Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I have an opening statement. I'll try to be brief.
One thing I'd like to emphasize at the outset is that the board is an independent administrative tribunal. It doesn't engage in the broader policy questions.
I hope to give you an overview of the refugee appeal division, the legislation and how it would work, the implications in terms of cost and processing time, and to highlight for you some of the particular challenges the board might face if we were called upon today to implement the RAD.
As I indicated, the board is an independent administrative tribunal. I'm sure all of you know that one of its functions is to make determinations in matters of refugee status.
In 2006 the refugee protection division of the board made about 20,000 determinations. Of those, status was granted in about 9,300 cases, about 8,100 were rejected, and the remainder were either abandoned or withdrawn in the process.
The refugee appeal division would add a fourth division to the board--an entirely new organism. The function of this division in the legislation would be to provide for an appeal of an RPD decision. A claimant whose claim is rejected, or the minister in a case where status was granted, would have a right of appeal. The right of appeal does not exist for those individuals who the RPD has decided have abandoned or withdrawn their claims. It's restricted to decisions that are made on the merits of the case.
Like any appeal process, the RAD would serve two functions. One of them is to do justice in individual cases. The other one is a broader systemic function to promote consistency of decision-making at the RPD by providing guidance and direction.
The reason we want to put this forward is that sometimes there are misperceptions from comments in the media about the RAD. It's important to illustrate what it would not do. Number one, it's an appeal that would be decided on the facts of the case as they existed at the time the RPD made its decision. In other words, the RAD would not entertain any new evidence.
It's a paper process. The RAD would not conduct any oral hearings; it wouldn't hear testimony from individuals.
Finally, the RAD's sole function is to determine whether a person is a refugee. In other words, it would not include the functions of the pre-removal risk assessment, nor would it adjudicate on issues such as humanitarian and compassionate grounds for remaining in Canada.
When the RAD makes its determination, it can do one of three things: uphold the decision the RPD made, set it aside and substitute its own decision, or set aside the RPD decision and direct that the matter be heard again.
As Mr. Stevens pointed out in the previous testimony, the moment someone gets a negative decision from the RPD, they can seek leave of the Federal Court for judicial review under the legislation. If the RAD were implemented, a person could only access the Federal Court by first going through the RAD.
I would like to talk to you about the context at the time the RAD was deferred and the context today. When the implementation of the RAD was initially delayed, the volume of claims was at an all time high in the system, that is about 52,000 were waiting to be heard.
During this period of time, when the board worked to ensure the successful implementation of other reforms introduced in the new act, we also began...