I must admit I'm a bit perplexed by the debate that's going on. This amendment doesn't do anywhere near what I'm hearing both the government side and the officials are suggesting it does.
All it does is say to the government, to the Department of Human Resources, “I'm going to be released. I'm going to be released on this date.”
As I interpret this--Ms. Birba and Mr. La Salle and I disagree on this--and as I read proposed subsection 8(2.1) now, it only allows the prisoner to give notice after they're released. What we're trying to do on this side of the table is to be sure that this notice goes out earlier than that, at the time of the anticipated release, and the person is told this, in writing, by Corrections Canada. That's how the system works. They're told, in writing, by Corrections Canada this is the date they're going to be released.
What we want to do is to be assured that this time period is used by the department, so we put them on notice once we're told we're going to be released...or we're going to be releasing this person, if it's coming from the department. That's the only onus on the department. That's a role the department has now accepted they're going to do anyway.
All we're doing, from this side of the table, is saying that we want that in the statute. Because the agreement they have between the two departments now is just that, it's an agreement. It's subject to change at any time by agreement with the two parties. We're saying, as parliamentarians, we are imposing upon you the responsibility to give that notice if you're instructed to do so--remember, that's all it's doing--by the prisoner. That's the sole responsibility that Corrections Canada is going to have.
All of what Mr. La Salle is suggesting is that in terms of the personal information they need, they will continue to gather from the prisoner, or, if it's after release, from the prisoner who has now been released into the general community. All of that information will continue to come from that person. There is no onus being imposed here on Corrections Canada to provide that information by the amendments we're proposing. I just want to be very clear on that.
They will continue to do their job. The only point here is that they will start doing that work, I hope, which is what they're planning on doing, anyway--I'm just imposing that responsibility on them by this amendment--gathering that information before the person is released as opposed to after they're released, which is the way I interpret proposed subsection 8(2.1) now.