Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I didn't vote to overturn your ruling, Mr. Chair, although I did want it to be overturned, because I wanted to speak to this.
But I want to speak against this amendment. Just to give some quick history, this is the wrong group to be sending this to. In the last Parliament we did an extensive review of oversight of all of our intelligence agencies, including FINTRAC. This was in an ad hoc committee of both the Senate and the House established under the PCO. There was a bill before the House just before the election was called that set out a mechanism and a committee—again a joint committee of both Houses—that would have provided oversight not just to a single agency but to all of our intelligence agencies. We have about 12 of those in the country, FINTRAC being one of them.
I think it's a mistake to look to SIRC. They have a very limited mandate. Quite frankly, when you see some of the files that have gone through and then been reviewed by them.... Take the Air India one, for instance. You then have other agencies, or in that case a court, pointing out all of the deficiencies there were in front of CSIS. They simply don't have a broad enough mandate to take on the responsibilities that legislation would have provided. The current minister has indicated that once Justice O'Connor comes down with his second report, which is scheduled for the end of this month or early in December, either that bill or a similar bill will be reintroduced.
That's where the responsibility should go. Passing it over to SIRC I think generally would be useless, but more importantly, it would be saying that maybe it is the agency we should be using, and I don't believe it is. The parliamentary oversight should be done by parliamentarians, including the work that needs to be done with respect to FINTRAC.
Mr. McCallum's point is well taken; all the points he made about the need for that oversight are well taken. This just isn't the body it should go to.
Thank you.