There are a few things. The fact that we don't have a RAD now, eight years after it was passed, is a problem. It's been a problem for the last eight years, and it's been a problem before we even got the RAD.
Lack of an appeal continues to be an issue. The fact that this bill proposes to have it there for most is great, but the justification for denying access to a full appeal on the basis of a presumption of safety in a country, in our submission, is unfair. And it's unfair for a couple of reasons, of course. There is a combination of issues. There are multiple changes, and they all affect each other in this bill, particularly if we do have a situation where you've got an eight-day interview and a 60-day hearing.
Right now it's before a civil servant. We have no idea who that civil servant is going to be. Right now, the way the bill is drafted, as Mr. Showler and others have talked about, it could be a current PRRA officer, an enforcement officer, or anybody.
So if you're going to have civil servants who potentially work for the minister, or who actually do work for the minister, making that first decision, and they're making decisions about people their boss, the minister, has said are coming from countries that are safe, they are exactly the people who need an appeal to somebody who's impartial and protected from the minister, to a Governor in Council term-length appointee.
In my submission, it's backwards almost. That, again, is one of the problems we have with that proposal.