; (i) encouraging positive work of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and defending the independent work of the Commissioner against escalating attempts to control her activities and agenda; (j) protecting Special Rapporteurs on human rights issues and defending the council's independent rights monitors from efforts to intimidate them or influence their work; and (k) strengthening the universal periodic review through fair and informed questioning of every country reviewed.