CONTENTS
Wednesday, October 2, 1996
Mr. Breitkreuz (Yorkton-Melville) 4977
Mr. White (North Vancouver) 4979
Mr. Lavigne (Beauharnois-Salaberry) 4980
Mr. Chrétien (Saint-Maurice) 4981
Mr. Chrétien (Saint-Maurice) 4982
Mr. Chrétien (Saint-Maurice) 4982
Mr. Chrétien (Saint-Maurice) 4982
Mr. Chrétien (Saint-Maurice) 4982
Mrs. Stewart (Brant) 4983
Mrs. Stewart (Brant) 4983
Mr. Chrétien (Saint-Maurice) 4984
Mr. Leroux (Richmond-Wolfe) 4985
Mr. Leroux (Richmond-Wolfe) 4985
Mr. Axworthy (Winnipeg South Centre) 4985
Mr. O'Brien (London-Middlesex) 4987
Mr. Martin (Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca) 4988
Mr. Martin (Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca) 4988
Mr. Martin (LaSalle-Émard) 4988
Mr. Chrétien (Saint-Maurice) 4989
Mr. Martin (LaSalle-Émard) 4992
Mr. Martin (LaSalle-Émard) 4992
Motion for concurrence in 34th report 4994
Mr. Harper (Simcoe Centre) 4995
Mr. Harper (Simcoe Centre) 4995
Mr. Harper (Simcoe Centre) 4996
Mr. Harper (Simcoe Centre) 4996
Motion agreed to on division: Yeas, 131; Nays, 75 4997
Bill C-45. Consideration resumed of motion for thirdreading 4998
Mr. Hill (Prince George-Peace River) 5005
Mr. White (North Vancouver) 5006
Motion agreed to on division: Yeas, 122; Nays, 67 5009
(Bill read the third time and passed.) 5010
4977
HOUSE OF COMMONS
Wednesday, October 2, 1996
The House met at 2 p.m.
_______________
Prayers
_______________
The Speaker: As is our practice on Wednesdays, we will now
sing O Canada, which will be led by the hon. member for Calgary
North.
[Editor's Note: Whereupon members sang the national anthem.]
_____________________________________________
STATEMENTS BY MEMBERS
[
English]
Mr. John Cannis (Scarborough Centre, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
this past Sunday, September 29, the spiritual leader of the Greek
Orthodox Church of Canada, His Grace Bishop Soterios was
elevated to the ranking of Metropolitan by His All Holiness
Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew and the Holy Synod. In
addition, I am proud to say that our Diocese of Canada will now, as
a result, be recognized as a Metropolis.
It is a very proud moment for all Orthodox Canadians of
Hellenic descent to have this honour bestowed on us. As the
spiritual leader of the Greek Orthodox Church of Canada, His
Eminence Soterios has worked diligently with zeal, compassion
and understanding to improve our lives spiritually within a united
Canada.
Over many years of dedicated service to the Lord and to the
congregations, His Eminence Soterios has worked tirelessly,
initiating programs to address the needs of both young and old,
such as family counselling, women's issues, senior services and
youth programs.
To this end I wish to express my heartfelt congratulations,
wishing His Eminence good health and longevity. May the good
Lord give him strength to continue his excellent work.
[Translation]
Mr. Maurice Dumas (Argenteuil-Papineau, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, when the construction work on the new Perley Bridge
between Grenville, Quebec, and Hawkesbury, Ontario, was begun
this past June 10, the Minister of Public Works and Government
Services indicated that 50 per cent of the workers would come from
Quebec, and 50 per cent from Ontario. Yet, on the construction site,
the majority of workers are from Ontario.
Dufferin Construction apparently hired its workers through the
Hawkesbury Employment Centre. Unfortunately, the Lachute
employment centre does not offer the same service as its Ontario
counterpart. In Quebec, workers have to contact the Commission
de la construction du Québec, the CCQ. The only problem is that
the employer, in this case Dufferin Construction, has not contacted
the CCQ for a list of potential workers.
I am therefore asking the minister of public works to intervene
so as to ensure that Quebec workers may enjoy the same
opportunities as their Ontario colleagues, as promised by the
Minister last June.
* * *
[
English]
Mr. Garry Breitkreuz (Yorkton-Melville, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, yesterday in the House the Liberal member for
Souris-Moose Mountain made grossly inaccurate statements. He
alleged that I was telling people in his riding to not respect the law.
That is totally false. In fact it was the opposite.
The audience of over 200 was clearly told they should work to
defeat the Liberal government so that Reform could repeal Bill
C-68 and farmers and shooters would not have to register their
guns.
The member did not come or even send representatives to this
most important meeting in Moosomin. For over 200 farmers to
show up at this meeting at harvest time shows how important an
issue this is. They are frustrated with a government that does not
listen and runs roughshod over the fundamental rights of people.
Useless laws cause people to lose respect for the law.
4978
Is this member telling his constituents to immediately run out
and register their guns? Has he done an about face and decided
that gun registration is a cost effective way of controlling crime?
I request that he immediately withdraw his statement. It is totally
unacceptable for the member to blatantly misrepresent my words
and Reform policy.
* * *
Mrs. Elsie Wayne (Saint John, PC): Mr. Speaker, where are the
Atlantic Liberal MPs? Why will they not speak up for their
constituents?
Last Friday I challenged all Atlantic Liberal MPs to sign a
motion that would require the House to debate the new EI fisheries
regulations. As of today, not one Atlantic Liberal MP has agreed to
sign the motion that would allow proper debate.
These new regulations, which were quietly tabled, will see the
employment insurance benefits for fisheries reduced by $33
million. The savings will come from lowering benefits, shortening
the duration of benefits and penalizing repeat users.
Today I challenge my colleagues from all parties to rise above
partisan politics, to preserve the quality of life and dignity of our
fishing families. With these new EI regulations, the government is
unfairly punishing our fishers.
I ask all my colleagues to sign. I only need about 30 signatures
and it will be debated in the House. Atlantic fishing families are
waiting for Parliament to do what is right, to stand up and protect
their livelihood.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. Mark Assad (Gatineau-La Lièvre, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
Robert Bourassa was a man who represented Quebecers throughout
Canada, and his political career was devoted to promoting the
collective prosperity of his fellow citizens. He was, in brief, one of
the architects of modern Quebec and he had a vision of Quebec of
the future.
Everyone who has known Mr. Bourassa has been struck by his
strong democratic values and his particular sensitivity to the most
disadvantaged in our society.
Throughout his entire career, his prime objective was the
economic development of Quebec, but he was also concerned about
social justice. Robert Bourassa was a real human being and easily
approachable. No matter how busy he was, his door was always
open.
(1405)
All of his colleagues and activists in the Quebec Liberal Party
liked Mr. Bourassa and had the utmost confidence in his leadership.
Our most sincere condolences to Mrs. Bourassa and the family.
* * *
[
English]
Mrs. Marlene Cowling (Dauphin-Swan River, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, as a member of Parliament and a lifelong farmer, rural
economic development is at the top of my priority list. As the fall
harvest is upon us, I would like to take this opportunity to pay
tribute to all Canadian farmers who help make the Canadian
economy strong by their hard work and determination, particularly
those farmers from my riding Dauphin-Swan River.
We can be proud that Canada's farmers produce the safest and
highest quality food products in the world. Our farmers make a
valuable contribution to the Canadian economy. Agriculture
accounts for 8 per cent of the GDP and 15 per cent of all
employment in this country.
Hats off to Canadian farmers. Their efforts and hard work will
continue to help Canada remain the best country in the world. Let
us not forget that rural economic development initiatives of the
Liberal government ensure that all Canadians, rural and urban,
benefit from strong economic growth.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. Louis Plamondon (Richelieu, BQ): Mr. Speaker, with the
passing of Robert Bourassa, today Quebec has lost a great defender
of Quebec's interests. A man of principle, brave, tenacious and
dedicated both to his family and to Quebec. He has put his mark on
our history.
Throughout his life he fought for Quebec with conviction,
determination and skill, always showing the greatest respect for
allies and opponents alike. He leaves an impressive political
legacy, as reflected in his economic policies as well as in his
repeated demands for broader powers for Quebec.
On behalf of all my colleagues in the Bloc Quebecois, I wish to
extend our most sincere condolences to his wife and children.
Robert Bourassa, thank you for your great contribution to
democracy in Quebec and Canada.
4979
[English]
Mr. Ted White (North Vancouver, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, most
Canadians thought that the previous minister of immigration was
hopeless, but the new one is even worse. She has failed to get rid of
more than 1,300 bogus and criminal refugee claimants in the
Vancouver area alone.
In March I wrote the minister about one of many in my riding, a
man who has been forging passports so that other criminals could
get into Canada and join him. It was a profitable home based
business. He paid no income tax on the proceeds. He had no
business licence and he remitted no GST.
For passport forgery he got three paltry month's probation at
home. He even qualified for Canadian citizenship after entering
Canada for a second time after lying to immigration officials about
his past. Now he is accused of sending someone else in his place to
the citizenship ceremony.
When will this failure of a minister start earning her salary by
ridding us of these criminal refugees and taking some meaningful
action to put a stop to them getting into the country in the first
place?
* * *
Mr. Jerry Pickard (Essex-Kent, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, today
there is good news in Chatham, Kent county for the economy,
farmers, workers and the environment. Commercial Alcohols Inc.
has announced the construction of an ethanol plant. The $153
million facility will generate 400 direct and indirect jobs, provide a
new market for 15 million bushels of corn, and create additional
jobs in trucking.
Once the operation of the plant is under way, it will run 24 hours
a day, seven days a week, producing 150 million litres of fuel
ethanol and industrial alcohol. It is a truly Canadian success story.
This announcement demonstrates that investors are confident in
the Canadian economy and they are confident in the government's
alternative fuels policy. This announcement also demonstrates that
we can achieve great things in partnership with the private sector.
I wish to thank Commercial Alcohols Inc. and all those who
helped this plant to succeed. I urge my colleagues and all
Canadians to share in the success. Think Canadian and fill up with
Canadian ethanol blended fuels.
(1410)
[Translation]
Mr. Clifford Lincoln (Lachine-Lac-Saint-Louis, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I was very sad to hear the news this morning of the death
of Robert Bourassa. Although I campaigned for one of his
opponents during the leadership campaign in 1983, Mr. Bourassa
did me the honour of appointing me to his cabinet in 1985.
Even after our political paths diverged, Robert Bourassa showed
me and my two colleagues, Richard French and Herb Marx, the
understanding and courtesy that imbued all his personal relations.
In paying tribute to his memory, I would like to take the few
moments I have to talk about a side of his character that is less
well-known. He was, above all, a very warm individual. Seemingly
cool, he was simply a very nice man. Behind that stern face
sparkled a great sense of humour. He was, above all, unfailingly
cordial and sympathetic in his dealings with all his colleagues. He
never took himself seriously. His door was always open, and the
most junior member would always feel welcome and find a
sympathetic ear.
I therefore wish to express my loyalty to and respect for the man
who was, more than a leader-he was a friend. To Mrs. Bourassa
and her family I wish to extend our profound and most cordial
sympathy.
* * *
Mr. Bernard Patry (Pierrefonds-Dollard, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, yesterday, Canada's Minister of Industry announced that
more than $20 million would be invested in the Biotechnology
Research Institute in Montreal.
This institute, which is part of the National Research Council of
Canada, works in close co-operation with the private sector. Since
it opened in 1987, the BRI has helped businesses as prestigious as
Ibex Technologies, Medicorp, Immunocorp, Quantum
Biotechnologies and BioSignal get off the ground.
The money will be used to expand existing facilities by 50,000
square feet and create over 200 specialized jobs. This Canadian
investment in Montreal's economy was made possible by
FORD-Q, the National Research Council of Canada and private
sector developers.
This major investment confirms the Canadian government's
unfailing support for Montreal's global leadership in the area of
biotechnology.
4980
[English]
Mrs. Eleni Bakopanos (Saint-Denis, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I rise
sadly today to pay tribute to a man with whom I had the honour and
privilege to work for over 10 years as an organizer and political
adviser for the Quebec Liberal Party.
He was a man who believed in a strong Quebec inside a strong
Canada. I remember a man who believed in the full and strong
participation of all Quebecers in the political process, regardless of
their ethnic origin.
But I rise not to speak of his political accomplishments, which
are many, but to remember the human side of the man we call
Robert Bourassa.
[Translation]
I remember he would rather drink a glass of milk than anything
else. I remember he loved Chinese food. I remember he always
started off his days by swimming laps in the pool. I remember he
always had vegetables in his car.
[English]
I remember the first time I met him and we spoke. He was
crammed with his feet up to his chin in a used car that I used to
drive around as a political organizer. In that position he made a
commitment to me and to other Quebecers that night-I was a
novice at the time-that he had a deep commitment to public
service and to ensure that members of Quebec's cultural
communities continue to play a strong role in Quebec's future
development.
I extend my sympathies to his family and his wife-
[Translation]
In short, I remember.
* * *
[
English]
Mr. Bill Blaikie (Winnipeg Transcona, NDP): Mr. Speaker, I
am sure all Canadians breathed a sigh of relief when the
comprehensive test ban treaty was signed at the United Nations just
a few days ago, but at this time I think we need to reflect on what
now needs to happen.
The Canadian government needs to work now to abolish nuclear
weapons entirely. It is not enough just to talk about getting other
countries who have not signed the treaty yet to sign on, like India.
The fact is that countries like India, while I wish they would sign
the treaty, have a point when they say that the countries who now
possess nuclear weapons should be working to abolish those
weapons faster than they are.
I urge the government to break out of the NATO mindset and to
work toward the abolition of nuclear weapons, weapons which I
have always regarded as a blasphemy, given that we would even
think, in the name of anything, of destroying all creation.
* * *
Mr. Grant Hill (Macleod, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, chief electoral
officers represent Elections Canada in every constituency in
Canada. They are supposed to be unbiased and impartial.
When I found out that the Liberals were breaking another
campaign promise by systematically turfing out the old officers
and replacing them with their pals, I did some checking.
(1415 )
All the old officers were fired. None had been offered the job and
none saw the position advertised. The new officers had no special
skills and were just well connected to, guess who, the Liberals.
This breaks another red book promise to return integrity to politics.
Reform's solution is simple: advertise openly and make sure you
hire the best person. The chief returning officers should not be
political hacks, period.
* * *
Ms. Colleen Beaumier (Brampton, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, several
months ago the Coalition for the Safety of Our Daughters
distributed a videotape to some members of the House called ``Reel
Hatred''. This video contains clips from so-called slasher films
which depict horrible acts of violence against women and girls.
The distributors and retailers of these videos hide behind the
principle of free speech which is the foundation of a free and
democratic society. However, all good democrats know that the
freedom to commit an act ends when that act causes another
individual harm.
This is the case with slasher films. Just as movies can inspire us
to do great things, they can also inspire individuals to commit
horrible acts of violence, a fact which is demonstrated by so-called
copycat crimes.
In our zeal to protect free speech, we should not protect the right
to produce and distribute such rubbish.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. Laurent Lavigne (Beauharnois-Salaberry, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, we were saddened to learn of the death this morning of
former Quebec premier Robert Bourassa. Elected four times to the
4981
position, Mr. Bourassa was Quebec's youngest premier ever at the
age of 36.
All the people of Quebec recognize the tremendous efforts he put
into giving Quebec the tools it needed for its economic future.
Throughout his life, Mr. Bourassa treated his fellow citizens with
respect and compassion and listened to what they had to say.
His oft-repeated desire to secure Quebec's rightful place within
the Canadian federation was one of his greatest challenges. We will
all remember this great democrat, this man of conviction and
conscience.
Today Quebec lost a great man and, on behalf of my colleagues
and the people of Quebec, I wish to convey my sincere condolences
to Robert Bourassa's family and friends.
_____________________________________________
4981
ORAL QUESTION PERIOD
[
Translation]
Mr. Michel Gauthier (Leader of the Opposition, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, in his testimony before the Somalia commission this
morning, Roberto Gonzales, the former director of public affairs at
National Defence, made a shocking revelation, stating that not only
was General Boyle, the chief of defence staff, aware of a plan to
tamper with information to be released but that he had actually
approved this plan.
In light of the fact that Mr. Gonzales states unequivocally that
final approval for the cover-up operation came from General Boyle
himself, how does the Minister of Defence intend to react to such a
damning revelation?
[English]
Hon. David M. Collenette (Minister of National Defence and
Minister of Veterans Affairs, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, we have made
the same argument a number of times over the last few weeks. We
have a process that is now working and that is the commission of
inquiry. All people are free to come to the inquiry and give their
evidence and facts as they see them.
It is inappropriate for anyone's testimony, anyone's set of facts,
anyone's set of circumstances that is being raised at the inquiry to
be debated in the House of Commons. Let the commissioners do
their work. Let them issue a report and the government will
respond.
[Translation]
Mr. Michel Gauthier (Leader of the Opposition, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, Mr. Gonzales testified he met with General Boyle in
person to get his approval to tamper with the information, which is
no insignificant matter.
My question is for the Minister of Defence. I can see that he
wants to keep General Boyle in his position at all costs, but in the
light of the numerous allegations condemning the chief of defence
staff, does he not consider he should be relieved of his duties at
least-and I think people would consider this the minimum-until
the investigation is complete?
[English]
Hon. David M. Collenette (Minister of National Defence and
Minister of Veterans Affairs, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, what the
government and I want at all cost is for the commission of inquiry
to be allowed to do its work, to do it in an unfettered way and come
to reasoned judgments. Then the government will respond.
(1420)
[Translation]
Mr. Michel Gauthier (Leader of the Opposition, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, given the absolutely incredible situation we are facing, I
would like to ask the Minister of Defence this: How far is the
minister prepared to go to save his friend, General Boyle? How far?
[English]
Hon. David M. Collenette (Minister of National Defence and
Minister of Veterans Affairs, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, there are
fundamental principles of justice at stake and they concern a
number of individuals who will be going before the inquiry. We
should allow the inquiry to hear all the evidence and allow each
individual the right that all Canadians deserve, and that is to be
heard in an impartial setting and have those people who are
conducting the inquiry come to reasoned judgments in a way that
will reflect the principles of Canadian justice.
[Translation]
Mr. Pierre Brien (Témiscamingue, BQ): Mr. Speaker, my
question is for the Prime Minister.
The Prime Minister just heard the defence minister renew his
support for General Boyle, in spite of the very serious accusations
made against him this morning under oath by Mr. Gonzales, who
was the director of public affairs when the falsified documents
were released.
Does the Prime Minister not think that, this time, his defence
minister has gone beyond the acceptable?
Right Hon. Jean Chrétien (Prime Minister, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, the Minister of National Defence just provided the
government's view on the issue: We asked a commission of inquiry
to look into all the issues relating to the incidents in Somalia and to
report to us, so that we could take appropriate action. As the
minister said, all kinds of allegations are made before a
commission of inquiry. Some people say certain things, while
others have a slightly different view. There are lawyers who make
representations on behalf of each of the parties involved.
4982
The commissioners are now hearing arguments. Later, they will
report to the government and, at that time, we will act on their
recommendations.
Mr. Pierre Brien (Témiscamingue, BQ): Mr. Speaker, my
supplementary is also for the Prime Minister.
Does the Prime Minister not think that, from a strictly ethical
point of view, such serious accusations against the Chief of Staff
justify General Boyle's suspension, at least for the duration of the
inquiry? If the Prime Minister will not dismiss General Boyle from
his duties, will he at least suspend him?
Right Hon. Jean Chrétien (Prime Minister, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, the commission of inquiry is currently conducting its
proceedings. We hope it will release its findings at the earliest
opportunity. The sooner the better for everyone.
In the meantime, we have to respect the rights of each individual
to be heard and we must wait for the commission to render its
judgment, before taking action.
[English]
Mr. Preston Manning (Calgary Southwest, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, this morning I received a very moving letter from a retired
armed forces captain, Stephen Ransier in Guelph. What made it
moving was that along with it he included his Canadian service
decoration for years and years of military service in the Canadian
Armed Forces.
This is what he said: ``I have concluded that I can no longer wear
my Canadian forces decoration-with pride or honour''. He lists
the reasons why: lack of moral leadership; a minister of defence
who appears to have no concept of or interest in the military; and a
chief of the defence staff who abrogates his responsibilities.
What does the Prime Minister have to say to Captain Ransier and
others like him who are so disappointed in the leadership at the top
that they return their Canadian forces decorations?
Right Hon. Jean Chrétien (Prime Minister, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I will tell this gentleman that it is exactly because we are
very preoccupied with the morale in the armed forces following the
incident in Somalia that this government did the very unusual thing
of setting up an inquiry into the matter. It is exactly because I want
the commission to finish its work that I will not prejudge the
conclusions of the commissioners.
I have respect for all the people serving today in the armed
forces. All of them are not responsible for what happened in
Somalia. When the results are known, we will act. In the meantime
we have to respect the commission and let it finish its work. After
that we will make our decision based on its recommendations.
(1425)
Mr. Preston Manning (Calgary Southwest, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, I will give the Prime Minister the letter.
As a young soldier Captain Ransier protected the current Prime
Minister during the FLQ crisis. He apparently stood outside the
current Prime Minister's door when he came back from Pierre
Laporte's funeral. He accompanied Mrs. Chrétien to the grocery
store during those unsettled times. Now he is looking to the Prime
Minister for protection of the morale and reputation of the
Canadian Armed Forces.
What is the Prime Minister's response to soldiers who are
looking to him to protect the morale and reputation of the Canadian
Armed Forces from mismanagement by the Minister of National
Defence and the chief of defence staff?
Right Hon. Jean Chrétien (Prime Minister, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, there is an inquiry.
I am happy that the gentleman did his job properly when he was
there. He was rewarded with a decoration for the work he
performed. He should not jeopardize the services rendered because
there is an inquiry at this time. He should not try to politicize the
issue.
At this moment what is important is to go with the inquiry, let
the commissioners ask the questions, get the answers, weigh the
pros and cons of every testimony and render a judgment. It is not
for anybody in the House of Commons to decide matters which are
discussed in front of an inquiry and prejudge the conclusion. That
would show a complete lack of respect for the commissioners who
are doing a difficult job.
Mr. Preston Manning (Calgary Southwest, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, I know political letters when I see them and this is not a
political letter.
I will hold Captain Ransier's decorations in trust and I will
return them to him on the day when he can wear them with pride
and honour. I will hold them in trust until there is a new defence
minister and a new chief of defence staff. How long will Captain
Ransier have to wait?
Right Hon. Jean Chrétien (Prime Minister, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, that is precisely the way to politicize the issue. The leader
of the third party cannot find a lot against the government and he is
looking for an occasion to have his picture in the press with the
soldiers.
We will run the government the way we think it should be run.
The proper way to run a government is to show respect to the
commission. We must let the commissioners do their job. They
have sworn to do their job properly. When the commission
completes its work we will act accordingly. That is the way things
are done in Canada. We will not find anybody guilty before the case
is closed.
4983
[Translation]
Mr. Michel Guimond (Beauport-Montmorency-Orléans,
BQ): Mr. Speaker, my question is for the revenue minister.
Over the past five years, Revenue Canada has audited the excise
taxes of only one oil company and of no tobacco products
manufacturers, thus risking the loss of millions of dollars, because
there is a four year limitation on audits. In other words, after four
years, you can no longer recover the money. We are not talking
about smuggling here, but lax tax controls.
Can the revenue minister explain to us why her department did
not do its job properly, letting millions of dollars that it can never
recover disappear daily?
[English]
Hon. Jane Stewart (Minister of National Revenue, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, we have been doing our work.
What I want to explain to the House is that even though audits
were not completed, we were constantly monitoring the tax
revenues from these companies. There was absolutely no
indication that there were any changes to the amounts of revenue
which the government was receiving.
[Translation]
Mr. Michel Guimond (Beauport-Montmorency-Orléans,
BQ): Mr. Speaker, might we remind the minister that the number
of public servants assigned to audit functions has been plummeting
in her department for 20 years and that the auditor general tells us
that, since 1991, those left have been doing only GST audits.
(1430)
I therefore ask the minister what she is waiting for to hire or train
new auditors, thus making it possible to carry out the required
controls within four years and collect millions owed the federal tax
department?
[English]
Hon. Jane Stewart (Minister of National Revenue, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, the hon. member is wrong. In fact we have hired 1,200
new auditors. With the last budget the Minister of Finance gave us
$50 million to hire 800 more.
* * *
Mr. Jim Hart (Okanagan-Similkameen-Merritt, Ref.):
Mr. Speaker, the answers of the defence minister and the Prime
Minister may have been acceptable, except for one small fact.
Troops from the Canadian Armed Forces are deployed around
the world. This issue of leadership goes right to the heart of the
matter. If they do not do something, they are going to get someone
killed in our Canadian Armed Forces.
Today Roberto Gonzales contradicted the general and implicated
him in the cover-up. I would like to ask the Prime Minister a very
simple question: Will the Prime Minister clearly state to this House
whether or not General Boyle still enjoys the confidence of this
government?
Hon. David M. Collenette (Minister of National Defence and
Minister of Veterans Affairs, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, we have been
very consistent in our answers. You have heard them again today.
What is very troubling is that at this time people in the armed
forces are feeling a lot of pain; people in the House of Commons
are feeling a lot of pain; Canadians are feeling a lot of pain about
the problems we have had with this particular mission. These are
being looked into by the inquiry.
For members to come here to the House of Commons and exploit
the pain of an individual soldier, to come here to the House of
Commons and basically give the impression that somehow lives
are at risk goes beyond any partisan politics I have ever seen in
nearly 20 years of being in and out of this Chamber.
I would only hope for decency's sake that the hon. member and
his colleagues would let the inquiry do its work and leave the
members of the armed forces to continue to do the good job they
are doing.
Mr. Jim Hart (Okanagan-Similkameen-Merritt, Ref.):
Mr. Speaker, being a former member of the Canadian Armed
Forces, I take this to heart.
The worst situation in the Canadian Armed Forces and for
personnel in the Canadian Armed Forces was when the chief of
defence staff stood up, blamed everything on his subordinates and
said that his subordinates lacked moral fibre. That was the worst
thing that ever happened.
In a speech on ethics in 1991 the Prime Minister stated in this
House: ``When we form government, every minister in the cabinet
that I will be presiding over will have to take full responsibility for
what is going on in his department. If there is any bungling in the
department, the minister will have to take the responsibility''.
Canadians know there has been a whole lot of bungling going on
in the minister's department. I have a simple question for the Prime
Minister: Exactly how much does it take before the Prime Minister,
before you hold your Minister of National-
The Speaker: My colleagues, please. You will address your
questions to the Chair and then they will be passed on through. I
will permit the right hon. Prime Minister to answer.
4984
Right Hon. Jean Chrétien (Prime Minister, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I have a lot of confidence in the Minister of National
Defence.
When I was in the opposition, I knew there were a lot of
problems in that department. That is one of the reasons we made a
promise to have an inquiry into the Somalia affair. I said at that
time that one of the problems which existed in the previous
administration was that there were seven defence ministers in nine
years.
I said to the Minister of National Defence: ``You will take over a
very difficult job, but I will keep you in that job. This department
needs the respect of the government. We should have a minister
who will be there for a long time, who will be responsible and who
will take his responsibilities very seriously''. That is exactly what
the Minister of National Defence has been doing since November
1993.
* * *
(1435)
[Translation]
Mr. Réal Ménard (Hochelaga-Maisonneuve, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, my question is for the Minister of Labour.
The Minister of Labour is in the process of reviewing part I of
the Canada Labour Code. The task force he set up for that purpose
recommended in its report, the Sims report, which was tabled this
past January, that the RCMP be given the right to collective
bargaining.
Since RCMP officers are the only police officers in Canada who
do not have the right to collective bargaining, will the minister
undertake to use the current revision of the Canada Labour Code to
put an end to this discriminatory and unjustified situation?
Hon. Alfonso Gagliano (Minister of Labour and Deputy
Leader of the Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I have already given the hon. member an answer on this.
Within a few weeks, I hope to be in a position to table amendments
to the Labour Code. At that time, people will have a chance to see
what the proposed amendments are.
Since the hon. member referred to the Sims report, I would invite
him to reread it. I believe there is a difference between what he has
just said and what the report states with respect to the RCMP.
Mr. Réal Ménard (Hochelaga-Maisonneuve, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, I would ask the minister to leave it to the opposition to
decide whether or not he has provided an answer, and at this point
he has not.
The RCMP Association has proposed a collective bargaining
system under which there would be binding arbitration without the
right to strike. Does the minister intend to accede to this proposal,
which is fair, equitable and respectful of RCMP employees?
Hon. Alfonso Gagliano (Minister of Labour and Deputy
Leader of the Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I repeat, we are in the process of drafting the amendments
to the bill concerning part I of the Labour Code, and I invite the
hon. member to wait until the bill is tabled in the House and then to
make his comments and pass judgment on the minister's actions.
* * *
[
English]
Ms. Val Meredith (Surrey-White Rock-South Langley,
Ref.): Mr. Speaker, on Monday when I asked the immigration
minister about the case of Dennis Garcia, an escaped American
dangerous offender who claimed refugee status in Canada and was
released, the minister simply responded by stating that the
government has a different view from the Reform Party.
Now we find out just how different the government's view is.
She has issued new guidelines to immigration officers that they are
to bend over backward to avoid detaining illegal immigrants and
bogus refugees.
Can the minister explain why she is issuing guidelines to
immigration officers that contradict sections of the Immigration
Act?
[Translation]
Hon. Lucienne Robillard (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I have not issued any new
guidelines on the subject, and the hon. member is saying is just not
true.
[English]
Ms. Val Meredith (Surrey-White Rock-South Langley,
Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I would suggest that the information comes
from immigration officers within her department. They are the
ones who have received this information from the minister.
The Reform Party believes that an escaped dangerous offender
who savagely beat a defenceless woman during a robbery should
not even be allowed to claim refugee status in Canada, never mind
being released from detention. The Liberals think that not only
should he be released but he should be welcomed with opened
arms.
Can the minister explain why this government is now adopting a
get soft approach concerning illegal immigrants and bogus
refugees rather than protecting Canadians?
[Translation]
Hon. Lucienne Robillard (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, it is not true that we are going to
make changes in the Immigration Department's detention policy
4985
so that dangerous criminals may circulate freely in this country. It
is not true at all.
The reason this policy is now under review-a policy that was
not adopted by the deputy minister or by the current minister-is to
conform to existing jurisprudence. We also respect the rule of law
in this country.
* * *
(1440)
Mr. Gaston Leroux (Richmond-Wolfe, BQ): Mr. Speaker,
applications for museum financing under the Museums Assistance
Program were filed with the Department of Canadian Heritage as of
February 15 this year. Some Canadian museums received their
replies at the end of June, but most did so at the end of August. In
Quebec only one museum received a reply, and it happens to be in
Shawinigan, in the Prime Minister's riding.
My question is directed to the Minister of Canadian Heritage.
What explanation does the minister have for the delay in
responding to museums in general and those in Quebec in
particular, and why does she let small museums languish for as
long as seven months before bothering to answer their
applications?
Hon. Sheila Copps (Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of
Canadian Heritage, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, in the same article it says
that the McCord Museum received $100,000. What he says is not
true.
Mr. Gaston Leroux (Richmond-Wolfe, BQ): Mr. Speaker, if
I may refresh the minister's memory, scarcely two years ago, in
1994, corporate services asked her to reply within four months of
the mailing date on grant applications.
If this is due to a considerable lack of efficiency, I would ask the
minister to explain why she is super-efficient when she hands out
flags and so negligent when dealing with museums in Quebec?
Hon. Sheila Copps (Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of
Canadian Heritage, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I am very particular about
how we spend $8 million of Canadian taxpayers money. Since we
received some applications only a few weeks ago, our purpose is to
protect both the museums that filed proper applications and
taxpayers in Quebec and Canada.
* * *
[
English]
Mrs. Dianne Brushett (Cumberland-Colchester, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, my question is to the Minister of Foreign Affairs.
The Canadian summit on land mines begins tomorrow, with
more than 70 countries represented. Parliamentarians from the new
Republic of South Africa visiting this House today told us last
evening that in Mozambique alone at least one child per day, every
day, is killed by a land mine while walking to school. What does
the minister hope to achieve that will stop this human tragedy?
Hon. Lloyd Axworthy (Minister of Foreign Affairs, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I would like to thank the member for the question. The
purpose of this conference that begins here tomorrow is to bring
together over 70 countries to begin organizing the move toward the
total global elimination of land mines. It is a very significant
landmark.
I would like to point out that as part of the leadership that Canada
has taken, I think the House should applaud the decision taken
today by the minister of defence to move toward the elimination of
the Canadian stock of land mines beginning with a two-thirds
reduction immediately.
That is the kind of leadership and dedication that we see taking
place and I would invite members of Parliament to attend the
exhibit that was opened today on land mines where we can see the
professionalism, competence and courage of our armed forces
today as they work around the world on the elimination of mines.
* * *
Mr. Jack Ramsay (Crowfoot, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, it is evident
that the justice minister continues to support the right of murders to
a full judge and jury review of their parole ineligibility after
serving just 15 years of a life sentence. By doing so, the justice
minister continues to support the criminal and ignores the pain and
anguish of the families of murder victims.
The minister and his government have repeatedly taken the side
of the criminal at the expense of law abiding Canadians. Why does
the minister of justice not eliminate section 745 of the Criminal
Code completely and deny all first degree murderers, including
Clifford Olson, any opportunity for early release and demonstrate
his willingness to come down on the side of the victim?
Hon. Allan Rock (Minister of Justice and Attorney General
of Canada, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I urge the hon. member to support
Bill C-45 which we put before this House to improve the current
provisions of the Criminal Code so far as they relate to applications
for early parole by those sentenced to prison for longer than 15
years.
(1445 )
In that bill we have proposed a tightening and a toughening of
that provision to ensure it is available only in exceptional cases.
What is most important of all, apart from the fact altogether that it
would make applications of that nature impossible if one is
4986
convicted of multiple or serial killing, it puts the ultimate decision
in the hands of the community, the community jury, the very
Canadian people for whom this hon. member purports to speak.
Mr. Jack Ramsay (Crowfoot, Ref.): Of course, Mr. Speaker,
we recognize in the minister's response that he is forgetting one
more time about the victims of crime.
Fourteen years ago Darlene Boyd's teenage daughter was raped
and murdered, her body burned by Jim Peters. In four months this
murderer can apply for early release under section 745 of the
Criminal Code.
How can the justice minister justify putting Darlene Boyd
through this torment and anguish one more time?
Hon. Allan Rock (Minister of Justice and Attorney General
of Canada, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I have met with Darlene Boyd. I
have spoken to her directly about this issue. I saw for myself the
enormous tragedy she has had to endure and live through.
I know I speak for all members of this House when I say our
hearts go out to Darlene Boyd and to others who find themselves
facing those types of tragedies.
If the hon. member and his colleagues in the Reform Party would
co-operate with us and support Bill C-45, as I urge them to do, we
will change the provisions of the Criminal Code so that before
anyone who is in custody can bring such an application they would
first have to have it screened by a judge of a superior court to
demonstrate, and they would bear the onus, that there is a
reasonable prospect of their success in front of a jury.
Second, they would have to persuade a jury unanimously, as
opposed to the present two-thirds rule, that they should be given
permission to apply early to the parole board.
I believe those changes allow us to retain this provision, which
has been part of criminal law for 20 years, while improving it and
ensuring that it is available only in exceptional cases. I urge the
member to join us in passing that legislation.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. Paul Mercier (Blainville-Deux-Montagnes, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, my question is for the Minister of Transport.
This summer, we learned from the Transportation Safety Board
of Canada that the number of main line derailments in Canada in
the first seven months of 1996 was 50 per cent higher than in the
same period last year. Since the beginning of the year, there have
been 146 accidents, compared to only 97 last year, for an average
increase of seven accidents per month.
Does the minister not think that this disturbing rise in the
number of rail accidents is due partly to the appalling condition of
the rail system itself, especially in Quebec where, according to a
1995 Transport Canada study, the number of problems on Quebec's
main rail lines is three to ten times-
An hon. member: Question.
The Speaker: I am sorry, but I must give the floor to the hon.
Minister of Transport.
[English]
Hon. David Anderson (Minister of Transport, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, the subject is a very serious one and safety is in fact
Transport Canada's preoccupation in all its activities.
I point out to the hon. member that it is certainly correct, there
has been an increase in mainline accidents. I would suggest,
however, the figures should be looked at rather carefully to see
what level those accidents are on. In fact, in terms of the more
serious accidents there is a very slight change.
I can also assure the member that only an hour ago I was meeting
with the presidents of Canadian National and Canadian Pacific to
discuss this very issue and I certainly welcome his concern on this
account.
[Translation]
Mr. Paul Mercier (Blainville-Deux-Montagnes, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, the minister apparently cannot see a cause and effect
relationship between the appalling condition of Canada's rail
system and the record number of accidents.
Will he at least admit that his negligence in the recent closing of
some rail carriers' maintenance facilities is partly responsible for
the increase in the number of accidents?
[English]
Hon. David Anderson (Minister of Transport, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, certainly not. The situation is not related, as the hon.
member suggests.
(1450)
This is not the easiest question to deal with when one is
analysing statistics, but I would suggest that the hon. member
compare the enormously successful Canadian system with others.
If the member compares the record of both CN and CP to those
lines across the border, he will find that we have a very safe system.
However, inevitably in a country with the amount of rail traffic that
we have there will be some accidents. I certainly welcome his
concern and interest in the subject because it is, as I said earlier, the
most important priority of my department.
4987
Mr. Elwin Hermanson (Kindersley-Lloydminster, Ref.):
Mr. Speaker, evidence shows that the Canadian Wheat Board has
not performed well with its sales of barley. The agriculture minister
has sat back and twiddled his thumbs over marketing reform while
barley growers have lost millions of dollars.
The minister knows that the Alberta plebiscite and several
prairie polls, including his own, indicate barley growers support
voluntary participation in the Canadian Wheat Board.
My question is for the Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food.
Will he stop twiddling his thumbs and implement his panel's
recommendations or at least hold a plebiscite soon asking barley
producers if marketing barley through the Canadian Wheat Board
should be voluntary?
Hon. Ralph E. Goodale (Minister of Agriculture and
Agri-Food, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, on the first day of this session of
Parliament, September 16, I was asked a question by the hon.
member for Provencher as to the timing of the government's
reaction to the controversy in western Canada about western grain
marketing. I indicated in that reply that we would be in a position to
announce our policy decisions before Thanksgiving.
I am pleased to confirm that we are on track with that timing. I
will be in a position to make an announcement of the government's
policy decisions within the next several days.
On the specific allegations the hon. gentleman has made with
respect to barley marketing, I presume he is referring to recent
media reports carried in Winnipeg and elsewhere. I can assure him
those media reports are grossly inflated and are not an accurate
representation of the facts.
Mr. Elwin Hermanson (Kindersley-Lloydminster, Ref.):
Mr. Speaker, if the minister wants to talk about gross
misrepresentation, he should talk about his own Angus Reid poll
which was a crude manipulation, attempting to swing support
behind the monopoly selling of barley. That is why a plebiscite is
so important.
I would really like the minister to commit today to call a
plebiscite with a clear and honest question, which he has said is
important, that will allow all prairie barley producers a vote on
their marketing choice in the future.
Hon. Ralph E. Goodale (Minister of Agriculture and
Agri-Food, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I am sure the Angus Reid
organization will be intrigued with the hon. gentleman's allegation
of manipulation. I will be certain to draw that to the attention of
Mr. Reid and he can take whatever response he deems appropriate.
With respect to the barley issue, as I have said, the government is
on the verge of making its policy pronouncements. The hon.
gentleman has only a few days to wait and I think he may be
intrigued by the position we announce.
* * *
Mr. Pat O'Brien (London-Middlesex, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
my question is for the Minister of Natural Resources.
Atomic Energy Canada and Ontario Hydro are proposing to
import plutonium fuels from the United States. If the federal
government agrees to this proposal will the minister commit our
government to a full environmental assessment with public
hearings to afford Canadians a fair and full opportunity for
meaningful input?
Hon. Anne McLellan (Minister of Natural Resources, Lib.):
Mr. Speaker, let me reassure the hon. member that any decision in
relation to the importation of MOX fuel is a very long way off.
Feasibility studies are presently being done in relation to the
possible use of MOX fuel in Candu reactors. If it proves feasible
then obviously there still has to be a decision made by the United
States or perhaps Russia as to whether they choose the Candu as an
option for disposal.
In relation to the hon. member's specific question, let me
reassure him that all relevant federal and provincial environmental
health and safety assessment processes and licensing processes will
be followed. Many of those processes involve full opportunity for
the public to participate and to offer its point of view.
Let me reassure the hon. member that the public will have ample
opportunity for input into any final decision-
Some hon. members: Oh, oh.
* * *
(1455)
[Translation]
Mr. Pierre de Savoye (Portneuf, BQ): Mr. Speaker, my
question is for the Minister of Industry.
On December 20, the minister stated that he did not want the rate
restructuring in the field of telecommunications to be done at the
expense of accessibility. The minister said: ``Accessibility is
currently not at stake and we will make sure that it will not be in the
future''.
Since the minister and the CRTC authorized significant increases
in the cost of local services, with more to come, what measures is
4988
the minister contemplating to make sure local services remain
affordable for everyone?
[English]
Mr. Morris Bodnar (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Industry, Minister for the Atlantic Canada Opportunities
Agency and Minister of Western Economic Diversification,
Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the position of the government has been to
continuously allow competition to play an important role in the
provision of services, including the area of telecommunications.
During this process, the CRTC has been involved. It is very
important to recognize that during the restructuring in this area of
telecommunications there may be inconveniences that arise.
However, the marketplace is an important place that sets the fee
structures, and when the marketplace takes priority it comes up
with a level of funding and a level of pricing that is superior with
lower costs for the consumer.
[Translation]
Mr. Pierre de Savoye (Portneuf, BQ): Mr. Speaker, I
appreciate the hon. member's answer, but the fact is that consumers
will pay more, not less. Incidentally, the federation of consumers'
associations and the National Anti-Poverty Organization proposed
the setting up of a fund to ensure universal access to
telecommunications for low-income people and the regions.
Will the Minister of Industry follow up on this suggestion?
[English]
Mr. Morris Bodnar (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Industry, Minister for the Atlantic Canada Opportunities
Agency and Minister of Western Economic Diversification,
Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the suggestion that has been made is a matter
we will take under advisement and discuss with the Minister of
Industry.
* * *
Mr. Keith Martin (Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, a moment of sympathy, please, for the Minister of Health
who has been suffering under the tough and personal attacks by the
tobacco lobby. But while he is suffering, 10,000 Canadian children
take up smoking every single month. They suffer from premature
illness and death.
Would the Minister of Health like to come out from underneath
his suffering and put tobacco under the Hazardous Products Act?
Hon. David Dingwall (Minister of Health, Lib.): No, Mr.
Speaker.
Mr. Keith Martin (Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, one year ago the Supreme Court decided to revoke its ban
on advertising, and while 40,000 Canadians die every year from
tobacco the Prime Minister plays golf with the president of
Imperial Tobacco.
If the minister is not prepared to put tobacco under the
Hazardous Products Act, I would like him to tell this House what
he is prepared to do to prevent 40,000 Canadians from dying every
year from this most preventable disease.
Hon. David Dingwall (Minister of Health, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
I am happy to receive the support of the Reform Party as it relates
to our blueprint and the direction in which we wish to proceed in
terms of tobacco.
The hon. member has quite wrongly described the best solution
as it relates to tobacco consumption in this country. We hope to
move forward in a comprehensive way which will address a variety
of things from enforcement to the proliferation of youth smoking.
The hon. members yell out from their seats. It has taken them
three weeks to come up with a question with regard to tobacco. I
say to the hon. members opposite that the legislation we are
intending to introduce will come relatively soon.
* * *
Mr. Alex Shepherd (Durham, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, my question
is for the Minister of Finance.
At a meeting this past weekend the minister agreed that Canada
along with other countries would forgive certain debt to third world
countries. At a time when Canadians are being asked to bear the
burden of our own deficit and debt reduction measures, why are we
forgiving other nations?
(1500 )
Hon. Paul Martin (Minister of Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
this was indeed a landmark decision taken by the G-7, the IMF, the
World Bank and the creditor nations of the Paris Club. As a result,
some $5 billion to $7 billion of debt of the poorest of the poor
countries in the world will be forgiven and they will be put in a
position where they can put their existing debt on a sustainable
basis.
We should not discuss this in terms of the arid numbers on a
sheet of paper. We should realize that as a result of this, millions of
children who otherwise would not get vaccinated will receive
vaccinations. As a result of this, children who would otherwise not
4989
have a chance to learn to read and write will get school books. As a
result of this, food will be put on their tables and decent
hospitalization will be provided.
The reason that this Canadian initiative, among others, has taken
hold is because this nation understands that we are one world and
we must take care of each other.
* * *
Mr. Nelson Riis (Kamloops, NDP): Mr. Speaker, my question
is for the Prime Minister, who along with everybody else was very
proud yesterday when we applauded the Olympians on the floor of
the House of Commons, including many of my Liberal colleagues.
But as we were applauding, the Liberal government was gutting the
support program for Canadian Olympians.
In light of the support shown yesterday by the representatives of
Canadians on the floor of the House of Commons, would the Prime
Minister consider shutting down the information office with its $27
million allocation and provide that money to support Canadian
Olympians?
Hon. Sheila Copps (Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of
Canadian Heritage, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, at a time when we are
cutting across the board and at a time when we are facing very
difficult decisions, we increased the individual payments to
athletes by 25 per cent. Last year we invested $20 million of the
taxpayers' money assisting our athletes in what proved to be the
absolute best performance ever at the Olympics.
I hope that with the support of the Minister of Finance, having
turned the corner on some of our economic problems, that in future
years we can build an even stronger national mandate for national
sport as a nation builder.
* * *
[
Translation]
Hon. Jean J. Charest (Sherbrooke, PC): Mr. Speaker, my
question is for the Prime Minister.
Even when he is reminded of the very high level of
unemployment, the Prime Minister does not seem to want to budge
on the unemployment issue. When he is reminded that the
unemployment rate in Canada has remained above 9 per cent for 71
consecutive months, the longest stretch since the 1930s, he does
not seem to be moved to action either. A report released by the
Conference Board this week shows that the real unemployment rate
among young Canadians exceeds 25 per cent.
I would like to give the Prime Minister another chance to tell this
House he welcomes this opportunity to announce a reduction to
Canadians in their unemployment insurance overcontributions-an
extra $10 billion that will be taken out of the pockets of small
business workers.
Will he not reconsider, cut unemployment insurance
premiums-this tax on employment-and restore hope to those
who, at present-
The Speaker: The hon. Minister of Human Resources
Development has the floor.
Hon. Douglas Young (Minister of Human Resources
Development, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, there is no doubt that, whenever
the hon. member shows up in this House, he speaks quite boldly.
Today, he dared to come and tell us about the unemployment rate
and the rates of premiums paid by workers and employees. When
he was in government, when his party formed the government,
these rates were higher than they are today. The unemployment rate
was higher than it is today.
The longer he stays at home, the better off we will all be.
* * *
(1505 )
[English]
The Speaker: I wish to draw the attention of members to the
presence in the gallery of a parliamentary delegation from South
Africa led by Mr. Geoffrey Doidge.
Some hon. members: Hear, hear.
The Speaker: We will now proceed, before the routine order of
the day, to tributes to Mr. Robert Bourassa, the former premier of
the province of Quebec.
* * *
[
Translation]
Right Hon. Jean Chrétien (Prime Minister, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, it was with great sadness that I learned this morning of the
death of Quebec's former premier, Robert Bourassa.
I would like, first of all, to mention the exemplary courage he
demonstrated during his long battle with the illness that finally
claimed his life.
He met this ultimate test, as he met all the other tests in his life,
quietly and with determination.
I extend my sincerest condolences, of course, to his wife Andrée,
with whom I had the opportunity to speak earlier this morning, and
to his children and grandchildren, as well as his former colleagues
and friends.
4990
In Robert Bourassa, our country has lost a great Canadian, who
always worked to improve the lot of his fellow Canadians.
I first met him in the early 1960s, when he was a tax advisor with
the Department of National Revenue, here in Ottawa. He went on to
teach at the universities of Ottawa, Laval and Montreal, and took
up a position as director of research with the Bélanger commission
on taxation.
He began his political career in 1966, when he was elected MNA
for Mercier. Four years later, at the age of 36, he became the
youngest premier in the history of Quebec.
His first term of office will be remembered primarily for the
contribution he made to the modernization of Quebec through the
massive James Bay hydroelectric project. In launching this project
and introducing social programs, such as health insurance, Robert
Bourassa showed his keen long term vision in trying to equip
Quebec with the economic and social tools it needed to meet the
challenges of the future.
After his defeat in 1976, he withdrew from active political life to
teach and reflect on the future of Canada. He was again elected
leader of the provincial Liberal party in 1982 and resumed the
position of premier of Quebec from 1985 to 1993.
The memory I will carry of his long career in politics is the
following: Robert Bourassa was at once a proud Quebecer and a
proud Canadian. He was always an ardent federalist, who defended
Quebec's interests within Canada. He remained convinced that,
despite the challenges and complexities of Canadian federalism,
Quebec's place was with Canada. He sought the cultural and
linguistic development of French Canadians, while holding firmly
to the belief that Canada would continue to serve Quebecers well in
this regard.
[English]
Robert Bourassa served Quebecers well during his time as
premier. He was always a voice of moderation and reason. He was
convinced that Quebec's future prosperity lay within Canada and
Canada's with Quebec.
Mr. Bourassa devoted himself to public service for more than 30
years. I know, today, all Canadians will wish to express their
appreciation for his life and work.
[Translation]
I pay tribute to the memory of Robert Bourassa, who gave his
life in the service of his fellow citizens. On behalf of the
government of Canada, of members in this House, and of all
Canadians, I share the pain felt by Mrs. Bourassa, his family and all
Quebecers. On behalf of all of them, I say to Mr. Bourassa: We
thank you.
Some hon. members: Hear, hear.
(1510)
Mr. Michel Gauthier (Leader of the Opposition, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, today Quebec mourns the passing of the former Premier
of Quebec, Robert Bourassa, a man who spent nearly 30 years of
his life serving Quebecers to the best of his ability.
In 1960, Mr. Bourassa started to make his mark as a professor at
the University of Ottawa, Laval University and the University of
Montreal. Elected for the first time in 1966 in the riding of Mercier,
Mr. Bourassa embarked on a long and brilliant political career.
In 1970, his perseverance, his talent as a communicator and his
energy made him, at the age of 36, Quebec's youngest premier. He
was an excellent politician, and was responsible for a number of
impressive achievements that remain today as symbols of Quebec
society. The decisive role he played in building a modern Quebec is
reflected, as the Prime Minister mentioned earlier, in our health
insurance system and the James Bay project, for instance.
Mr. Bourassa was always concerned about Quebec's future. He
was responsible for the signing of the Meech Lake Accord, whose
demise was certainly not his fault. He did everything to save the
accord. His efforts to renew the Canadian federation were
praiseworthy, even if they were to no avail.
I had the pleasure of sitting with Mr. Bourassa in the Quebec
National Assembly when I was elected for the second time as a
member of the Parti Quebecois in 1985. I soon realized he was a
very human person who profoundly respected his opponents. In
fact he taught me a very useful lesson in politics when I was the
energy critic and stood opposite him: he taught me that in politics
one must never underestimate one's opponent.
A man of consensus and discipline, Mr. Bourassa was until the
very end an enduring benchmark in the political history of a
province that is gradually evolving towards political sovereignty.
On my own behalf and on behalf of my colleagues and the
people of Quebec, I wish to extend my most sincere condolences to
the family and friends of Mr. Bourassa. Today, Quebec has lost a
great man.
In concluding, I would like to quote something that Mr. Bourassa
said, in which there is a lesson for us all: ``Happiness is being able
to fight for one's convictions''.
Some hon. members: Hear, hear.
[English]
Mr. Preston Manning (Calgary Southwest, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, I rise to join with other colleagues in paying tribute to
Robert Bourassa on the sad occasion of his death.
Allow me first of all to express sympathies to his family and to
the people of Quebec on this loss of a husband, father and a
political leader. These sympathies are expressed on behalf of the
Reform members of Parliament and their constituents, many of
4991
whom live in constituencies and areas a long way from Quebec and
yet who feel the loss that Quebecers feel today.
[Translation]
My wife Sandra and I wish to extend our heartfelt sympathy to
his wife, Andrée, and their two children, François and Michelle.
[English]
In paying tribute to his memory we could focus on a number of
things as other speakers have done: his academic contributions, his
political work, the acts of his government and his commitment to
keeping Quebec within Canada.
The attribute that I would like to select for tribute is a more
human one. We in this Chamber, who spend all our time on politics,
do not spend enough time paying tribute to human characteristics,
and that is his courage in adversity, particularly in his latter years.
In his latter years he carried out all his political and governmental
work while suffering from a painful illness. The willingness and
ability of a public servant to attend to the affairs of others while
enduring personal pain and suffering is a rare attribute. It is one
which should be recognized and praised particularly on this
occasion.
(1515)
We salute today the many contributions of the late Robert
Bourassa, but particularly his courage in adversity.
[Translation]
Mr. Bill Blaikie (Winnipeg Transcona, NDP): Mr. Speaker, on
behalf of my colleagues in the New Democratic Party, I wish to
offer a tribute to Mr. Bourassa, as well as to convey our sympathies
to his family and friends.
Canada and Quebec have lost one of their masters in the art of
politics, and a great public resource. The political life of Robert
Bourassa reflects in many ways the history of Quebec since the
quiet revolution.
He also played a central role in some of the most important
moments in the history of the Canadian federation, namely the
October crisis and the negotiations around the Meech Lake accord.
History no doubt will attest to the difficulties he encountered in
trying to accommodate the aspirations of Quebecers and those of
other Canadians within our federal institutions. It will also attest,
however, to the fact that there were people of good will, like Mr.
Bourassa, who made that effort, and that the effort is worthwhile.
[English]
I first met Mr. Bourassa when I was vice-chairman of the special
committee of the House of Commons on federal-provincial fiscal
relations. We met with former premiers in 1981 in the
parliamentary dining room. We gathered a lot of former premiers to
receive their advice on how to deal with federal-provincial fiscal
affairs. At that time Mr. Bourassa was a former premier, but he was
to go on from there to make one of the political comebacks of the
century and to become premier again.
I remember also that he first came to my attention when I was a
teenager as the premier of Quebec during the October crisis. All
Canada was riveted on the events happening in Quebec at that time.
I see him as someone who tried to balance his perception of
Quebec as a community and his perception of Canada as a
community where Quebec could thrive not just as individual
Quebecers but also as a community.
My sadness today is not just for Mr. Bourassa; it is for the fact
that the ambivalence and the ambiguity which he expressed so well
has been broken. Many of his critics-critics not of him but of the
things which he stood for-have prospered. The kind of Canada
which he sought to build is on the ropes.
I say to all of us here that the one thing we could do to honour his
memory would be to revitalize the kind of Canada which he had in
mind. I did not always agree with him, but he knew that the best
place for Quebec was within Canada and that the best kind of
Canada was a Canada open to Quebec.
[Translation]
Hon. Jean J. Charest (Sherbrooke, PC): Mr. Speaker, today is
a day of great sadness for all those who had the pleasure, indeed I
would term it a privilege, of knowing Robert Bourassa.
I would like to pay tribute to his courage, his constant
companion throughout his political career, as well as throughout
his illness. My most heartfelt condolences, and those of my party,
to Mrs. Bourassa, their children and grandchildren.
(1520)
Robert Bourassa was the incarnation of modern Quebec.
Throughout his long career, economic issues were his main
concern. In 1970, he headed the government at a crucial time in
Quebec history. In that context, he was able to stay the course and
focus on his fundamental objectives: Quebec's cultural security
and its economic progress.
Quebecers' unshakeable belief today in their ability to be the
masters of their own economy is, in large part, the work of Robert
Bourassa.
Mr. Bourassa was the incarnation of modern Quebec in all of its
dimensions. He spoke to us knowingly of our own ambitions and
also reflected our ambivalence.
[English]
Canadians would often remark that Mr. Bourassa for them was
an intriguing political figure. Those of us who knew him well and
4992
were from Quebec were always tempted to reply that he was a true
reflection of the people of Quebec.
[Translation]
Robert Bourassa too felt ambivalence, the ambivalence of a
person with a very great responsibility. He was always concerned
with protecting and furthering the interests of a mainly
francophone population.
This concern was ever-present, whenever discussions and
negotiations were held on the future of Quebec and of Canada, in
Victoria in 1971 and in the 1980 and 1995 referendums, and
especially in the negotiations around the Meech Lake accord.
What needs to be kept in mind concerning that event is that he
had obtained an agreement which satisfied both Quebec and the
other Canadian partners. Events, unfortunately, took a different
turn, and history will be the final judge.
On a personal note, I remember Mr. Bourassa as a generous and
affable man, one who was able to resist the temptation to lower
debates to a personal level and one who, of all the politicians I have
had the opportunity to observe, was without a doubt the one who
always treated his colleagues, his opponents, the media and the
general public with the utmost respect.
The second quality that characterized Robert Bourassa was,
without a doubt, his exceptional perseverance. Who, after the 1976
election, would have dared predict that he would return to public
life? Yet he did, and stronger than ever, at the head of majority
governments in 1985 and 1989. Twenty years ago, who would have
thought that people would one day hold him in such affection?
We shall all keep in our hearts the undying memory of an
exceptional head of government and, what is more, a great man
who never admitted defeat.
Some hon. members: Hear, hear.
The Speaker: I ask you all to rise for a minute of silence in
memory of Mr. Robert Bourassa.
[Editor's Note: Whereupon the House stood in silence.]
_____________________________________________
4992
ROUTINE PROCEEDINGS
[
English]
Mr. Paul Zed (Parliamentary Secretary to Leader of the
Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
pursuant to Standing Order 36(8), I have the honour to table in both
official languages the government's response to three petitions.
(1525)
[Translation]
Hon. Paul Martin (Minister of Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
pursuant to Standing Order 83(1), I have the honour to lay upon the
table a notice of ways and means motion to amend the Income Tax
Act.
I also table explanatory notes and ask that you designate an order
of the day for the consideration of the motion.
* * *
Hon. Paul Martin (Minister of finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
perhaps I will be allowed, first, to join in with what the Prime
Minister and the Leader of the Opposition had to say about Robert
Bourassa. He was a good friend and a great statesman.
In May of this year the auditor general reported his concerns
about a 1991 tax ruling that allowed a taxpayer to transfer property
out of Canada without being subject to capital gains tax in Canada.
The House of Commons finance committee examined the issue
and issued a report in September, just last month.
[English]
The House of Commons finance committee found that Revenue
Canada's interpretation of the law as it stood in 1991 was correct
but recommended in its majority report that the law be changed to
ensure that tax is paid in Canada in similar circumstances from now
on. With the tabling of a notice of ways and means motion today,
the government is acting to implement the finance committee's
recommendations.
[Translation]
This is a textbook case of the system working as it should. The
auditor general has done his work as a watchdog. Parliament
listened and asked a committee of the House to investigate. The
committee probed and reported back to Parliament with
recommendations. And now the government is proposing to
implement those recommendations swiftly and fully.
It is imperative that Canadians have absolute faith in the tax
system. People have a right to demand that everybody pays their
share. That is why, from the time this government took office, we
have worked hard at constantly improving the fairness of the tax
system.
Each of our budgets has closed loopholes. We have said that we
will constantly scrutinize the fairness and effectiveness of the tax
system. This measure today is further evidence of our
commitment. It will ensure that all emigrants from
Canada-including individuals, trusts and corporations-will pay
Canadian tax on any
4993
capital gains that have accrued in Canada up to the time of
departure. They will either pay the tax immediately or give
Revenue Canada security to pay those gains when the property is
actually disposed of.
This measure takes effect immediately.
[English]
This measure will ensure that all those leaving Canada to live
abroad, including individuals, trusts and corporations, will pay
Canadian tax on any capital gains that have accrued in Canada up to
the time of departure, if they are in fact emigrating. They will pay
the tax immediately or will give Revenue Canada security to pay
those gains when the property is actually disposed of. This measure
takes effect immediately.
[Translation]
If these measures had been in place in 1991 the tax policy issue
identified in the auditor general's report would not have arisen.
This is not an issue about family trusts.
(1530)
We removed all tax advantages for family trusts in the 1995
budget. One faces same tax policy questions whether one is talking
about the transaction described in the auditor general's report or
determining what rules apply to the small businessperson who
moves from St. Stephen, New Brunswick, to Calais, Maine.
Exceptions to this rule will include gains that accrue on
Canadian real estate and Canadian business property: things that
Canada can always tax when they are ultimately sold. There will
also be an exemption for pensions.
As well, emigrants with any significant property, including real
estate, will have to report it all to Revenue Canada when they leave.
This will help Revenue Canada ensure that former residents pay the
tax they owe to Canada.
All persons who have been in Canada only temporarily will of
course not be subject to these requirements.
[English]
With our new measures, Canada will be implementing one of the
strictest systems in the world with regard to taxpayer migration.
Indeed, Canada is only one of three or four countries that have any
system at all for taxing people who leave. The United States does
not have such a system, nor does most of Europe or Japan.
The motion to which I speak also implements the committee's
more technical recommendations which have to do with issues
such as the scope of the definition of the term taxable Canadian
property and the character of property that is distributed from a
trust to a non-resident beneficiary. These are complicated points of
law and policy.
I expect that many members in this House and many of their
constituents will want to take part in shaping this legislation's final
form. They will have that opportunity as it proceeds through
Parliament.
I would like to thank the auditor general for bringing an
important issue to Parliament's attention. I would also like to thank
the chairman and the members of the finance committee. Their
careful research and their thorough report have laid the foundation
for this motion.
[Translation]
Mr. Yvan Loubier (Saint-Hyacinthe-Bagot, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, first of all, I wish to convey my sincerest sympathy to Mr.
Bourassa's family.
In his statement, the Minister of Finance confirmed that the
Liberal government helps some people to avoid paying taxes. He
confirmed that he has done nothing to end the family trust scandal
in which $2 billion in assets was transferred to the U.S. without a
penny in tax being collected.
Should we be surprised? Since the beginning of this affair, the
behaviour of the Liberal members on the finance committee has
been unworthy of parliamentarians. They tried to undermine the
credibility of the auditor general.
According to the minister's statement, Canadians must have
confidence in the tax system. They are entitled to demand that
everyone pay his or her fair share.
On behalf of all the taxpayers in Quebec and Canada, I ask the
Liberal government to shed light on this scandal and plug the tax
loophole, instead of throwing the borders wide open as they are
now doing.
[English]
If the minister truly wants, as he claims in his ministerial
declaration, to re-establish confidence in the fiscal system, he must
shed light on the scandal of December 1991 which permitted a
family trust of $2 billion to be transferred tax free in the United
States. He must demonstrate to Canadians that they can have
confidence in the system. With the scandal and the complicity of
the government, the proof must be given.
Mr. Herb Grubel (Capilano-Howe Sound, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, I have three points with respect to the government's
policy initiatives just outlined by the Minister of Finance.
First, I am glad that in his statement he eliminated the criticism
of the auditor general which had pervaded the finance committee's
own report.
4994
It makes no sense to distinguish criticism based on wasteful
policies and the wasteful implementation of sound policies caused
by faulty bureaucratic decisions. Waste is waste and the auditor
general must fight it wherever he finds it.
(1535 )
Second, I agree with the minister that this entire controversy is
not about the roll of family trusts as a vehicle for the evasion of
taxes. The contemptible tax loopholes that once existed were
closed by legislation some time ago.
I respect the integrity and goodwill of my colleagues from the
Bloc Quebecois serving with me on the finance committee.
However, after listening carefully for many hours to expert
testimony on family trusts and capital gains taxation, I reluctantly
and respectfully disagree with their continued allegations that
family trusts have served recently and continue to serve as vehicles
for tax evasion and avoidance.
Third, I want to raise a point of disagreement with the
government's approach to solving the one clear and important
problem identified by committee witnesses. This problem concerns
the lack of data on real estate and private business assets left behind
untaxed by emigrants. Under present rules the government taxes
capital gains on these assets whenever they are sold and a fair value
has been established.
Presently Revenue Canada has in place a rather unreliable
system for assuring that the sales of these assets are recorded and
taxed properly. Such sales are not brought to the attention of
Revenue Canada automatically and emigrants avoiding the
payment of these taxes are difficult to catch once they have moved
abroad.
The government has chosen to tighten the net for catching all
capital gains on such assets by a mandatory reporting rule and the
payment of a security deposit. I find the latter provision to be an
unnecessarily harsh and punitive measure. Many emigrants will not
have assets acceptable to Revenue Canada as a security deposit and
will be hard pressed to come up with some.
It would have been much kinder and more efficient for Revenue
Canada instead to put contingent liens on real estate and ask
operating divisions of the department to report the sale of privately
held firms showing up in tax returns.
I regret that the government has failed to take the kinder and
gentler approach to regulation and the treatment of Canadians.
These emigrants deserve our respect and compassion even after
they have decided to take up residence in another country.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mrs. Eleni Bakopanos (Saint-Denis, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
pursuant to Standing Order 34(1), I am pleased to table, in both
official languages, the third report of the Canadian NATO
Parliamentary Association.
It is the report of the official delegation representing Canada at
the joint session of the defence and security committees, the
economic committee and the political committee of the North
Atlantic Assembly held in Brussels on February 18 and 19, 1996.
* * *
[
English]
Mr. Bob Speller (Haldimand-Norfolk, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
pursuant to Standing Order 34, I have the honour to present to the
House three reports from the Canadian Branch Commonwealth
Parliamentary Association concerning our parliamentary seminar
which was held in London, United Kingdom from March 5 to 16,
1996, a parliamentary visit which was held in London, United
Kingdom from May 8 to 24, 1996 and the Canadian Regional
Conference which was held in Winnipeg, Manitoba from July 27 to
August 2, 1996. These are in both official languages.
* * *
Mr. Paul Zed (Parliamentary Secretary to Leader of the
Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I
have the honour to present the 34th report of the Standing
Committee on Procedure and House Affairs regarding the associate
memberships of the Standing Committees on Justice and Legal
Affairs and on Health.
If the House gives its consent, I intend to move concurrence in
the 34th report later this day.
(1540)
If the House gives its consent, I move that the 34th report of the
Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs be concurred
in.
(Motion agreed to.)
* * *
Mr. Paul Szabo (Mississauga South, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I have
two petition is from Sarnia, Ontario. The petitioners draw to the
attention of the House that managing the family home and caring
4995
for preschool children is an honourable profession which has not
been recognized for its value to our society.
The petitioners therefore pray and call on Parliament to pursue
initiatives to eliminate tax discrimination against families that
provide care in the home for preschool children, the chronically ill,
the aged or the disabled.
Mr. Paul Szabo (Mississauga South, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the
second petition comes from Burlington, Ontario. The petitioners
draw to the attention of the House that the consumption of
alcoholic beverages may cause health problems or impair one's
ability, and specifically that fetal alcohol syndrome and other
alcohol related birth defects are 100 per cent preventable by
avoiding alcohol consumption during pregnancy.
The petitioners therefore pray and call on Parliament to enact
legislation to require health warning labels to be placed on the
containers of all alcoholic beverages to caution expectant mothers
and others of the risks associated with alcohol consumption.
Mr. Ed Harper (Simcoe Centre, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I have four
petitions to present today on behalf of the constituents of Simcoe
Centre.
The Speaker: Order. My colleague, four is a bit much. Maybe
we could split them down to two and two or three and one. Would
you consider that, rather than four today?
Mr. Harper (Simcoe Centre): Yes I will, Mr. Speaker.
The first petition deals with age of consent. The petitioners
request age of consent laws. The petitioners ask that Parliament set
the age of consent at 18 years to protect children from sexual
exploitation and abuse.
Mr. Ed Harper (Simcoe Centre, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, the second
group of petitioners request that the Government of Canada not
amend federal legislation to include the phrase sexual orientation.
The petitioners fear that such an inclusion would indicate
societal approval of homosexual behaviour. The petitioners believe
the government should not legitimize this behaviour against the
clear wishes of the majority.
Mr. Maurizio Bevilacqua (York North, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
pursuant to Standing Order 36, I am pleased to present to this
House two petitions signed by the residents of York North.
The first petition is about the Helms-Burton law. The petitioners
draw to the attention of the House that the Cuban liberty and
democratic solidarity act attempts to impose American domestic
policy on other sovereign countries and therefore violates
international law.
The petitioners further draw to the attention of the House that
Canadian interests, rights and businesses must be defended with
strength and vigour.
The petitioners therefore call on Parliament to pursue all
avenues available to ensure the rights of Canadians are protected.
Mr. Maurizio Bevilacqua (York North, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the
second petition draws to the attention of the House that Canadians
of all ages view our health care system as a defining element of
Canadian society.
The petitioners therefore call on Parliament to continue to
uphold the fundamental principles of the Canada Health Act so that
public health care remains accessible, comprehensive, portable,
universal and publicly administered.
Mr. Ronald J. Duhamel (St. Boniface, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, this
petition was submitted by the St. Boniface Chapter of the
Ukrainian Catholic Women's League of Canada.
The petitioners call for the present laws on obscenity and
pornography to be strictly upheld. It is a pleasure for me to present
this petition.
Mr. Jim Abbott (Kootenay East, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I have in
my hand a petition signed by people from all over Canada. It is
really quite interesting.
They are concerned about the increased entry fees to our national
parks, that there was a lack of public consultation on the new fee
structure and that they believe a standard fee of $2 for all passenger
vehicles or $25 for a yearly pass should be set for entry to all
Canadian national parks.
Mr. Paul DeVillers (Simcoe North, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I have
two petitions from my constituency to present pursuant to Standing
Order 36. The petitions contain 75 and 58 signatures respectively.
The petitioners request that Parliament regulate the longstanding
Canadian practice of marketing generic drugs in a size, shape and
colour similar to that of their brand name equivalents.
Mr. Paul Steckle (Huron-Bruce, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, pursuant
to Standing Order 36, I wish to present the attached petitions I have
in my hand. These people petition the government to take notice of
an issue they feel is very important. These constituents come from
the riding of Huron-Bruce for the most part. They embrace the
4996
philosophy of zero tolerance toward individuals who drive while
impaired by alcohol or drugs.
(1545)
The petitioners therefore pray and call on Parliament to proceed
immediately with amendments to the Criminal Code that will
ensure that sentences given to anyone convicted of driving while
impaired or causing injury or death reflects both the severity of the
crime and zero tolerance by Canada toward this crime.
Mrs. Diane Ablonczy (Calgary North, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I
have petitions on two subjects to present to the House on behalf of
citizens in my riding Calgary North.
The first petition asks Parliament to establish a pedophile
registry.
Mrs. Diane Ablonczy (Calgary North, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, the
second petition asks Parliament to commit to a triple E Senate and
to permit the selection of senators by the people of a province
directly.
Mr. Gary Pillitteri (Niagara Falls, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, at the
request of 74 senior citizens of my riding of Niagara Falls, I would
like to table a petition asking that Parliament regulate the
longstanding Canadian practice of marketing generic drugs in a
size, shape and colour similar to its brand name equivalent.
Mr. Mauril Bélanger (Ottawa-Vanier, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, on
behalf of 43 citizens in the national capital region I would like to
present a petition.
The petitioners pray that members of Parliament enact Bill
C-205, introduced by the hon. member for Scarborough West, at
the earliest opportunity so as to provide in Canadian law that no
criminal profits from committing a crime.
Mr. Nelson Riis (Kamloops, NDP): Mr. Speaker, it is my
privilege to present a petition pursuant to Standing Order 36 on
behalf of the constituents of Kamloops.
About 1,800 constituents have signed a petition asking for the
complete removal of section 745 of the Criminal Code. They are
going to get half of that so I suppose they will be half pleased, but
they are calling for full abolition of section 745.
Mr. Nelson Riis (Kamloops, NDP): Mr. Speaker, on another
matter, the taxpayers of Kamloops make a long case for fairer tax
reform. I will not go into detail as they are well known to all
parliamentarians. They call for an overhaul of the tax system.
Mr. Nelson Riis (Kamloops, NDP): Mr. Speaker, 219
constituents call on Parliament to consider the advisability of
extending benefits or compensation to veterans of the wartime
merchant navy equal to those enjoyed by veterans of Canada's
second world war armed services.
Mr. Ed Harper (Simcoe Centre, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, a third
group of petitioners from Simcoe Centre request that Parliament
pass legislation to strengthen the Young Offenders Act, including
publishing the names of young offenders, lowering the age of
application and transferring serious offenders to adult court.
Mr. Ed Harper (Simcoe Centre, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, the final
petition is on the subject of Bill C-205, the private members' bill of
the member for Scarborough West. The petitioners request that the
House enact Bill C-205 to prevent criminals profiting from their
crimes.
* * *
Mr. Paul Zed (Parliamentary Secretary to Leader of the
Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I ask
that all questions be allowed to stand.
The Speaker: Is that agreed?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
* * *
Mr. Paul Zed (Parliamentary Secretary to Leader of the
Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I ask
that all notices of motions for the production of papers be allowed
to stand.
The Speaker: Is that agreed?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
_____________________________________________
4996
GOVERNMENT ORDERS
[
Translation]
Hon. Alfonso Gagliano (Minister of Labour and Deputy
Leader of the Government in the House of Commons, Lib.)
moved:
That, in relation to Bill C-45, An Act to amend the Criminal Code (judicial review of
parole ineligibility) and another Act, not more than one further sitting day shall be
allotted to the consideration of the third reading stage of the Bill, and that, fifteen
minutes before the expiry of the time provided for Government Business on the day
allotted to the consideration of the third reading stage of the said Bill, any proceedings
4997
before the House shall be interrupted, if required for the purpose of this Order and, in
turn, every question necessary for the disposal of the said stage of the Bill shall be put
forthwith and successively, without further debate or amendment.
Some hon. members: Shame, Shame!
[English]
The Speaker: The House has heard the terms of the motion. Is it
the pleasure of the House to adopt the motion?
(1550)
Some hon. members: Agreed.
Some hon. members: No.
The Speaker: All those in favour of the motion will please say
yea.
Some hon. members: Yea.
The Speaker: All those opposed will please say nay.
Some hon. members: Nay.
The Speaker: In my opinion the yeas have it.
And more than five members having risen:
The Speaker: Call in the members.
(The House divided on the motion, which was agreed to on the
following division:)
(Division No. 133)
YEAS
Members
Adams
Anawak
Anderson
Arseneault
Assadourian
Augustine
Bakopanos
Barnes
Beaumier
Bélair
Bélanger
Bertrand
Bethel
Bevilacqua
Blondin-Andrew
Bodnar
Bonin
Boudria
Brushett
Bryden
Byrne
Calder
Campbell
Cannis
Catterall
Cauchon
Chamberlain
Chan
Clancy
Cohen
Collenette
Collins
Cowling
Cullen
DeVillers
Dhaliwal
Dingwall
Dion
Discepola
Dromisky
Duhamel
Dupuy
Easter
Fewchuk
Finestone
Finlay
Flis
Fontana
Fry
Gagliano
Gagnon (Bonaventure-Îles-de-la-Madeleine)
Gallaway
Gerrard
Goodale
Grose
Guarnieri
Harb
Harvard
Hopkins
Hubbard
Ianno
Iftody
Irwin
Jackson
Jordan
Kirkby
Knutson
Kraft Sloan
Lastewka
Lavigne (Verdun-Saint-Paul)
LeBlanc (Cape/Cap-Breton Highlands-Canso)
Lee
Loney
MacAulay
Malhi
Maloney
Martin (LaSalle-Émard)
Massé
McGuire
McKinnon
McLellan (Edmonton Northwest/Nord-Ouest)
McTeague
McWhinney
Milliken
Minna
Mitchell
Murphy
Murray
Nault
O'Brien (London-Middlesex)
O'Reilly
Pagtakhan
Paradis
Parrish
Patry
Payne
Peric
Peterson
Phinney
Pickard (Essex-Kent)
Pillitteri
Proud
Reed
Richardson
Rideout
Robichaud
Robillard
Rock
Scott (Fredericton-York-Sunbury)
Shepherd
Sheridan
Simmons
Speller
St. Denis
Steckle
Stewart (Brant)
Stewart (Northumberland)
Szabo
Telegdi
Terrana
Thalheimer
Torsney
Ur
Valeri
Verran
Volpe
Walker
Wells
Whelan
Young
Zed-131
NAYS
Members
Abbott
Ablonczy
Bachand
Bélisle
Bellehumeur
Benoit
Bernier (Gaspé)
Blaikie
Breitkreuz (Yellowhead)
Bridgman
Brien
Canuel
Caron
Chrétien (Frontenac)
Dalphond-Guiral
Daviault
de Savoye
Deshaies
Dubé
Duceppe
Dumas
Duncan
Epp
Fillion
Forseth
Frazer
Gagnon (Québec)
Gauthier
Godin
Grubel
Guimond
Hanger
Harper (Calgary West/Ouest)
Harper (Simcoe Centre)
Hart
Hayes
Hermanson
Hill (Prince George-Peace River)
Hoeppner
Jennings
Johnston
Landry
Langlois
Laurin
Lavigne (Beauharnois-Salaberry)
Leblanc (Longueuil)
Lefebvre
Leroux (Richmond-Wolfe)
Leroux (Shefford)
Loubier
Manning
McClelland (Edmonton Southwest/Sud-Ouest)
Ménard
Mercier
Meredith
Mills (Red Deer)
Nunez
Picard (Drummond)
Ramsay
Riis
Ringma
Robinson
Rocheleau
Sauvageau
Schmidt
Silye
Solomon
Strahl
Taylor
Thompson
Tremblay (Lac-Saint-Jean)
Venne
Wayne
White (North Vancouver)
Williams-75
PAIRED MEMBERS
Alcock
Asselin
Comuzzi
Crawford
Crête
Dubé
Guay
Jacob
Keyes
Lalonde
Lebel
MacDonald
Marchi
Peters
Pettigrew
Pomerleau
St-Laurent
Vanclief
4998
(1615 )
The Speaker: I declare the motion carried.
I wish to inform the House that because of the ministerial
statement, Government Orders will be extended by 18 minutes.
* * *
The House resumed from September 25 consideration of the
motion that Bill C-45, an act to amend the Criminal Code (judicial
review of parole ineligibility) and another act, be read the third
time and passed.
Mr. Peter Milliken (Kingston and the Islands, Lib.): Madam
Speaker, I am pleased to have an opportunity to speak, even if it is
for a brief time, on this important bill.
During the course of the lengthy debate on this bill, when we sat
and listened to Reform members go on and on about its evils, I kept
asking them pointedly what were their views on caning. I know one
of the their colleagues is a staunch supporter of caning and I wanted
to hear about their party policy on this issue. However, not one of
those members had the courage to answer my questions.
I want to point out some of their inconsistent statements on this
bill and on other matters and then I will come to the caning point.
I am sure the members of the Reform Party are relieved that
closure has been applied on this bill because it lets them off the
hook from all the inconsistent statements they have been making.
First, I have a quote on rehabilitation from the hon. member for
Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca, who I thought often exhibited some
sense in the House. I quote from page 3888 of Hansard where he
said: ``It is not to say that we are not concerned about
rehabilitation. It is not to say that we are not concerned about
prevention''.
Yet the hon. member for Crowfoot, that well known expert on
justice issues, said on page 3878 of Hansard: ``A life sentence is
not about rehabilitation. It is about punishment and retribution''.
He should speak with the hon. member for Esquimalt-Juan de
Fuca to find out what he thinks.
The hon. member for Cariboo-Chilcotin said: ``I am not
suggesting that people who had a difficult childhood should not be
given consideration. It is our intention that all Canadians should
have the opportunity to come to their full potential and do what
they truly choose to do''.
Yet the hon. member for Wild Rose, who is well known for his
liberal views, said: ``To those who argue that these criminals can be
rehabilitated, let them prove this after they have served their full
term of 25 years and not a moment sooner''.
Some hon. members: Hear, hear.
Mr. Milliken: That is their kind of thinking. Listen to the
applause that rings out from the Reform.
On page 4294 of Hansard, the hon. member for Beaver River
said: ``Yes, criminals need attention, rehabilitation, love and
caring''. And the hon. member for Mission-Coquitlam said: ``It is
not about rehabilitation. It is about providing a fair and just
penalty''.
Some hon. members: More, more.
Mr. Milliken: They want more and they are going to get it.
Also on page 4294 of Hansard, the hon. member for Beaver
River said: ``Some murderers and violent offenders are curable.
They are not all incorrigible. Some of them will be rehabilitated.
Some will care and will have a genuine conversion experience in
prison. They will want to make their lives better and pay back to
society some of the terrible things they did by doing good work''.
That does not fit well with the hon. member for Wild Rose.
Then we have the hon. member for Peace River getting into it.
He said: ``These inmates do have the right to earn their way out of
prison after a period of time. If they do try to upgrade their skills
they have a chance to be rehabilitated''. Yet the hon. member for
Yorkton-Melville said: ``I question the need for killers to have
any rights when they are in jail''.
Listen to the inconsistencies in those statements.
Then we have the hon. member for Calgary Centre, who is
considered a moderate in the party and who was reduced to tears
after his public caning at the caucus meeting of the Reform Party
last summer. On page 3885 of Hansard He said: ``We are not
concerned about Olson. He is not going to get out''. We do not need
to scare Canadians with that. That is not what the Reform Party is
saying''.
(1625)
Yet we had the hon. member for St. Albert on page 4260 saying:
``Mr. Olson and others like him will be able to walk the streets of
this country absolutely and totally free after 25 years, perhaps
sooner''. What garbage. Which one is right, Calgary Centre or St.
Albert? Calgary Centre happened to be right on that occasion, but
4999
my goodness, there are so many mistakes and inconsistencies in
these statements that it is hard to imagine what is going on here.
Let us turn to the glimmer of hope clause. The hon. member for
Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca says: ``The Reform Party has been
accused of being without sympathy, but it is simply not true.
Reformers believe that sympathy and consideration must be for
victims and for criminals''.
Yet the hon. member for Crowfoot said: ``Murderers should not
be given a glimmer of hope or any incentive to ease the burden of
the severity of the punishment for what they have done''. The hon.
member for Wild Rose said: ``I frankly do not care if killers' hopes
are dimmed by the prospect of no early release''. That is what they
said. Which one is speaking for the Reform Party, Esquimalt-Juan
de Fuca or Wild Rose? Let them make up their minds.
We then have the ``throwing away the key'' quote by the hon.
member for Calgary Northeast who said: ``The feeling is that the
return of capital punishment is desirable and necessary-To cater
in any way other than providing the bare necessities for existence
to any of these low life individuals-''. That is his opinion of these
people.
The hon. member for Prince George-Bulkley Valley said: ``Do
not let them out. They should spend the rest of their lives behind
bars''. I could go on and on, but I want to turn from these
inconsistencies to the question of caning.
I have a clipping from the Montreal Gazette dated Thursday,
February 27 of this year. In it the hon. member for Calgary
Northeast is championing caning. He said: ``They have a corporal
punishment system''-this is in Singapore of course-``and the
offenders sit up and take notice of it''. Apparently they cannot sit
down afterward. ``So I am going to take a look at just how effective
it is,'' said the Reform justice critic, the hon. member for Calgary
Northeast.
The article goes on to state that corporal punishment was
abolished in Canada in 1972. Said the member for Calgary
Northeast: ``It was part of our justice system and personally I think
it should be back again''. He seems to have changed his tune
because we all know he cancelled the trip. He wrote a little article
for the Calgary Herald that I have here which was published on
March 22. Shortly after that he recanted and decided that spanking,
corporal punishment, caning and whipping were not things with
which we really should proceed. He decided to abandon them.
The hon. member for Calgary Northeast decided that the trip to
Singapore was going to create waves and cause too much trouble.
In fact, one of the former Reform members said that it was
extremist and got the boot. She was fired right out of the party. She
went to a caucus meeting and what went on there we do not know,
but one suspects there was some caning and she got the boot. She
said that it was extreme. Do members know something? She was
right. I do not know if there is a Canadian here who does not think
so except the hon. member for Wild Rose.
I have more. Here is the latest article in the Globe and Mail from
the other day. The hon. member for Calgary Northeast got on to the
subject of prurient literature in the prisons. Apparently somebody
in some prison somewhere, I think it was in Edmonton, had
received some bad magazines in the prison, was selling them and
inmates were reading them. The hon. member for Calgary
Northeast is quoted as saying in the Globe and Mail: ``If he wants
to entertain himself, give him a good book to read and they might
want to start with the Bible''.
Mr. Speaker, of all people to talk about starting with the Bible. I
know the hon. member for Calgary Northeast started with the
Bible. He got to the book of Leviticus and quit. The problem is that
he stopped when he read about an eye for an eye and a tooth for a
tooth. He really should have read on. There is another section of the
Bible called the New Testament. If he had read that he might have
had some of the milk of human kindness come out in some of his
speeches.
I see the member sitting with his leader. His leader's father, as I
recall, was something of a preacher and knew something about the
gospel. He might do well to sit down with the leader of his party,
read the New Testament and try to understand some of the
intricacies of the law that was pronounced there. It might help to
relieve him of some of the extremism that is exhibited in his
speeches and is clearly one that is inappropriate for this kind of
article.
(1630 )
Imagine suggesting that inmates sit down and read the Bible.
Perhaps he should take a break from his parliamentary duties,
which perhaps the electors of Calgary Northeast will provide after
the next election, and he can sit down, read the Bible and take up
another convocation, another employment
opportunity-convocation is the wrong word-vocation. Never
mind the ``con'', it is just ``vo''. He could get out there and preach
the gospel or read the Bible in a public way. I think it would help
him with his extremism.
I know some of the newspaper articles are misleading. They
suggest that he is the justice critic for his party. I understand he is in
fact the solicitor general critic and he is supposed to deal with
matters relating to prisons.
We have here in his speeches on this bill some of the most
extraordinary statements about the virtues of imprisonment and
how people have to be locked up, jailed and put away. He does not
say he is going to lock them up and throw away the key. However
5000
one of the members the other day told us right here in the
Chamber-I am sure I heard him say it and I think it was the hon.
member for Vegreville, but I would not want to misquote and I do
not have this one written down-that in fact anyone who is
convicted of a violent offence should serve the entire sentence in
prison. If a person gets a life sentence for a violent crime, they go
to prison for life and they do not come out. If that is not lock them
up and throw away the key, I do not know what is.
What we have here is the Reform Party trying to capitalize on
this issue by saying on the one hand it believes in loving kindness
and compassion. The hon. member for Beaver River in her
speeches exemplifies this. Then we have on the other hand a group
which says no, no, no. Which is party policy? I invite the leader to
stand up and clarify the matter for us.
[Translation]
The Acting Speaker (Mrs. Ringuette-Maltais): It is my duty,
pursuant to Standing Order 38, to inform the House that the
questions to be raised tonight at the time of adjournment are as
follows: the hon. member for Bourassa-Citizenship.
Mr. Antoine Dubé (Lévis, BQ): Madam Speaker, I am pleased
to take part in the debate on Bill C-45. Before making my speech, I
must say that the way the hon. member for Kingston and the
Islands expresses himself is reflective of a situation that we have to
put up with in this House.
The hon. member spent a lot of time replying to Reformers to
conceal the fact that, in introducing this bill, the Minister of Justice
has responded to the comments made by Reformers, particularly
regarding the case of Clifford Olson who, as we know, became
eligible to apply for parole this spring.
Reformers took advantage of the situation, and the Minister of
Justice quickly improvised because, they were speaking up in the
west and they still are in this House, even though it is not their turn
to do so. The Reform Party made a big fuss over this issue in
western Canada.
In some way, this is relatively good for the Liberal Party. When
it comes to certain political issues, the Liberals often try to say two
different things, depending on whether they are out west or in
Quebec. This bill is a good example of that.
So, the reformers often mention that the number of dangerous
offenders roaming the streets is increasing. They scare people by
referring to all sorts of terrible incidents in their comments, in their
questions and in their interventions in debates such as this one.
They are very interested in repression, but care little about
prevention and the means to avoid a rise in crime.
(1635)
Once, during the period for questions and comments, I reminded
a Reform Party member of a figure, and I told myself that I would
bring it up again. What about it? In 1993, Canada had the fourth
highest rate of incarceration in the world, 130 prisoners per
100,000 population. The country with the fourth highest rate of
prisoners in the world. These figures come from the Department of
Justice.
The United States leads the field, with 565 persons for 100,000
population. We are talking here about the land of liberty, where
several states have the death penalty. I am speaking about the
United States, of course, a country whose judicial system the
Reform Party members would like to copy. Let it be noted that the
Liberals are very sensitive to the legal concerns of Reform voters.
That is why the justice minister introduced this in the month of
June.
But what about the crime rate? Canada's homicide rate compares
favourably to that of the United States, with 1.98 murders, fewer
than 2, for 100,000 population, against 8.5 for 100,000 population
in the United States. Internationally, Canada falls within the
average of 1.94 for 100,000 population.
Once again, we must look not just at the murder rate, but at who
is committing these murders. In Canada, they are committed by
members of the victim's immediate family in 36.1 per cent of
cases; by immediate acquaintances other than family members in
46.6 per cent of cases; and by strangers-as we keep hearing from
the Reform Party-by people unknown to victims, in only 15.9 per
cent of cases.
I would like to hear the Reform Party, and the Liberal Party as
well, express an interest-as do certain people I know on the health
committee-in ways of preventing spouses and former spouses
from murdering their partner or former partner, and then attacking
and killing their children. I would very much like to hear the
Reform Party propose solutions to family situations such as those.
As the statistics show, that is the real problem in Canada.
In fact, there is a certain increase in rates, at least in Quebec,
because that is where I live. Recently, we have seen many cases of
people, men, in particular, it must be admitted, for it is usually men
who kill their former spouses and then very often kill themselves.
What difference would parole make in these cases?
Why are the Reform and Liberal Party members focusing
desperately on one part of the problem, on the 15.9 per cent of
crimes that are committed by strangers. And of these strangers-I
do not have the figures-a certain number are gangs of criminals,
motorcycle gangs. We saw this in Quebec. People were not known
to each other, but had a mission. These are senseless murders.
Enough of scaring people.
5001
In most cities in Canada, and in Quebec in any event, there are
not all that many, but there are some and as long as there are any
at all, it is a serious problem. But I am worried. There have been
cuts in unemployment insurance, in social programs at all levels.
Perhaps it does not come under federal jurisdiction, but there
should be more programs so that the provinces can spend more
on prevention, assistance to families, to the people going through
difficult periods, in order to prevent situations like this from
happening.
(1640)
But no, that is not what they do. There is much fanfare about
amending the act, but they are making it up as they go along. They
are not consulting the experts in the field, and, without any
consultation, they introduced this bill in the House late in June.
They waited for the summer to go by and then brought it back. I am
well aware that the Liberal majority will impose its point of view
and that we will have to live with the result.
I invite my colleagues, those across the way and elsewhere, to
take a greater interest in the real problems, the more vital problems
affecting families and leading to an increase in domestic violence.
That is the real problem.
[English]
Mr. Preston Manning (Calgary Southwest, Ref.): Madam
Speaker, I rise to participate in the debate on Bill C-45.
Since the Liberals and the separatists apparently share the same
philosophy on criminal justice, it has fallen to the Reform members
of the House to object in principle to the bill as well as to its details.
This they have done with great vigour and distinction. I can add
little to their arguments other than to support them with my vote.
What I would like to do is to analyse the bill as a product of the
Liberal approach to criminal justice as a whole. What I would like
to argue is that not only is the product flawed, but the whole
approach on which it is based is flawed.
What are the distinguishing characteristics of the Liberal
approach to criminal justice illustrated by the bill which Reformers
and growing numbers of Canadians reject? I will refer to three
characteristics.
The first characteristic is a perverse set of priorities. The Liberal
approach to criminal justice puts the rights of persons accused or
convicted of crimes ahead of the rights of victims and law-abiding
citizens. We see this perverse set of priorities in the bill, but we
even see it in the Liberal inspired charter of rights and freedoms.
Under the charter section on legal rights, there is one general
section affirming the right of everyone to life, liberty and security
of the person, but that is followed by 16 additional
provisions-rights on arrest or detention, rights of a person
charged with an offence and so forth-all pertaining to the rights of
persons suspected, charged or convicted of crimes. There is one
general clause affirming the rights of Canadians to public safety
and protection of the person. There are no clauses at all on the
rights of victims. There are 16 provisions pertaining to the rights of
persons suspected, charged or convicted of crimes.
The Liberal set of priorities when it comes to public safety and
criminal justice is perverse. It is perverse because the priorities of
the Canadian people would put the rights of victims and
law-abiding citizens ahead of the rights of persons accused and
convicted of crimes.
In the bill before us we see exactly the same perverse set of
priorities. What was the sole purpose of the original section 745
which the government insists on maintaining and amending rather
than scrapping? It was to provide a faint hope of parole eligibility
for convicted first degree murderers. It was yet another Liberal
effort to affirm the rights of persons convicted of crimes, and the
most heinous crimes, while the rights of victims of crimes and
law-abiding citizens remain undefined or at risk.
The bill before us alters the procedure but still maintains the
original purpose. The bill is the product of a perverse set of
priorities and deserves to be rejected on that ground alone.
The second distinguishing characteristic of the Liberal approach
to criminal justice, again illustrated by the bill, is an excessive
reliance on bureaucratic compromise. If in doubt, especially on
matters of principle, compromise. That is the Liberal approach.
The bill is nothing but a compromise, a half measure that satisfies
no one except those poor souls who believe that compromise is
virtuous for its own sake.
There are some policy issues where half measures simply will
not do. We cannot be half committed to national unity. We cannot
be half committed to fiscal responsibility. We cannot be half
committed to democracy. We cannot be half committed to public
safety.
The public wants section 745 scrapped. According to the
government's philosophy of criminal justice, the section should be
retained as it is. But rather than do one or the other, scrap or retain,
the government came up with a half baked compromise in the form
of this tinkering amendment. The distinguishing characteristic of
the government's approach as exemplified by the bill was
bureaucratic compromise.
(1645)
This tinkering amendment exhibits all the characteristics of
bureaucratic tinkering. First degree murderers are now to be
divided into different categories. Bureaucrats like to categorize. A
screening measure is set up for all section 745 applications.
Superior court judges, not just the chief justice of the superior court
in a province, are drawn into the process, and the rules governing
5002
juries hearing section 745 applications are amended. What can we
call all this except bureaucratic fine tuning of a compromise
position?
If there is anything worse than government by the lawyers, of the
lawyers, for the lawyers, it is government of the bureaucracy, by
the bureaucracy, for the bureaucracy, and this bill smacks of both.
My colleagues and I have no faith in bureaucratic tinkering,
particularly with the Criminal Code and indeed in the whole area of
criminal rehabilitation.
Thinking of the ineffectiveness of bureaucratic action in these
areas, the inability of bureaucratic measures and institutions to
protect people or to rehabilitate criminals, I am reminded of a
poem by the Canadian poet George Pepki, inspired by the
children's nursery rhyme ``Humpty-Dumpty'':
Humpty-Dumpty sat on a wall
Humpty-Dumpty had a great fall;
All the king's horses and all the King's men
Couldn't put Humpty together again.
And what is the moral to this little rhyme?
A moral with meaning for men in our time?
The moral is this, and its lesson is true:
There are certain things that the state cannot do.
If all the King's horses and all the King's men
Cannot put an egg together again,
Is it not a false hope, an illusion, a sin,
To ask civil servants to reconstruct men?
A third distinguishing characteristic of the Liberal approach to
criminal justice is its growing disregard for the will of the people.
When Liberalism first emerged as a distinct political philosophy
in 19th century Britain, its distinguishing characteristic was faith in
the common sense of the common people. That was the essence of
Gladstone's great reform bills which extended the franchise to
ordinary people; the right to make important governing decisions
to more and more ordinary people.
Gladstone treated the people as a great tribunal to which the
greatest issue of state could be brought for discussion, not only
discussion but decision.
But something happens to Liberals long in office. They begin to
trust themselves and their friends and their advisers more than they
trust the people, until finally in the last decade of the 20th century,
mistrust of the common people has become the distinguishing
characteristic of a degenerate Liberalism.
In this House a private member's bill introduced by the hon.
member for York South-Weston, supported by members on both
sides of the House, represented the wishes of the Canadian people
with respect to section 745 of the Criminal Code. Their wish was to
scrap the section, which was the effect of Bill C-234.
But what has the government done? It attempted to derail in
committee the bill which represented the will of the people and has
substituted for it this bureaucratic compromise we have before us
representing the elitist views of the Minister of Justice and his
colleagues. And to add insult to injury, the government now
invokes time allocation to cut off debate and force the bill through
a reluctant House.
Unless there is a display of courage by government
backbenchers in the House, something we see far too infrequently,
the government whip will coerce his colleagues to support this
bureaucratic compromise and once again disregard the will of the
Canadian people with respect to a Criminal Code provision.
In conclusion, Reform MPs reject both the bill and the whole
Liberal approach to criminal justice on which it is based: this
perverse set of priorities, bureaucratic compromises and blatant
disregard for the will of the people. We urge other members to
reject the bill and to bring back to the House and support Bill
C-234, which more accurately reflects the will of Canadians on this
issue.
We look forward to the day when a fresh start will be made on
criminal justice in this country, one based on principle rather than
bureaucratic compromise, one in which the rights of victims and
law-abiding citizens take precedence over the rights of persons
accused or convicted of crimes, one in which respect for the will of
Canadians becomes the guiding light of the Canadian Criminal
Code.
(1650)
Mr. Jack Ramsay (Crowfoot, Ref.): Madam Speaker, I am
honoured to follow my leader in this final debate on this bill. I rise
today to speak once more in opposition to Bill C-45 because it
demeans the value of a human life and it is unworthy of support.
I have repeatedly stood in this House, as have my colleagues,
and asked one simple question, a question the justice minister and
the Liberal government have failed to answer. What is a fair and
just penalty for the taking of an innocent life?
Last week when I was in Quebec with the standing committee
which is in the process of reviewing the Young Offenders Act, I had
an opportunity to meet with several convicted first degree
murderers.
One young man had killed his mother, father and brother.
Another had stabbed his girlfriend 18 times. I asked them what they
believed was a fair and just penalty for their crimes. I asked if 10
years was enough for what they had done. They said: ``If we were
to ask the victims if 10 years was long enough the answer would be
no. If we were to ask them if 25 years was long enough, the answer
would still be no''. No length of time would be long enough in the
eyes of their victims according to these murderers.
5003
What then would be an appropriate penalty? We must answer
this question. This unanswered question remains at the heart of
today's debate.
On February 24, 1976 the Liberal government introduced Bill
C-84 to abolish the death penalty and to create two new categories
of murder, first and second degree murder, both of which carried a
minimum sentence of life imprisonment. Those convicted of first
degree murder were to serve 25 years before being eligible for
parole while second degree murderers would serve between 10 and
25 years prior to release.
The 25 year minimum for first degree murder was the Liberal
government's trade off for the abolition of the death penalty.
Instead of the death penalty society was to be protected by the
incarceration for life of those who deliberately and with
premeditation killed with no consideration for parole until a
minimum of 25 years had been served.
However, unbeknown to the vast majority of Canadians, the
Liberal government of the day betrayed them by slipping section
745 into the Criminal Code. Section 745 nullifies the term life
imprisonment and bestows on killers an unjustifiable right to early
release before serving a minimum of 25 years.
An hon. member who spoke earlier is absolutely right when he
quoted me as saying a life sentence is not about rehabilitation. I
mention it because of the importance of this issue. It is about
punishment. What is a fair and just punishment for the wilful
premeditated taking of an innocent life, particularly of our
children?
It is also about retribution for the most horrible crime in society,
the unlawful taking of an innocent life and the devastating affect
this has on society. Liberals do not believe in punishment, at least
those who run the Liberal government. They do not believe in
punishment or retribution, only in rehabilitation. That is what we
have been getting from the bleeding hearts for the past 25 years.
They tolerate the most extreme crimes in society at the expense of
law-abiding Canadians. They mock and scorn the requests of all
those who seek the removal of section 745 of the Criminal Code in
its entirety.
The pathetic performance today by the member for Kingston and
the Islands is a typical example of that mocking and scorning that
goes on in this House on such a very serious matter. In the absence
of capital punishment I am confident Canadians, as the Canadian
Police Association and the chiefs of police believe, the minimum
penalty for first degree murder should be life imprisonment with
absolutely no chance of parole until at the very least 25 years have
been served.
(1655)
The government talks about the glimmer of hope. There is the
glimmer of hope which all Canadians would support and that is
after 25 years give that individual, if rehabilitated, an opportunity
for parole.
Bill C-45 does not meet those demands. Bill C-45 does not
ensure a minimum of 25 years imprisonment. In fact, Bill C-45 is
nothing more than a meagre attempt by the justice minister to sugar
coat this repulsive provision of the Criminal Code for reasons of
political expediency. This is not just my view. This is shared by
victims' groups all across this country.
To amplify this point I would like to read to the House portions
of a recent letter addressed to the justice minister by Mrs. Debbie
Mahaffy on behalf of Action for Victims:
How can you skate over the glaring surety of a charter challenge regarding
slapping an electronic bracelet on an innocent yet potential high risk offender but fail
to deal adequately with releasing convicted first and second degree murderers? Oh
right, they only lost their freedom of movement for a determined number of years
but earn their rights to an early release.
Shelving C-45 and Olson's judicial review and finally giving more than a quick
look at high risk offenders by actual legislation looks like, sounds like a pre-election
handout to me. It is obvious that you may be able to avoid ever having to deal with
Olson's judicial review or the contentious Bill C-45, as they can be put on a slow
back burner until the election is over. But we will not fail to recognize that this
shuffling of files on your desk is just clever politics.
We hear from a mother who lost her daughter at the hands of a
murderer expressing her concern to the justice minister in as
eloquent a manner I suppose as I have see yet.
Bill C-45 strips multiple or serial killers of the right to apply for
early parole and creates an additional bureaucratic hurdle for single
killers to jump before exercising their right to a full jury review of
their parole ineligibility. Bill C-45 contains a royal
recommendation which allows for the expenditure of additional
funds for section 745 appeals.
When questioned in June, the justice minister said the extra
money will be allocated to Correctional Service Canada for longer
periods of incarceration for those killers denied a judicial review
by a jury. This is misleading and an absolute joke. The justice
minister via Bill C-45 has set up another level of appeal for first
degree murderers and this is what will incur additional costs.
Multiple killers currently incarcerated will not apply directly to a
jury but must first satisfy a superior court judge that their
application for a reduction in parole will have a reasonable
prospect of success.
If the superior court judge denies one of these 28 multiple
murderers their right for a judicial review by a jury they can appeal
this decision to a higher court, of course at taxpayer expense.
As well, if the jury denies them a reduction in their parole
ineligibility, provisions within section 745 allow them to apply
again. The same process will be applicable to all first degree
murderers. I question the necessity for extra funding in this regard,
given the number of criminals, including violent criminals, who
will never see the inside of a prison as a result of the Liberals'
5004
alternative measures as contained in Bill C-41 and the change from
indictable offences to summary conviction fines as prescribed in
Bill C-17.
Bill C-45 may delay but will not prevent killers from getting a
judicial review and ultimately a reduction in their parole
ineligibility. Bill C-45 and the review of a killer's application by a
judge will do nothing but add an expensive layer of bureaucracy to
our growing justice industry.
This will add to Canadians' financial strain and undermine their
personal security. The minister's June 11 introduction of Bill C-45
just 10 days before the House recessed for the summer was nothing
more than a half baked attempt to deflect criticism for not
preventing Clifford Olson from once again making headlines
despite the fact he had almost three years and ample support to
bring this bill before the House.
(1700 )
The minister's efforts to limit child serial killer Clifford Olson's
bid for early release failed. To the horror of all Canadians who have
shared the pain of the Rosenfeldts and the other 10 families whose
children were brutally ripped from their lives on August 12, 1996,
Clifford Olson was eligible to apply for early release.
As revealed in the court challenge on Bill C-68 launched by the
governments of Alberta, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Ontario and
Yukon, the minister did not adequately consult his provincial
counterparts regarding that bill. I would respectfully suggest that
the provincial attorneys general are not alone. Canadians have not
been consulted with regard to Bill C-45. Canadians have not been
granted by this Liberal government an opportunity to be heard on
the issue of section 745, as they have not been granted an
opportunity to voice their opinion on capital punishment.
I conclude by saying again that I oppose Bill C-45 because it is
unworthy of my support.
Mr. Myron Thompson (Wild Rose, Ref.): Madam Speaker,
during the first session of Parliament I served as one of the
members of the Standing Committee on Justice and Legal Affairs.
It is a job I took very seriously since I was one of the select few
given the job to look after justice legislation on behalf of 295
members of Parliament.
The most troublesome problem I encountered as one of those
members was the Liberal government's deliberate fast tracking of
legislation through this House. For example, last year with only
two weeks left before the House recessed for the summer, Bills
C-41 and C-68 were brought before the House for report stage and
third reading, although they had been reported out of committee
weeks before. The minister deliberately waited until the eleventh
hour and time allocation was used to limit debate and thus exposure
for both of these contentious bills.
The most recent example of this undemocratic fast tracking is
this bill, Bill C-45. Since 1993 the Reform Party has been asking
the justice minister to repeal section 745. The justice minister
waited until there were only eight sitting days left for the House
last June, knowing full well that the bill could not be properly
debated in that short period of time. The most important point is
that with only eight days for debate, this allowed only one day for
study and review by the Standing Committee on Justice and Legal
Affairs.
There is no way on earth that proper analysis could take place in
just one day. This is an insult to the whole process and certainly an
insult to the victims of crime who tried so desperately to have
section 745 repealed. It also was very repulsive to the number of
witnesses who wanted to appear before the committee.
In order to let the Canadian people hear a sample of what these
witnesses had to say, I would like to take this opportunity to present
the testimony of Joanne Kaplinski. She said: ``I am a survivor of a
murder victim and have been forced to endure a judicial review
under section 745. It would also appear that because of the law of
the day, I will be required to live through that ordeal yet again, as
the co-convicted has advanced his application''.
She tells the story of how her brother Kenneth was robbed and
later shot twice in the head at point blank range. Forensic evidence
revealed that he in all probability was made to kneel before his
killer. His decomposed body was found two months later.
She goes on to state: ``We, Kenneth's survivors, also received
life sentences and became initiated into a very exclusive club,
probably more exclusive than the Canadian Club, but it is a club
that I assure you no one here would ever want to join. The initiation
is the death of a loved one by violence. Membership dues are
extracted from us each and every day of our lives as survivors of
such violence.
(1705 )
``In sum it has been over 18 years coping with the aftermath of
those two parolees' actions. We got on with our lives, or rather we
got on with picking up the pieces of our shattered lives, but never
would we be able to look at the world with the same eyes again.
Evil was no longer some ethereal concept, it was real and tangible.
I think our profound despair came from being forced to look into
the abyss, the depth of human cruelty and suffering.
``In December 1993 we once again were forced to revisit that
same abyss and relive what we had to go through in 1978. All our
pain of course was resurrected by the section 745 application of one
of Kenneth's murderers.
5005
``We the public feel duped by the machinations and doublespeak
of bureaucrats. By making available this section 745, however
reworked, the Liberal government of the day is sending a message
to Canadians across the country that murder in this society will
be tolerated. I think that conveys a very sad statement about the
value of our lives, yours and mine, as Canadian citizens. Fifteen
years is not adequate denunciation for the wanton destruction of
human life. My brother Kenneth was, by volition of those
convicted, sentenced to death, and that sentence for Ken was
eternal and irrevocable''.
As can be seen from this witness's comments, to have a bill of
this magnitude fast tracked as it was through the justice committee
is appalling. There are many more witnesses with compelling
stories. Time will not allow me to convey their thoughts and
certainly this Liberal government did not allow them the time to
convey their thoughts through the proper channel of the justice
committee. It is clear that the whole process of not studying the bill
and not giving everyone an opportunity to share their information
is nothing but a direct insult to the victims' families who worked so
hard throughout this nation to repeal section 745.
After this mere one day analysis, the bitterness started to set in
with these witnesses. They felt they were just shoved aside. One of
those people was Darlene Boyd. She later sent me a copy of a letter
she wrote to the justice minister about issues she had to get off her
chest. Her letter is as follows:
Since being in Ottawa to testify before the justice committee, which I felt was a
rushed and last minute formality, I have had the opportunity to examine Bill C-45.
My feelings, as you know, concerning section 745 are total repeal. Thousands of
Canadian people have supported and continue to support total repeal, believing
repeal is the only concrete measure that will keep first degree murderers where they
belong, in prison for at least 25 years, this being the maximum punishment provided
to us by your government for premeditated first degree murder.
I also understand Mr. Nunziata's Bill C-234 has expired in the Speaker's hands.
Bill C-234 should have been voted on for the third time in the House before Bill
C-45 was ever presented. Is there no priority given in matter of sequence? John's bill
drew positive results for repeal from many Liberals. My question to this is what
political pressure suddenly made them support amending rather than repealing
section 745?
I am receiving letters every day, as I am sure Mr. Rock has been, from people
demanding total repeal. These people I have never met, but truth in sentencing is
what concerns them. Most feel betrayed by our justice system.
Mr. Rock has said he is listening to the Canadian people. Bill C-45 does not
demonstrate this.
Mr. Rock, you have referred to us as the ``victims industry''. We never classified
ourselves as part of any industry. We are ordinary people who have paid a price far
too great to establish such a petty organization. We never asked for this fate and we
are not victims, we are survivors.
There is one thing I need advice on and that is how to tell our son, who has not yet
put his life back together since his sister's murder, that the man convicted and
sentenced to life in prison will be applying for and probably will be granted his day
in court to tell everyone what a good person he has become in the past 15 years.
Who will take responsibility when he falls apart? Bill C-45 will be guilty of this
crime.
My family is three people. There are hundreds who will be affected if section 745
is not repealed.
Does the charter of rights not protect us, or was it written just for murderers?
I appeal to you not as politicians, but to anyone who holds family and friends
dear. Because murder shows no bounds, please reconsider repeal and make it
impossible for these killers to once again exploit my family and the families of
others.
(1710)
I have thousands of these letters from victims. I visit them in
their homes and at rallies. I am sure the member for Kingston and
the Islands has never been to a victims rally. He would not know
what they are all about. However, when I spend time with these
people, I for the life of me cannot understand for the slightest
moment why we would adopt a bureaucratic procedure such as Bill
C-45 over the good common sense of the people all across Canada
who are screaming and demanding loud and clear: ``Repeal section
745''.
What is the matter with a government that will not listen to the
people? It is called tyranny and it is time that tyranny was crushed.
Please bring back Bill C-234 and repeal section 745 on behalf of
the Canadian people.
Mr. Jay Hill (Prince George-Peace River, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, it is a pleasure for me this afternoon to speak again to Bill
C-45. I say it is a pleasure because obviously, with the government
enacting time allocation yet again on another piece of legislation,
we find the unfortunate situation that a number of my colleagues
and I am certain colleagues from the other parties as well would
have liked to have spoken again on this bill and are being denied, I
believe, their right to do just that.
It is a pleasure for me to be allowed the opportunity to once
again try to get my message through to the Liberals on the opposite
side of the House and the supporters of the justice minister. He
continues to bring forward these weak-kneed, half-baked pieces of
legislation, instead of doing, as my colleague from Wild Rose so
aptly said just moments ago, what the people of Canada are
demanding and expecting the Government of Canada to do.
I suppose it could be said that after quite a number of hours of
debate on C-45 what more can be said that has not already been
said on this issue. Reluctantly, Reform has come to understand that
the only way to get through to the Liberals is to repeat our points
over and over again. That is unfortunate. I am sure all of us in the
Reform Party would much rather be discussing some other
legislation today and be moving forward with some other
constructive legislation. However, no matter how hard we try, it
seems that we
5006
run up against a brick wall and cannot get our message through to
the Liberal government.
That was clearly demonstrated at the start of the debate this
afternoon. After the vote on the government's time allocation
motion on this piece of legislation, the hon. member for Kingston
and the Islands got up and read through transcript after transcript of
things that the Reform Party had said but had nothing constructive
of his own to say about the legislation. He was merely attacking us
for what we were trying to say. If only, and I mean this sincerely, he
had listened to what was being said. Instead he simply poked fun at
what the Reform Party has been trying to say on this piece of
legislation.
Obviously, as it has been said repeatedly and I will repeat it
again, the thrust is that the people of Canada are demanding the
repeal of section 745. It is that simple. That is the crux of the issue
here.
This has been said before and I will say it again and again. The
independent member for York South-Weston brought forward a
private member's bill. It had the support of the majority of
members of the House and moved on to committee. I expected that
perhaps with a few minor amendments that piece of legislation
would ultimately be passed into law. Obviously it had the support
of the people of the country and it had the support of the majority of
the representatives of the people of the country. That is what should
have happened.
(1715)
I believe the way the justice committee handled this particular
private member's bill is an insult to the private members' process
in this place. I am absolutely appalled at the way the private
member's bill of the member for York South-Weston was treated.
I want to draw the attention of the House and the people who are
viewing the debate this afternoon to that point.
The second point which I want to make, which has been made
before, is that what we should be moving toward, what Canadians
are demanding, especially when it comes to multiple murderers, is
a system of consecutive sentencing. It does not matter how many
lives murderers take, they get one life sentence. We are debating
whether they should get 15, 17, 18 or 25 years.
I believe the vast majority of the people of Canada would
support consecutive sentencing. It has been implemented in some
U.S. states. If a person takes one life they get 25 years; two lives,
50 years; three lives, 75 years; and it keeps on going. Individual
lives must count for something.
What I hear when travelling across the country is that people are
simply fed up with the weak justice system and the criminals who
flaunt it.
We can all quote statistics until we are blue in the face; however,
despite whatever the statistics are saying about violent crime being
on the decline or whatever the case may be, the reality is that
people feel threatened. People feel unsafe in their homes, on the
streets and in their communities. They are telling us to do
something about it.
Reform members have been endeavouring to do that. We have
been trying to drive that message home. We have repeated time and
time again what we are hearing from Canadians.
What Canadians are crying for is the bottom line. I can stand and
say how I feel, but what are Canadians saying? What is the mood of
the country out there?
I had a recent poll done in my riding of Prince George-Peace
River. One of the questions that was asked was: ``How do you feel
the federal government is doing with respect to criminal justice
issues?'' This was a scientific poll. What we found was that 6 per
cent of those polled said it was doing very well. Twenty-seven per
cent said it was doing an adequate job. However, 56 per cent said
that the government was doing a poor job. Another 11 per cent were
uncertain.
Two-thirds of the people in my riding either feel that the
government is doing a very poor job with respect to criminal justice
issues or they are unsure what it is doing. That clearly indicates that
there is a growing sentiment in the country that the government is
weak on crime. That has been reinforced again and again by the
justice minister, who continues to bring in these half baked
schemes which do not get to the root of the problem.
A number of my colleagues have outlined where we should be
going and where Canadians are demanding we go on criminal
justice issues. We have to concentrate more on victim rights. That
is paramount in the minds of Canadians. It is high time this
government started to address the real concerns which are out there
among average Canadians.
(1720)
Mr. Ted White (North Vancouver, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, a short
time ago the member for Kingston and the Islands was waxing
eloquent with quotations from Hansard. You could ask, Mr.
Speaker, why he quoted so eloquently from Hansard things that
were said by Reformers in this House supporting the views of
Canadians across the country but he never bothered to quote from
the victims' families, the people who have suffered from the crimes
of these people the member for Kingston and the Islands is trying
to protect. He did not bother to quote from the people who suffer
because of his liberal minded rules about law and order.
Since the member for Kingston and the Islands is so fond of
quoting from the printed word, I would like to quote a few things
that he said. I have here an article from the British Columbia
Report of July 15 of this year in which the member for Kingston
5007
and the Islands, when talking about the protection of VIA Rail
tickets that members in the House had, said: ``I think we were
hoodwinked by the people who introduced the bill''. The people
behind the alleged plot are members of his own Liberal
government, reports the reporter in the article.
The member for Kingston and the Islands said: ``I think we were
hoodwinked by the people who introduced the bill''. On this bill
before us I would venture to say the member is being hoodwinked
again: ``The MP for Kingston and the Islands suspects faceless
bureaucrats were negligent in their duties although he is not quite
sure who is to blame for introducing the bill but he says `I don't
know anyone who reads every bill. I don't'''.
No wonder he is so easily hoodwinked. He does not even read
the bills. Since he does not read the bills I can tell that he also does
not bother listening to his constituents or he would know that
repeal of section 745 is supported by an overwhelming majority of
Canadians coast to coast. We do not have to be a rocket scientist to
find that out.
Just as they support the repeal of section 745, they also support a
complete and effective overhaul of the Young Offenders Act. They
want a referendum on the return of capital punishment. They are
totally dissatisfied with the Liberal's performance on justice issues.
These Liberal trained seals on the other side of the House
support a closure motion to shut down meaningful debate on an
issue of great importance to the people of Canada. They stand there
and call us extremists for speaking the minds of Canadians coast to
coast. That is too bad. The real extremists in this place are the
people who sit on the government side. They are the ones
responsible for a debt that will hit $600 billion on November 22;
600 billion of debt on the shoulders of our children and our
grandchildren. They are the extremists who let murderers and
sexual offenders out of prison early so they can commit more
crimes.
There is ample evidence that letting these people out before they
have served their sentences causes a great many more crimes. I am
going to quote some bureau of justice statistics of 1989 from a
study that was done in the United States between the years 1973
and 1989. In 1989 the bureau of justice statistics issued some
estimates of how many crimes are prevented while criminals are
locked up rather than walking the streets.
Analyst Patrick Langan concluded that higher incarceration rates
between 1973 and 1989 cut the number of rapes by 66,000,
robberies by 323,000, assaults by 380,000, burglaries by 3.3
million, and that imprisonment clearly contributes to major cuts in
the number and cost of violent crime.
(1725 )
Those Liberals can stand there and call us extremists, but they
are the extremists. Because of their policies, Canada has probably
suffered tens of thousands more rapes, tens of thousands more
violent crimes, hundreds more murders and God knows how many
million more burglaries; simply because of their wishy-washy
justice approach.
Over the past 20 years or so our justice system has tended to
concentrate on this wonderful theory of rehabilitation and treating
the root cause of the crime. Everybody has had this terrible
childhood. ``Oh, my God, the reason I am such a bad guy is that I
had this terrible childhood. Nothing ever went right for me. I did
not win the Lotto 649. It is just dreadful''. Some of these people
have to start taking responsibility for that they do.
Everybody in Canada, except the people who sit on the other side
of the House, are sick to death of this ``oh, dear the poor things''. It
is time for some justice.
I would like to mention another experiment that took place in the
United States. The police commissioner for New York, Mr.
William Bratton, was quoted shortly after he was appointed
security director for the subway system in 1990: ``Eureka, we have
discovered the root cause of crime. It is criminals''.
He adopted a hard line approach in addressing the problems of
graffiti, fare evasion, panhandling and assaults that were taking
place in the subway system in New York. He said: ``The way to get
this thing under control is to take a hard line approach of zero
tolerance on graffiti, spitting on the sidewalk, all of that sort of
stuff''. He took this hard line approach where he insisted and the
security people clamp down on any incidents of panhandling,
graffiti, spitting on the sidewalk.
Within one year there was an impressive improvement.
Robberies were down 75 per cent; serious felonies on the subway, a
drop of 64 per cent.
Mr. Bratton subsequently became the police commissioner for
New York where his methods have resulted in a 31 per cent drop in
murders, a 25 per cent drop in car theft and a 22 per cent drop in
robberies. How much evidence do we need?
The people who were flagrantly disobeying the rules of law,
when they discovered there was zero tolerance for minor crimes,
realized that there would be zero, zero tolerance for the major
crimes and they stopped committing them.
As long as they were getting free counselling and free
rehabilitation and were told how terrible their childhood was, they
just kept disobeying the law. For God's sake, we are such patsies.
When are we going to get real? It is time to get tough. Not a day
goes by, and I believe this applies to members on the other side as
well, that I do not get phone calls and letters to my office telling me
people are sick and tired of this pandering to criminals. They are
sick and tired of it and it is really time we started to do something.
On May 11 this year the Ottawa Sun reported that during a
meeting of the attorneys general, Alberta, Manitoba and Ontario
pushed for the total repeal of section 745; Ontario, Manitoba and
Alberta.
5008
Mr. Harper (Simcoe Centre): A great province.
Mr. White (North Vancouver): A great province says my
colleague from Ontario. They are all great provinces. The attorneys
general knew what the people wanted. They knew they needed to
get rid of this section in order to return some stability to the
sentencing and serving of punishment.
Members on the other side constantly get excited if we talk about
punishment. For some reason we are not allowed to punish people
for committing crimes. Please do not punish them. These things
can be carried to extremes.
The justice minister suddenly thinks it is okay to let people out
after 15 years where there is evidence that they will not commit the
crime again. Let us let them out. Why keep them locked up? We
can carry that argument to the extreme and say we recognize they
committed murder, but why lock them up? They will never do it
again. Why does it have to be 15 years? Why not 15 hours? They
are so repentant and they promise to take counselling and they will
learn French and do whatever is necessary. And they are let free. It
has to stop
(1730 )
When the attorneys general of the provinces start pushing for the
repeal of these sections, it is time the justice minister started
listening. The attorneys general are telling him his gun control bill
is misdirected. They told him Bill C-33 was misdirected. They
have told him that section 745 is misdirected and they have told
him the Young Offenders Act revisions were misdirected. When is
he going to start listening?
It is a travesty of justice that closure was moved on this bill
today. I urge members, please, in a last minute appeal, vote against
it.
Mr. Chuck Strahl (Fraser Valley East, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, the
reason I have only five minutes to speak is that the government has
moved closure again on a bill. I would like to talk for the couple of
minutes I have left on why this bill is symbolic of two things that
have become obvious of this Liberal government.
One thing that has become obvious is that Liberal leadership is
an oxymoron. There is no such thing as a Liberal leader. There is a
Liberal follower, there is a Liberal bootlicker, there is a Liberal
cave in, there is a Liberal puppet, there is a Liberal wishy-washy
half-baked social engineering attempt at doing something, but
there is no Liberal leadership. That is what I would like to talk
about.
I would like to show how this bill is symbolic. Out on the west
coast there is a symptom we know of when we talk about fish, that
the fish rots from the head down. What we have in this example is
the fact that not only is there no Liberal leadership, there is no such
thing, there is also a rot at the top. The rot at the top has started to
create a stench. It is not only something that maybe we could say is
a mistake but an actual stench surrounds what is going on here
today.
We should be debating the private member's bill from the
member for York South-Weston. We should be debating in this
House the elimination of section 745. This House passed that
private member's bill. We in this House said that we approve in
principle the bill of the member for York South-Weston that we
will abolish-not tinker with, not play with, not jack around
with-we will abolish section 745.
This House passed that bill. It was approved by all members of
this House. It was sent to committee and then what happened? That
Liberal leadership, the concept that is foreign to the government,
said to their Liberal committee: ``This bill must not ever see the
light of day''. What is it? Was the bill too popular, was there too
widespread an appeal?
I will tell you what it is. The bill was sent to committee. The bill
was then sent from committee to cyberspace. The Minister of
Justice should be showing some leadership on this. If he had the
guts to vote against it that is one thing, but instead he just says:
``Let us hope it goes away''.
People have talked about the government's half measures, that it
moves half way on different things. It is not half way, it is nowhere.
This bill has no support. The Canadian police chiefs will not
support it. The victims of crime will not support it. The Canadian
people will not support it. If the Liberals were to ask in their own
ridings, there is no support for this half measure. There is none.
Canadians want this section eliminated. Reform members have
gone through the reasons it is not supported by anyone.
Maybe the reason the member for Kingston and the Islands
wanted it is that he knows the prisoners can now vote. Maybe there
is something in it for him. Maybe it will swing the riding.
What has happened here in the House is that the Liberals have
told their backbenchers: ``We can have a free vote on private
members' bills whenever you want''. It is like a drug. They say:
``Oh thank you. I feel so good about this. I will vote my conscience,
I will vote what I think my constituents want''.
(1735 )
They did that, to give them credit. They did that on the bill from
the member for York South-Weston. When they were appeased,
when they felt good, when the drug and the sedative was flowing
through their bodies, what happened? The bill was sent to
committee to never see the light of day. I do not know where the
sedative is. I do not know whether someone has to take it with a
double shot of rye to make them feel good.
5009
The backbenchers should be angry over this. They should say to
the government: ``When we pass legislation in this House, when it
goes to committee, we want to vote on it''. They should have the
right. It was wrong. There is no leadership over there. This thing
stinks.
[Translation]
The Deputy Speaker: Hon. members, pursuant to order adopted
earlier today, it is my duty to interrupt the proceedings and put
forthwith every question necessary to dispose of the third reading
stage of the bill now before the House.
Is it the pleasure of the House to adopt the motion?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
Some hon. members: No.
The Deputy Speaker: All those in favour of the motion please
say yea.
Some hon. members: Yea.
The Deputy Speaker: All those opposed will please say nay.
Some hon. members: Nay.
The Deputy Speaker: In my opinion the yeas have it.
And more than five members having risen:
The Deputy Speaker: Call in the members.
(The House divided on the motion, which was adopted on the
following division:)
(Division No. 134)
YEAS
Members
Adams
Anderson
Assadourian
Augustine
Axworthy (Saskatoon-Clark's Crossing)
Bakopanos
Beaumier
Bélair
Bertrand
Bevilacqua
Blaikie
Bodnar
Bonin
Boudria
Brushett
Bryden
Byrne
Calder
Campbell
Cannis
Catterall
Cauchon
Chamberlain
Chan
Clancy
Cohen
Collenette
Collins
Cullen
DeVillers
Dhaliwal
Dion
Discepola
Dromisky
Duhamel
Dupuy
Easter
Fewchuk
Finestone
Finlay
Flis
Fontana
Fry
Gagliano
Gagnon (Bonaventure-Îles-de-la-Madeleine)
Gallaway
Gerrard
Goodale
Guarnieri
Harb
Harvard
Hickey
Ianno
Irwin
Jackson
Jordan
Kilger (Stormont-Dundas)
Kirkby
Knutson
Kraft Sloan
Lastewka
Lavigne (Verdun-Saint-Paul)
LeBlanc (Cape/Cap-Breton Highlands-Canso)
Lee
Loney
MacAulay
Malhi
Maloney
Manley
Marleau
Massé
McGuire
McLellan (Edmonton Northwest/Nord-Ouest)
McTeague
McWhinney
Minna
Mitchell
Murphy
Murray
Nault
O'Brien (London-Middlesex)
O'Reilly
Pagtakhan
Parrish
Patry
Payne
Peric
Pettigrew
Phinney
Pickard (Essex-Kent)
Pillitteri
Proud
Reed
Richardson
Rideout
Robichaud
Robillard
Rock
Scott (Fredericton-York-Sunbury)
Shepherd
Sheridan
Simmons
Solomon
Steckle
Stewart (Brant)
Stewart (Northumberland)
Szabo
Taylor
Telegdi
Terrana
Thalheimer
Torsney
Ur
Valeri
Verran
Volpe
Walker
Wappel
Wells
Whelan
Young
Zed-122
NAYS
Members
Abbott
Ablonczy
Bachand
Bélisle
Bellehumeur
Bernier (Gaspé)
Breitkreuz (Yellowhead)
Bridgman
Brien
Canuel
Caron
Chrétien (Frontenac)
Dalphond-Guiral
Daviault
Duceppe
Dumas
Duncan
Epp
Fillion
Frazer
Gagnon (Québec)
Gauthier
Godin
Grubel
Hanger
Harper (Calgary West/Ouest)
Harper (Simcoe Centre)
Hart
Hayes
Hermanson
Hill (Macleod)
Hill (Prince George-Peace River)
Hoeppner
Jennings
Johnston
Landry
Langlois
Laurin
Lavigne (Beauharnois-Salaberry)
Leblanc (Longueuil)
Lefebvre
Leroux (Richmond-Wolfe)
Leroux (Shefford)
Manning
Martin (Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca)
McClelland (Edmonton Southwest/Sud-Ouest)
Ménard
Mercier
Meredith
Milliken
Mills (Red Deer)
Nunez
Penson
Picard (Drummond)
Plamondon
Ramsay
Ringma
Robinson
Sauvageau
Schmidt
Speaker
Strahl
Thompson
Tremblay (Lac-Saint-Jean)
Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata)
Wayne
White (North Vancouver)-67
5010
PAIRED MEMBERS
Alcock
Asselin
Barnes
Bergeron
Bethel
Comuzzi
Crawford
Crête
de Savoye
Debien
Dubé
Grose
Guay
Guimond
Hopkins
Hubbard
Jacob
Keyes
Lalonde
Lebel
Loubier
MacDonald
Marchi
Paradis
Paré
Peters
Pettigrew
Pomerleau
Rocheleau
St-Laurent
St. Denis
Vanclief
(1805)
The Deputy Speaker: I declare the motion carried.
(Bill read the third time and passed.)
_____________________________________________
5010
PRIVATE MEMBERS' BUSINESS
[
Translation]
Mr. Réal Ménard (Hochelaga-Maisonneuve, BQ) moved:
That, in the opinion of this House, the government should give RCMP officers the
right to unionize and to bargain collectively under the Canada Labour Code.
He said: Mr. Speaker, is it not somewhat of a paradox, although
it is not perceived as such, that today I should stand up in this
House and defend what is undoubtedly one of Canada's best known
symbols? This is proof that nobody in this House will be able to
say, either in the future or in reference to the past, that the official
opposition has not lived up to its responsibilities.
I expect the parliamentary secretary to generously mention it in
his reply; as you know, if there is someone who is often critical of
the official opposition, it is my colleague, the member for
Vaudreuil.
On a more serious note, I believe that as parliamentarians we
must realize that discrimination of a peculiar kind has been going
on for years within the RCMP. Around 16,000 officers are finding
themselves in a legal vacuum the likes of which is unheard of, a
very unhealthy situation indeed.
People listening to us must realize that the RCMP officers are
protected neither by the Labour Code nor the Public Service of
Canada Act. Therefore, the situation is that some clearly essential
workers are discriminated against and cannot exercise their rights
to collective bargaining.
It is quite paradoxical, because members of Parliament are
certainly already aware of the situation.
(1810)
At least three commissions of inquiry have stated that labour
relations were among the difficulties pointed out to the legislator.
We cannot rise today and plead innocence saying that we did not
know about the situation, that we do not know what it is all about.
On the contrary, the situation was brought to the attention of the
cabinet and of the parliamentarians. But there has always been
some reluctance to act on this issue.
Closer to home, the labour minister, also a member for Montreal,
asked for a task force, which reviewed and reported on part I of the
Labour Code, which we want to update, and rightly so. Among the
recommendations in the report Sims, named for the commission's
chairman, there was obviously a finding to the effect it was
unacceptable that all police officers in Canada, except RCMP
members, had the right to collective bargaining.
It was recommended to take action to see how this group could
be unionized. We will come back to what this right to unionize
means concretely. Believe it or not, Mr. Speaker, and knowing how
sensitive you are, I am sure you will have great difficulty admitting
it, but it remains that, despite the information available, despite
three inquiry commissions, despite the recent tabling of a report,
the minister responsible for this issue has still taken no action.
Let it be clearly understood: currently in Canada eight provinces
and 200 municipalities use the RCMP as their police. We have to
remind Canadians and the people who are watching us how flagrant
this discrimination is since two categories of employees who do the
same kind of work do not have the same rights. That is the situation
we want to correct.
When I tabled my motion, I had clearly in mind what this means
in the workplace, how unhealthy it can be when employees cannot
collectively determine, influence and work to ensure they have a
voice on the working conditions they will be subject to. That is
why, periodically, there have been labour relations problems in the
RCMP.
In order to restore a healthy labour relations climate in the
RCMP, I think that a certain number of requirements must be met.
First of all, employees must have the right to collectively negociate
their working conditions. This is not a meaningless statement.
What is a collective agreement if not a consensus expressed on
paper setting out the rules, procedures and avenues of appeal
available if the parties cannot come to an agreement?
Not only are RCMP officers prohibited from making
representations on collective bargaining, but they are in a
practically unprecedented situation. Anyone who is familiar with
labour relations knows how unhealthy this situation is, since, as a
manager, the RCMP Commissioner must implement directives and
make deci-
5011
sions, acting as both judge and jury. One does not need a law degree
to realize how unhealthy this is.
Again, this government-with its cow-like disposition-refuses
to step in and take the measures needed to correct the situation.
As I said earlier, for healthy work conditions to prevail within
the RCMP, officers must have the right to bargain collectively.
They must, of course, have the right to form an association, to have
democratically elected representatives recognized as such, and to
submit grievances to an outside organization that is independent
and neutral.
(1815)
I trust that the parliamentary secretary will, when he rises in a
few minutes, admit that when there are disputes in the Public
Service there is an outside third party to judge grievances and reach
a decision, as well as appeal mechanisms of which both the
employer and the workers are aware. That third party is the Public
Service Commission, or in certain specific cases Treasury Board,
or the Public Service Staff Relations Board. These are known
bodies and have a precise role. Their independence of action is
acknowledged, because they are accredited by both management
and labour.
This is the crux of the debate. It is all the more admirable
because these are not workers who have shirked their
responsibilities. They are all very aware of their responsibilities
which, moreover, have a special nature in the RCMP relating to
national security and protecting the public interest.
This is why the representations they are making to us as
parliamentarians are not for the right to strike. That is not what is
involved when RCMP employees, through a national association,
are calling for recognition of a certain number of rights. What is
involved is the right to compulsory arbitration, outside the RCMP
of course, but they are not calling for the commissioner to be bound
by the decision, and therefore not for a final and binding arbitration
such as there is in place today. There are already clauses within part
I of the Labour Code which permit this.
The employees of the RCMP have even facilitated the work of
the legislator. So much so that they proposed a bill containing a
certain number of stipulations. If we wanted to go ahead and be
serious about the attention we give employees of the RCMP, any
member in this House, but especially the government majority
whose responsibility it is, could well introduce a bill giving those
employees the right to collective bargaining and the right to group
together into an association.
I hope that people who are listening tonight understand that this
is what this debate is about, something harmless, the basis of work
relations.
Believe it or not, RCMP employees-officers, I am not talking
about civilian employees, I am talking about officers-have been
waiting for this decision for at least ten years. How is it that
nothing has been done? Since 1993, we have seen a total lack of
understanding of what is going on in the RCMP.
Let us take the following example: there is currently a divisional
representative process. However, this process is more like a small
shop union than like what exists elsewhere in the public service. As
an MP, I suggest that we give a legislative framework to the RCMP
so that those people can form an association and collectively
decide, collectively negotiate their collective agreement.
If ever there is no majority, I am quite convinced, and I would
even dare to bet on a large beer, Mr. Speaker, that the Parliamentary
Secretary will tell us in a few minutes, when he stands up: ``Yes,
but there is already a negotiation process.''
Mr. Discepola: Did you read my speech?
Mr. Ménard: I know the Parliamentary Secretary. He is awfully
predictable.
In a while, he will stand up and tell us: ``Yes, but there is already
a process for representational purposes and nothing indicates that
they want this process expanded.''
I am telling this to put off the Parliamentary Secretary: let us
give the RCMP and its employees a legislative framework and
leave it to them to take advantage of it. I hope the government will
not go on doing nothing, that it will listen attentively and will act to
help workers who are victims of discrimination even when faced
with a problem.
(1820)
Let us take a concrete example. Let us look at what happened. As
we know, the government is proud to have promoted bilingualism
in the public service through all sorts of measures, and the
parliamentary secretary believes in this principle.
The commissioner-and this is nothing personal-became an
institution through an act of Parliament and was both judge and
judged regarding bilingual bonuses. Under this program, when a
public servant passes a written and oral test, he is eligible to a
bonus of $800. This is not a huge amount, but it is better than
nothing.
These workers suffered a prejudice because it was claimed they
were not entitled to the bonus, even though the courts ruled in their
favour. What did the government do to correct the situation? Rarely
does one witness such a lack of sensitivity. The government
introduced a bill in which it took a malicious pleasure in legislating
5012
that these workers were clearly not covered by the Public Service
of Canada Act or the Canada Labour Code, in spite of the fact that
some, mostly Quebecers living in Quebec, are bilingual and were
deprived of this bilingual bonus. Such an anomaly would not exist
if things were more clear.
Let us talk about the right to unionize. In a democracy, what is
the point of having a charter of rights and freedoms? What is the
point of boasting about freedom of association and pay equity for
all, if this type of discrimination is being perpetuated? If RCMP
officers were covered by part I of the Canada Labour Code, the
employer would face reprisals if it objected to its employees
forming a union. Indeed, the employer cannot interfere if the
conditions regarding the application for union certification and the
related process are met.
We must keep this in mind when we discuss issues such as this
one.
How does the parliamentary secretary intend to restore good
working relations in such a sensitive milieu as the RCMP if we
deny these workers the fundamental right that all the other public
servants in Canada enjoy?
If we were holding a meeting here tonight, not with members of
Parliament, but with RCMP employees, can you imagine what
would happen? How could one of us explain to these workers who
pay taxes, get up every morning, take an oath and serve their fellow
citizens, that they do not have the right to sit at the bargaining table
and negotiate their working conditions, that they do not have the
right to have their grievances heard by a third party, unlike the rest
of the public servants? How can we explain that and how can we
remain so stubborn when inquiry after inquiry comes to the same
conclusion as the most recent report. That report does not date back
to the year 1992 before Christ, it is the Sims Report that was tabled
last January. The Sims Report, which I have the pleasure to quote
quite often in this House, recognizes that these workers are being
wronged.
So, I hope that my colleagues both from the government side and
from the Reform Party as well as the Bloc members will try to put
an end to this type of discrimination.
The one thing we should keep in mind at a time like this is that
there are still eight Canadian provinces who retain the services of
RCMP officers for policing purposes.
If the government could come up with some examples or if the
parliamentary secretary were to rise in this House and say: ``Yes,
but I would like to tell the hon. member about a police force in
Canada that is excluded from the rights that some are asking for'', I
would really be shaken. I will say that there is something wrong in
my rationale, that my arguments were not convincing enough, that
there is a lack of information. But it is not the case. Through you,
Mr. Speaker, I challenge the parliamentary secretary, who I know is
always looking for new challenges. I challenge him, before the
Canadian people, to give us an example of a similar police force.
(1825)
The parliamentary secretary will have to do his homework well,
but if he can give us an example of another police force that is
denied the right to collective bargaining and that does not belong to
a union, I will be contrite. I will rise on a point of order and admit
that I was wrong.
But I know perfectly well that the parliamentary secretary will
not find one such example because it is well known that this is a
case of discrimination, that the RCMP is in a unique situation.
In conclusion, you know that the government will embark on a
review of part I of the Labour Code, that there will be a
parliamentary committee on which I will sit, and I think we must
use this debate to get the government to say that it is willing to give
the RCMP the right to unionize and to bargain collectively to
finally put an end to a flagrant and unacceptable case of
discrimination.
Mr. Nick Discepola (Parliamentary Secretary to Solicitor
General of Canada, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I rise today to speak to the
motion put before the House by the hon. member for
Hochelaga-Maisonneuve.
I am sure that the hon. member's motion is prompted by concern
for the welfare and well-being of the membership of the RCMP-a
concern that I can assure him I and our government share.
We are only too aware of the RCMP's crucial role as Canada's
national police service and of the need to support RCMP members
in their professional duties and to ensure their personal welfare.
For example, the government recently introduced Bill C-52 in
this House. This amendment to the RCMP Superannuation Act will
ensure that RCMP members serving outside Canada in ``special
duty areas'' are automatically considered to be on duty 24 hours a
day, and therefore will receive complete benefit coverage.
The government introduced this bill because it realizes that
RCMP members serving their country in a peacekeeping mission,
in hazardous areas, should not have to worry about their own or
their families' well-being. This is an example of the kind of
practical and meaningful action this government is taking on behalf
of the women and men of the RCMP.
Through various initiatives, our government is committed to
improving the safety and security of Canadians, and, at the same
time, to helping the police, including the RCMP, do a better job.
We want to ensure that the police have the tools they need to carry
out their professional duties.
Let me give you a few examples. We have instituted tougher
measures for sex offenders who victimize children. We have
created a national system for screening applicants for paid or
volunteer positions where, once again, work with children is
involved. We have amended the Young Offenders Act to provide
for tougher sentences. We have reformed the sentencing process to
5013
ensure more consistency and to give greater emphasis to public
safety and the needs of victims.
[English]
The safety and security of Canadians has been a priority of the
government since it took office. I have given but a very few
examples of its initiatives. However some people, such as the hon.
member ask the question: Why has the government not made the
unionization of the RCMP a priority? It is a fair question.
The RCMP is our national police service and as such it operates
national programs that are used by other law enforcement agencies
and police forces in every part of the country. These are special
services that no other police service in Canada can provide.
I will give some examples as the member for
Hochelaga-Maisonneuve asked me to do. The RCMP maintains
the national crime computers, including the Canadian Police
Information Centre that feeds into most other police forces and
patrol cars in Canada. The RCMP runs the national forensic crime
laboratories and provides forensic services, again to police
jurisdictions throughout the country.
The RCMP also operates the source witness protection program
which can assist other police jurisdictions with the relocation of
witnesses and sources throughout Canada. As we all know, Canada
is a signatory to a number of international agreements and
conventions and our international reputation depends on the RCMP
providing never ending protection to embassies and diplomats
across Canada.
(1830 )
The RCMP provides protection for prominent people while
visiting Canada, visiting heads of state and governments, the
Governor General, supreme court justices and even the Parliament
Hill area.
The RCMP given its respected international reputation, has also
been called on by the United Nations to provide civilian
peacekeeping in various locations around the globe including the
former Yugoslavia and Haiti.
[Translation]
Clearly, the RCMP is not just any police force. No other agency
could provide all the services that I have just mentioned. Without
exaggeration, a work action by the RCMP could become a matter
of life or death.
We place great importance on the safety of Canadians who rely
on the services of the RCMP. That is not to say that the government
ignores the rights of the RCMP membership. Far from it. The
government realizes that, where a union does not exist to represent
federal employees, then there is a special obligation to listen to
those employees and to ensure that there is an effective system for
addressing workplace issues.
That is why the RCMP has a system of employee representation.
This very progressive system is known as the Division Staff
Relations Program. The backbone of the Div-Rep program, as it is
known, are the 29 representatives elected by regular and civilian
members of the RCMP. The Div-Reps regularly meet with division
Commanding Officers and also, on a national basis, with the
RCMP Commissioner to represent the membership.
The informal nature of the Div-Rep program promotes access to
the top management of the RCMP and even to the Solicitor
General. If relations were dominated by a formal and legally
binding collective agreement, I wonder if this kind of access could
still continue.
Many members strongly believe that the co-operative approach
which the Div-Rep program offers has been highly effective in
advancing the interests of the membership and in finding workable
and practical solutions to the members' concerns. For example, the
Div-Reps played a key role in securing new regulations which
provide better occupational health and safety protection for
members.
The Div-Reps can also take credit for the successful constable
reclassification initiative which was of particular importance in
addressing pay level concerns of newer members. The initiative
was successful, in part, because Div-Reps could take advantage of
the present flexible system.
The Div-Rep system allows the RCMP and the government to
quickly manage resources to meet new pressures and needs. This
type of timely response would be more difficult under a locked-in
collective agreement. In short, the Div-Rep program works, and
has worked for many years, efficiently and effectively.
The motion put before this House by the hon. member is
well-intentioned but it does not take into account the fact that the
RCMP, in the Div-Rep program, has a proven system of
representation. It is not clear why there is a need to tamper with a
system that is already working well.
The government will continue, as in the past, to support the
RCMP in their duties and work with them to resolve workplace
issues and, where possible, to improve working conditions.
But we will bear in mind the unique nature of the Force and their
crucial role in maintaining the safety and security of Canadians. It
is for these reasons that we cannot support the motion before us.
[English]
Mr. Dale Johnston (Wetaskiwin, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, the hon.
member for Hochelaga-Maisonneuve has put forth a motion that
calls for the government to give RCMP officers the right to
5014
unionize and to bargain collectively under an act other than the
Canada Labour Code.
Of course, he claims to have the best interests of the members of
the RCMP at heart, and perhaps we should accept that at face value.
(1835 )
However, we would have to wonder if it is not just a small group
of people with personal agendas who he is really out to represent
today.
We also have to wonder what the hon. member thinks the RCMP
stands to gain from what he has proposed here today. He contends
that his motion was a follow up to the Sims report. However, let me
read what the recommendation actually states on page 50 of the
report:
The government should undertake a process to determine the appropriateness of
RCMP officers having the right to organize and to engage in collective bargaining
under a statute separate from the Canada Labour Code. Such a process should
consider the interests of the members of the RCMP, existing associations of
members, management and the public.
Let me say that the Reform Party supports the traditional role of
the RCMP as a police force representative of and responsive to the
population it serves in Canada's regions. The Reform Party also
recognizes the right of workers to organize democratically, bargain
collectively and to strike peacefully. However, there is an
important distinction to be made between private and public sector
collective bargaining.
Strikes in the private sector of course may cause some
inconvenience to the public but they are primarily a contest
between the employer and the employees. The employer loses
profits, the employees lose wages and both sides know that either a
prolonged strike or a bad agreement could put the enterprise out of
business and could put the employees out of jobs. Incentives exist
for both sides to seek a settlement in good faith.
The situation in the public sector is quite different. Because of
the monopolistic nature of most public services like the RCMP,
alternatives are not readily available in the marketplace.
Is the hon. member, through his motion, proposing that the
RCMP should be given the right to strike? He knows all too well
that the aim of a public sector is to inconvenience or even endanger
the public in the hope that citizens will persuade or pressure the
public employer to give into the union's demands. He knows that
governments usually do not lose money in a strike. In fact, they
save money by not having to pay their employees' wages during
the duration of the strike.
Moreover, the member knows that the government plays two
conflicting roles. It is not only a player in the collective bargaining
process, it is also the supreme rule maker.
As we have witnessed time and again in this House, the
government ends public sector strikes by legislating workers back
to work. Is that what the member would like to see happen? I rather
doubt it.
Members have heard me say repeatedly in the House that the
Reform Party supports the final offer selection arbitration process
when management impasses jeopardize health, safety or the
national economy.
Finally, often arbitration gives labour and management the tools
to resolve their differences. Final offer selection does not favour
one side over the other and it eliminates the need for government
interference in the negotiations. It puts the onus on both sides to
reach an agreement and it can be used equally by labour or
management to provide a permanent, just and effective settlement.
In preparation for this debate, I contacted members of the RCMP
stationed in detachments throughout my constituency to find out
what they thought about unions and the bargaining process. I found
that there was zero support or enthusiasm for the creation of unions
from within the ranks of the RCMP. I think that is a very important
element to be considered in debating a bill of this type.
Last year, when RCMP officers appeared before the
subcommittee on government operations, they testified that out of
the over 1,000 members in Manitoba, only 15 wanted to unionize.
In British Columbia, 156 RCMP officers, out of a possible 4,600,
attended a meeting organized by union proponents to discuss
organizing and half of those 156 left the meeting before it ended.
(1840 )
There is a mechanism within the RCMP to deal with
labour-management issues that is part of the RCMP Act
regulations. The division staff relations representative program, or
DSRR program, has been in place for 20 years and it enjoys the
support of the vast majority of members of the force. The officers
in each division across the country elect at least one full time
representative and two part time representatives.
The RCMP members serving in detachments throughout my
constituency indicated to me that they are satisfied with this current
arrangement.
Since there is virtually no support in the RCMP for a union, the
hon. member's motion seems to me somewhat unnecessary. His
efforts and energies might be directed to other areas deserving of
his immediate attention. He should be suggesting ways for the
government to reduce the debt, eliminate the deficit, balance the
budget, give taxpayers like those hard working members of the
RCMP a tax break that they most certainly deserve.
If the hon. member is concerned with the plight of the RCMP he
would be willing to call for a tougher Young Offenders Act. I
believe it would be very frustrating for an RCMP officer to
5015
continually collar these people who are given a rap on the knuckles
and then turned loose.
The hon. member would be advocating a get tough on crime
agenda like the zero tolerance policies the Reform Party is
proposing. He would be calling for a referendum on capital
punishment for first degree murder for those who kill police
officers and find out if there is support, and I suggest there is, in
Canada for exactly that, capital punishment for first degree murder.
If the hon. member for Hochelaga-Maisonneuve were really
interested in the well-being of RCMP officers, he would focus on
issues that are of concern to the members of the force, concerns
that we hear when talking to the members of the force on a daily
basis.
[Translation]
Mr. François Langlois (Bellechasse, BQ): Mr. Speaker, I
welcome this opportunity to speak to the motion of the hon.
member for Hochelaga-Maisonneuve.
The issue of giving RCMP officers the right to unionize is not a
new one. In fact, more recently, since my hon. friend went much
further back in history, it goes back to the Gingras decision handed
down in March 1994 which established that RCMP officers were
entitled to the bilingualism bonus. To reach this conclusion, the
Federal Court of Canada had to establish that RCMP officers were
part of the public service.
It is immediately clear what the consequences are of the ruling in
the Gingras case: if RCMP officers are part of the public service,
they are also subject to other legislation that governs members of
the public service, and more specifically, the Canada Labour Code
and part I of the Canada Labour Code, which confers the right to
unionize.
Of course the Gingras decision was not about the right to
unionize, so the Federal Court of Canada did not have to rule
specifically on that right. By inference, one can at least argue, since
that is what is being argued today before the Quebec Court of
Appeal, that RCMP officers have the right to unionize. An
additional ground is based on the Canadian Charter of 1982,
namely that the right of association includes the right to unionize.
But we should let the courts rule on that issue.
Meanwhile, what did the government do following the Gingras
case? It could have very conveniently taken the case to the
Supreme Court, something this government seems very fond of
doing. But no, it did not. It tabled a bill in the House. This was Bill
C-58, at the time, which, after the House was prorogued, was tabled
again as Bill C-30.
This bill is a declaratory bill. In other words, the government is
acting like a court. It did not go to the Supreme Court to ask
whether RCMP officers are really part of the public service and
subject to the Canada Labour Code.
(1845)
No. The government is handing down the decision the Supreme
Court might have handed down or the decision the government
would have liked the Supreme Court to hand down.
In the declaratory provision included in Bill C-58, which has
become Bill C-30, the government is saying that, for greater
certainty, RCMP officers are not part of the public service and
therefore that the Canada Labour Code does not apply to them.
Nice way to exclude them.
What the member for Hochelaga-Maisonneuve said earlier is
characteristic of what is going on in Canada. The RCMP operates
and does a tremendous job at the federal level and in eight
provinces.
As a member of the government operations committee which
reviewed Bill C-58, I can tell you however that there is a deep
malaise within the RCMP. It seems to me that the present system of
representation by divisional representatives is not working or
working poorly. There appear to be at least two diverging views.
On one hand, we have the RCMP command telling us that
everything is working fine, and on the other, we have members and
members' representatives telling us that it is not working. There
are two sides to the coin.
For my part, I have reasonable doubt that the system is not
working; the RCMP commissioner who, to all intents and
purposes, is a separate employer can send a dispute to arbitration
and chose to abide or not by the adjudicator's decision.
Listen, if I prosecute you in a civil court and win, you will have
no choice, I will have the decision enforced. Willy nilly, you will
have to abide by it. This is one element that is missing. If, in our
society, one party in any civil suit could escape the application of a
ruling against it, we would have a pretty strange judicial system.
That is exactly the kind of system that members of the RCMP
have to deal with. We do not want to force them into unionization.
We want them to have the legal framework required so they may
chose freely whether they want a union or not.
Earlier, I heard my colleague, the member for Wetaskiwin, say
that in his region, several officers told him they did not want to be
unionized, that very few had attended the briefing meeting. This
reminds me of Quebec, a long time ago, when unions were not very
popular and when, if people were present at information sessions
on unionization, a trustee or some other official would take down
their names to be sure their contract would not be extended or they
would be made to change schools if they were too vocal.
5016
Clearly, there is no legislative framework which governs these
things; no one can impose sanctions if an employer hampers the
fair and usual process of requesting union certification. It is quite
easy to understand why the officers will not go to the meetings.
But the best way to find out is to give them their legal
framework, to apply to them Part I of the Canada Labour Code,
with one major exception. Contrary to what was said earlier,
contrary to what my good friend, the hon. member for Vaudreuil,
was saying earlier, the right to strike was never requested in any
way for officers of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police; they are
not asking it themselves.
In a properly working society, with the exemplary work that
RCMP officers do, this right, I believe, must not be recognized. But
should we go for mandatory arbitration, a final offer? This is a
system that can be discussed for a long time. But the right to strike
must not be granted at that level, and neither for the Sûreté du
Québec or the OPP in Ontario.
They must have the right to free bargaining, to confronting ideas,
to negotiating, to making compromises, to improving a climate.
The climate must be improved, otherwise the pressure will build up
and things will get out of hand in the RCMP. We will end up with a
service in which things are as bad as with CSIS, where just about
everything is rotten. We cannot get information, whether it is from
the director of the service, or from the Security Intelligence Review
Committee, which is supposed to monitor CSIS but rarely reports
to us, particularly to the sub-committee on national security, on
which I have the honour of sitting, along with the hon. member for
Vaudreuil, whose riding may soon be called Vaudreuil-Soulanges.
These are the reasons.
(1850)
The best way to solve the issue is to provide a legislative
framework in which officers will be allowed to vote. Let them
decide, through a vote, whether they want to unionize or not,
whether they want to form an association.
If the vote is negative but takes place within an appropriate
legislative framework, it will be respected, just like the no vote was
respected in Quebec, on October 30, 1995. If the vote is
affirmative, it will be respected because the Canada Labour Code
will apply. We do not want to force anyone to join a union, but the
reverse should also be true, in that we should not prevent people
who want to form a union from doing so.
The best way to proceed-and that is what the hon. member for
Vaudreuil is indicating and he would probably like to have another
chance to speak to correct a few statements he made earlier,
because I think the hon. member for Hochelaga-Maisonneuve has
seriously shaken him, and when he gets an opportunity to do so he
might change his mind. As for me I would be willing to let him
change what he said if he wants to-but the best way to proceed
would be to let people vote.
As it will be for us in the next elections in the riding of Vaudreuil
and in the riding of Hochelaga-Maisonneuve, and probably in
your riding too, Mr. Speaker, there will be several candidates,
people will put an X beside a name and we will count up the votes.
Everything is organized. Election officers, returning officers and
clerks, are appointed, the system is there and working.
People are not told in advance that they have to select this or that
person to represent them. People make their decision.
Fundamentally, let us apply to unionizing the electoral system that
is applied in Canada.
Let us ask the members of the RCMP if they want the Canada
Labour Code applied or not. If they say no, the problem will be
resolved to everyone's satisfaction. Some members claim that they
do not want to form a trade union. If they say yes, then the Canada
Labour Code will of course apply, but without the right to strike. I
will not fight for the right to strike for policemen in Canada.
One thing seemed strange to me. When I asked at RCMP
headquarters, during consideration of Bill C-58 in committee, the
only reason given to me for the opposition there to unionization
was that RCMP officers do work not done by any other police force
in Canada.
I asked for examples. They said the protection of ambassadors. It
is true. For example, here in Ottawa, the RCMP is responsible for
the protection of ambassadors. I was told that it is also responsible,
or is supposed to be responsible, for the safety of the Prime
Minister's residence.
It is also true that, in Toronto and Quebec City, two provincial
capitals, the OPP and the Sûreté du Québec are responsible for the
protection of the consular corps. The activities of the consulates are
exactly the same as those of the embassies. So, if that is the only
distinction, let the members of the RCMP be treated just like their
colleagues of the Sûreté du Québec, the police of the Montreal
Urban Community and the OPP. Let them enjoy the same benefits
as their counterparts in the provinces and cities.
I would even go farther. On the government operations
committee, my colleague from Surrey-White Rock-South
Langley put forward an amendment to Bill C-58 whereby part II of
the Canada Labour Code would apply to the RCMP and give its
members occupational health and safety protection. I was the only
one to support her proposal, which was rejected by the three
members of the government on the committee. Why should we
refuse to give occupational health and safety protection to the
members of the RCMP?
That said, I will take my seat to allow my colleague who moved
the motion to make a nice conclusion.
[English]
Mr. Art Hanger (Calgary Northeast, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I
really do not get the picture when it comes to the motion put
forward by the member for Hochelaga-Maisonneuve or the
support that the member for Bellechasse has given on his behalf
5017
and on behalf of the handful of RCMP members who would like to
see a union. For the most part, I believe it is only Quebec members
who seek a union for RCMP officers.
(1855 )
I have a letter which was written to me a short time ago on
request from RCMP representatives. I would like to read that letter
because it explains the viewpoint of the approximately 16,000
RCMP officers, apart from those the member
Hochelaga-Maisonneuve is referring to who seek unionization.
The letter represents the thinking of a group of representatives
from 22 different divisions and districts within the RCMP across
the country. It states:
``I cannot emphasize enough that the members supporting
unionization and/or associating with the Royal Canadian Mounted
Police are few in number when compared to the overall numbers of
members serving in the force today. The spokespeople for these
individuals reside primarily in Quebec and Ontario-''. Those
seeking the unionization fall basically within those two provinces.
``-with a small following in the lower mainland of British
Columbia. They boast approximately 2,000 members of our some
17,000 members nationally''. It is very small representation
according to the member who has put the motion forward.
``There is also some debate as to the accuracy of that figure, as
some would argue that there are fewer than 2,000 presently paying
dues to the various fledgling associations in Quebec, Ontario,
British Columbia and the national capital region. Other attempts at
starting up associations which support collective bargaining have
failed in other provinces. In fact, member surveys conducted by our
representatives in both Manitoba and New Brunswick have
revealed only a relative few who support such a notion''. I believe
that is supportive of what the member for Wetaskiwin pointed out
earlier.
``Our present system of employee representation is the division
staff relations representative system (DSRR). The foundation of
this process can be found at section 96 of the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police Act regulations''. I am sure the member knows
that.
``Presently there are 28 representatives duly elected by the
members from across Canada and one represented who we have
elected internally to represent our interests in the area of
compensation''.
This letter is signed by some of those divisional representatives,
but there are names of others who support the contents of the letter
which appear here. They number 22 out of 28.
``You will note on pages following this document that it bears the
signatures of the representatives and a number of members
represented by each representative''. Some have signed on behalf
of those who actually do the representations. ``The overwhelming
majority of those are opposed to the notions put forward by the
member for Hochelaga-Maisonneuve. None of these gentlemen
have been consulted in any way concerning this motion and
notwithstanding any claim the member for
Hochelaga-Maisonneuve may advance, there has been no
consultative process conducted by the individual members who
approached the member for Hochelaga-Maisonneuve to the rank
and file membership of the force''.
The member is dancing a jig and there is no music. Very few
people within the rank and file are supporting the motion put
forward.
``You will hear from the member for Hochelaga-Maisonneuve
that some of the individuals who have contacted him are also duly
elected representatives''. The writers of the document
acknowledge that. ``That is true. What is also true is that those duly
elected representatives have likely failed themselves to consult
with the majority of the very members whom they represent to
obtain the mandate necessary for the actions they are taking. These
are the very same representatives who have chosen to closely align
themselves with the Canadian Police Association, CPA, who as you
know is a lobby group who represent most unionized police
departments in the country, which does not include the RCMP''.
Their support comes from the CPA to continue this push.
(1900)
``Even if unionization were to be appropriate for the RCMP,
open dialogue and input from all members would have to occur
before any such action could be considered''. It is not coming from
the membership at large but a handful of individuals out of the
provinces of Quebec and Ontario, and some out of British
Columbia who have approached this member.
``We take great offence not only at the action of these individuals
but also any motion made in the House of Commons that may
affect the Royal Canadian Mounted Police would be made by a
member of Parliament who supports breaking up the very country
for whose citizens we work so hard keeping safe in their homes and
communities''.
Those are the comments from the following representatives:
Sergeant Bruce Morrison, E division, B.C., Staff Sergeant Hugh
Stewart, E division, B.C.; Staff Sergeant Doug Howarth, E
division, B.C.; Corporal Tim Kennedy, E division, B.C.; Corporal
Peter McLaren, E division, B.C.; Sergeant Rick Dinwoodie, E
division, B.C.; Sergeant Rick Neville, K division, Alta.; Corporal
Joe Mitchell, K division, Alta.; Sergeant Don Taylor, F division,
Sask.; Staff Sergeant Randy Thompson, F division, Sask.; Staff
Sergeant Reg Trowell, D division, Man.; Staff Sergeant Pat Dauk,
D division, Man.; Sergeant Bernie Bengevin, J division, N.B.;
Staff Sergeant Brian Flannagan, H division, N.S.; Staff Sergeant
Murray Brown, H division, N.S.; Staff Sergeant Roy Hill, B
division, Nfld.; Staff Sergeant Dave MacDonald, HQ Ottawa, Ont.;
Staff Sergeant Ron Lewis, HQ Ottawa, Ont,; Staff Sergeant Brian
Cook, Depot division; Sergeant Glen Morash, G division, N.W.T.;
Sergeant
5018
Graham Marrion, M division, YT and Staff Sergeant Kevin
MacDougall, RCMP Pay Counsel.
That is the representation that seeks not to support this member's
action or his bill.
I believe the member is taking advantage of a situation and has
not clearly researched it by those who have approached him and do
not represent the membership at large of the-
[Translation]
Mr. Ménard: Mr. Speaker, I was courteous in this debate and I
never questioned anybody's intentions. I will not permit my
colleague to question the quality of my research and my work, and
I ask him to apologize for the unkind remarks he made about me.
The Deputy Speaker: I think this is clearly a matter of debate
between the member who is proposing the motion and the member
who just spoke.
The member who just spoke has one minute left to conclude his
remarks, then the other member will have three minutes to respond.
[English]
Mr. Hanger: Mr. Speaker, it is clear that union organizers have
attempted to take over the RCMP. Their elections have failed to
win the support of rank and file officers. Then without consulting
rank and file officers in the field, these organizers came to this
member to try to unionize through a motion put forward in
Parliament. It is obvious there is not the support.
This motion is ill conceived and there is very little support by
rank and file officers for unionization in any form. I would say to
the member for Hochelaga-Maisonneuve to leave well enough
alone.
(1905 )
The Deputy Speaker: There are approximately three minutes
left. If the member for Hochelaga-Maisonneuve wishes to
summarize and close the debate, there being no other speakers
standing, he is entitled to do that.
[Translation]
Mr. Réal Ménard (Hochelaga-Maisonneuve, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, it is unfortunate that the Reform Party was unable to speak
on the essence of the motion but spoke only on the form of it, as is
its detestable habit.
I do not claim-and I want my Reform colleagues to be clear on
this-that all RCMP workers supported this motion. What I say to
my Reform friend, and I challenge him to prove me wrong on this,
is that there is a group of some 3,000 people who want a different
representation system.
One would have to be extremely obtuse and dull-witted to claim,
as does the Reform member, that the people who want unionization
and collective bargaining right do not represent anyone. Reform
members should be a little more open and better informed. There is
something structural there that has to do with their capacity for
greater generosity. I have no illusion that all this will change.
But essentially, I think we have the right as parliamentarians to
speak up in this House without being falsely accused and say there
is a labour relations problem, that there may be a number of
solutions to this problem and that one of them might be the right to
unionize without the right to strike.
This must be very clear. None of the workers we are talking
about here tonight has asked for the right to strike. These workers
are well aware of the fact that, considering the nature of their
functions, it would not be in the best interest of Canadians that they
have the right to strike. What must be recognized is that peace in
the work place will be achieved with a negotiated and debated
document, approved by everyone and called a collective
agreement.
What is clear also is that the workers have the right to associate
in a system other than the one that prevails. I am annoyed that this
debate has given the Reform members the opportunity to make
such detestable accusations.
The Deputy Speaker: The time provided for the consideration
of Private Members' Business has now expired and the order is
dropped from the Order Paper.
_____________________________________________
5018
ADJOURNMENT PROCEEDINGS
[
Translation]
A motion to adjourn the House under Standing Order 38 deemed
to have been moved.
Mr. Osvaldo Nunez (Bourassa, BQ): Mr. Speaker, before I
continue my speech, I shall, if I may, pay tribute to ex-Premier of
Quebec Robert Bourassa, who died today.
I arrived from Chile in Montreal with my family in 1974, when
he headed the Quebec government. I had fled a dictatorship and
immediately realized he was a great democrat, who showed a great
deal of respect for dissenting opinions. He was also very open to
ethnic communities. I want to pay tribute to his courage in politics
and in dealing with his terrible illness. I also want to extend my
condolences to the Bourassa family.
5019
On June 4 this year, I put a question to the Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration about the government's plans to
eliminate the citizenship rights of children born in Canada of
parents who are not citizens. I said that a measure of this kind
would be a direct attack on the children of claimants of refugee
status or persons already recognized as refugees by Canada.
In an interview published in the Toronto Star last May, the
minister suggested that Canada might remove the automatic right
to citizenship of children born on Canadian territory. This
statement aroused a great deal of criticism, especially from the
Canadian Council of Refugees. One hundred and eight
organizations wrote to the minister to express their objections.
These organizations included the Public Service Alliance of
Canada, the Bureau de la Communauté chrétienne des Haïtiens de
Montréal, the TCA, the Collectif des femmes immigrantes du
Québec, the Canadian Action Committee on the Status of Women,
the Canadian Labour Congress, the Canadian Jewish Congress, the
Canadian Hispanic Congress, the Canadian Ethnocultural Council,
the Canadian Arab Federation, the Jesuit Refugee Service, the
Table de concertation de Montréal des organismes au service des
réfugiés, the Vancouver Refugee Council, the Vigil Toronto
Refugee Assistance Organization, and so forth.
Under current legislation, except for the children of foreign
diplomats, anyone born on Canadian soil automatically becomes a
Canadian citizen. Most nations adhere to the jus soli or law of the
soil principle and grant citizenship to anyone born within their
borders. Most countries, including Canada, also recognize they
have an obligation to reduce the number of stateless people.
Until now, Canada has granted citizenship to the Canadian-born
children of refugee claimants. The jus soli or law of the soil
therefore represents a basic principle in the definition of
citizenship in Canada and reflects the values of Canada and Quebec
in this area.
During the consultations carried out in 1994 by the Standing
Committee on Citizenship and Immigration, of which I am a
vice-chairman, I asked departmental officials to provide us with
statistics on the number of children born to persons who were not
Canadian citizens. They were unable to give us exact figures. All
they could say was that approximately 400 children were in this
situation. The problem therefore is really not of such a magnitude
as to require a legislative amendment and changes to a basic
principle-
The Deputy Speaker: Unfortunately, the hon. member's time
has run out.
The hon. parliamentary secretary to the Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration has the floor. 1910-3
[English]
Ms. Maria Minna (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I must admit
the question of the member for Bourassa is a bit puzzling. He
knows full well we are examining all aspects of the citizenship
issue. This includes citizenship for children born in Canada.
Furthermore, the hon. member knows this because he is on the
Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration, as he has just
stated, and the committee recommended that children born in
Canada should be Canadian citizens only if one or both of their
parents is a permanent resident or Canadian citizen.
I am particularly surprised that the hon. member is showing such
concern over recommendation number 12 of the standing
committee report, especially since there was no dissenting opinion
on this particular recommendation from the Bloc Quebecois
member of the committee when the report was submitted.
It should be of no surprise to anyone, in particular a member of
that committee, that the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration
takes the standing committee's advice and opinions very seriously.
The government, however, has made no final decisions
regarding proposed amendments to current citizenship legislation.
We are still in the process of reconciling issues brought forward
from the Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration and
by the Canadian public. It is important that a consensus be reached
on a number of issues.
Let me assure all members of the House that when decisions are
taken on these important issues they will be informed.
Next year is the 50th anniversary of our citizenship. This will be
a welcomed opportunity for everyone in this House and for
Canadians across the country to celebrate the common bonds which
unite us all. I know we are all eagerly anticipating this very special
milestone in the life of our country.
[Translation]
The Deputy Speaker: Colleagues, the motion to adjourn the
House is deemed to have been adopted. The House stands
adjourned until 10 a.m. tomorrow.
(The House adjourned at 7.12 p.m.)