Thank you, Chair.
I appreciate that CRA is probably giving direction to the parliamentary secretary on this amendment, but I think Mr. Van Bynen brings up a really salient point here. I think the amendment is being characterized as this either-or dichotomy: Either we do this with a separate form or we're never going to get this implemented in an expedient period of time. I can't accept that. In this situation, the will and intent of Parliament is supreme. If Parliament gives direction to make this happen, with the intent of it being front and centre rather than buried in some separate form, then that's direction to the bureaucracy to make it happen.
I would rather that it happen properly than have it happen with limited impact. I think that's really the trade-off we're looking at here.
My understanding from Mr. Webber of the spirit of the bill is to incent as many Canadians as possible to think about making this decision and actually do it. I don't think that having assistance in a tax form is going to somehow remove consent. When you submit your tax return, even if you have assistance preparing it, you're still obligated as an individual to review that information and sign off on it that it's truthful and that you've disclosed everything. You are involved in informed consent in the submission of a tax form to begin with, so I think that's a bit of a false argument.
I think what's happening here is that perhaps the bureaucracy has given advice to the government that might make it easier for them to implement this, but in doing so it takes away the spirit and intent of the legislation. I don't think we can support the amendment while simultaneously supporting the spirit of the legislation, which is why I think we shouldn't support it.
With regard to the issue of provincial jurisdiction, in no way does the amendment remove the obligation to work with the provinces to make this acceptable within their jurisdiction. Again, I think that's been a bit of a false presentation; this would still have to happen. At this point, the time period to get that done is really a matter of the minister giving direction and overseeing the bureaucrats to make this happen between the provinces and the federal government. It's more of a matter of political will and efficiency within the bureaucracy than necessarily....
What I'm trying to say is that a statement that this is going to take years to happen is really a timeline being given by the bureaucracy, rather than political will or direction. I would like to think that, on an issue that's this urgent and that could save this many lives, we would see more political will.
The last thing is that I think the parliamentary secretary said that Nova Scotia had opted out. That's not correct. I believe they're moving to presumed consent, which is different from what was characterized.
I implore my colleagues, especially those from the Liberal Party, particularly Mr. Van Bynen. I think it's more important that we support the spirit of the legislation rather than the pedantry of a proposed implementation approach. This amendment would, I think, in effect neuter the spirit of the bill. I urge my colleagues that we can respect provincial jurisdiction, we can give direction to the minister and to the bureaucracy to make this happen within the spirit that it's being proposed, and we can actually do something that's going to save lives.
I strongly want to reiterate what my colleague Mr. Webber said about having this buried as a supplementary form in the back. The whole purpose of this bill is to have it up front so that people think about this and make a decision that could save lives. Having a form at the back might make the lives of a few bureaucrats a little easier, but I would rather that we, as Parliament, give direction to the government and to the bureaucracy to make this happen in a way that will actually save Canadian lives, rather than just put together a form.
Thank you.