Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I am wondering why, again today, we are arguing over the creation of the Refugee Appeal Division. The legislation was adopted in the House, not without difficulty. The process to implement the bill has not been easy.
There is one thing I find inconceivable. Despite the fact that the Canadian system of determining refugee status is a good one, we are less generous than the United States. That is quite hard to understand.
The committee heard from representatives of the Canadian Bar Association as well as retired judges, who claimed that the establishment of the Appeal Division would reduce the number of applications to the Federal Court to review claims that were rejected. Under the current process of determining refugee status, applicants who are turned down can ask the Federal Court to authorize a request for a judicial review. This authorization is granted in a proportionally small number of cases. That is why I would like you to give me that statistic.
In the event that such an authorization is granted, the judicial review of an IRB decision is more limited in scope than an appeal considered by the Appeal Division. I know that work was carried out to establish the Appeal Division. I would like to know how the process would unfold at the IRB.
It is important to know that an applicant did not need an authorization from the court to apply to the Appeal Division. Applicants who sent their requests to the Appeal Division had their cases reviewed. Of course, they could not submit new pieces of evidence, but their requests could be reviewed in-depth.
I did some research on the establishment of an appeal division at the Criminal Court, and the rationale is basically the same. However, I think that the basic principle of natural justice should be applied. It is quite normal to have an appeal division for decisions as important as whether to return an individual to another country.
Can you provide us with the costs of the Appeal Division? I have already requested those figures, but the request for distribution to the committee is probably still in the minister's office. I had asked for the current cost of the refugee determination process, from the moment an individual's application is rejected. What I basically want to know is how much it costs the Federal Court to review an application by a refugee who was turned down. I was expecting you to have those statistics, because we have asked for them on a number of occasions.
I have heard that the Appeal Division would cost $12 million to establish. That is a lot of money. Would the Appeal Division lead to savings elsewhere in the system?