Thank you. I will be rather brief.
My bill arose out of a letter from a Vancouverite who doesn't live in my riding. His name is Howard Cummer. He happened to be a Canadian trade commissioner in Singapore in 1979. He had a son while posted abroad as an employee of the Government of Canada, and his son, when he contacted me, lived in Tokyo and had married a Japanese citizen.
It would have been the case that, if the son had children, the children would not be able to pass along Canadian citizenship to their children if they themselves were living abroad at the time of their children's births. So if Mr. Cummer's grandchild, who happened to be living in Tokyo, let's say, when he or she married, then had a child, that child wouldn't be a Canadian citizen.
I felt that was rather unfair. If we as government send people to serve Canada abroad, then we should extend to those Canadians the same rights as if they had been living in Canada at the time of the birth of their children. My bill was very brief and attempted to deal with that issue.
If you're interested, I can read to you a very brief letter that Harold Cummer sent me. I don't know the man. I've never met him; he simply corresponded with me. I felt this was very important. He says:I am writing to you to seek your help in amending Bill C37, An Act to amend the Citizenship Act, which became law on April 17, 2009, to eliminate the unintended consequences of the Bill on the children of Canadians born abroad. I know that the Bill was unanimously passed by Parliament to eliminate the transfer of citizenship to the children of 'sojourning' Canadians--who have no long-term or historical ties to Canada and who consider a Canadian passport only to be one of convenience. But the Bill cuts far too wide a swath! Take my family situation as an example. I was working in Singapore in 1979 as a Canadian Trade Commissioner when my son was born. We had to agree in writing that we would not claim Singapore citizenship for him in order for my wife to have a hospital bed. He is now 30 years old, married to a Japanese citizen and starting an internet bank in Tokyo. If he and his wife have a child in Tokyo then under the present rules of C37 that child will not be eligible for Canadian citizenship. My family came to Toronto from Pennsylvania in 1797 in the second wave of United Empire Loyalists. Their presence is recorded in the place names of Cummer Avenue, Old Cummer Station and Cummer Park and my ancestors are buried in the family graveyard on Yonge Street now tended by the North York Historical Society. The family has fought for Canada in every war since the War of 1812 and was part of the Upper Canada Rebellion with William Lyon Mackenzie in 1837.But my family history is short compared to my wife's family--the Dawes claim to have been in Newfoundland since 1508 and can be confirmed as having been there by land titles since 1595.Between the two sides of the family there is over 600 years of Canadian history and yet my grandchildren will not be Canadian if born outside of Canada to my children who were born abroad while I was serving Canada. This is flat out wrong! The bill needs to be amended so that grandchildren of Canadian diplomats, Canadian Armed Forces personnel, the employees of Ministries of Finance, Agriculture, Justice, CSIS—all branches of government within interests abroad—will not be penalized for their citizenship--if their grandparents were working abroad for Canada. I am contacting you now to see what can be done to limit the unforeseen impact of this bill and to make the amendments necessary to preserve citizenship where and when it should be preserved.--Howard Cummer.
That, I believe, made the case for my very brief amendment. I might tell you that I had a conversation with the minister, and then I met with the parliamentary secretary and the officials. They believe it had some adverse unintended consequences and they would actually make some amendments to the bill when it goes to clause-by-clause. I have consented to that process. I have looked at the amendments; they're fine with me.
That, essentially, is my role in this.