That's a great question.
The legislation that we are advocating for is limited to non-disclosure agreements that cover up misconduct, sexual misconduct, harassment, bullying and discrimination.
Can I just add that there is an astonishing number of cases of proven discrimination? I'm talking now about pregnancy discrimination, discrimination against people with disabilities—they're not being accommodated and they're being forced out—many cases of discrimination on the basis of race and anti-indigenous racism.
We are seeing an enormous proliferation of the use of non-disclosure agreements in these cases. Much as you've indicated, they have become the default. We have data now that shows that a significant number of people.... For example, in the United States, there are three studies that now show that one in three people is subject to a non-disclosure agreement. There is data that we have put together from the quantitative survey we've been running that shows that a third of the people who answered that survey have also been asked to sign a non-disclosure agreement.
Let me pause a moment and suggest that there is an important distinction here between a confidentiality agreement, which simply says the amount of the settlement will not be divulged.... That is, I know, standard practice. In fact, there's an exception in the legislation for just that.
There may also be the need for confidentiality that the parties both agree to in terms of not speaking to the media or making this public. However, what non-disclosure agreements are doing now is preventing people from speaking up for their entire lives, because these are indefinite agreements. They are until the end of one's life. In fact, I've heard arguments that they endure, even after the death of the predator.
These are agreements, for the lifetime of the victims who sign them, that they cannot speak to anybody. We're talking about family, friends, therapists, counsellors, elders and people who might support them. This is why it was apparently impossible for Soccer Canada to put a red flag on Mr. Birarda. It was because he would have negotiated a non-disclosure agreement that would have kept everything that he did secret, and everybody would have been too afraid to break that and make it known that he is somebody who should be treated as a possibly dangerous person to be coaching young people.
Yes, we are confining this to those cases of misconduct, sexual violence and abuse, harassment and discrimination.
I would also say the committee should be aware that these NDAs are also being used in consumer disputes. The reason we didn't know about tainted baby formula for almost 20 years after the first settlement was made, and that the formula kept on being sold and poisoning babies, was because of an NDA.
We see them, as well, in professional services disagreements, when there is apparently an oath taken to never speak of this again. We see them in complaints in care homes, where people who speak up about concerns about the care being given to their relatives, or even professionals in the care homes, are being immediately NDA'd.
I think that is extremely dangerous, and I don't understand why there is any reason to perpetuate something that has, to a great extent, caused the revictimization of folks in sports and beyond.