I'd like to move my motion.
All members of the committee are aware of my notice of motion from two days ago. I would ask the committee to adopt this motion:
That this committee recommends: That this House take note of the importance of the contribution that the ethnocultural communities make to the prevention of crime, social reintegration of offenders and rapid growth of safer communities and that it recognize the need to ensure every means and resource to allow police departments, the Correctional Service of Canada, the National Parole Board and the ethnocultural communities to respond better to the needs of the increasingly diversified offender and prison population. That the chair report the adoption of this motion to the House.
I would simply and quite briefly like to explain why I am moving this motion. Further to Mr. Ménard's motion, our committee examined the issues of crime and street gangs. We've heard from several experts, police officers and representatives of at least one cultural community which is a victim of street gangs itself. Mr. Harry Delva, from the Maison d'Haïti in Montreal, explained how they became experts in the matter and indicated that law enforcement, Correctional Service of Canada and the National Parole Board often call on them for their expertise.
However, the fact that ethnocultural communities are themselves part of the solution is not something that is necessarily recognized by our Parliament or our governments. Moreover, ethnocultural communities can and should participate in creating resources and solutions, and they should receive the means and resources necessary to do so.
Police experts were entirely in agreement with the recommendations made by the Maison d'Haïti representative. Before entering politics, I gained a great deal of experience working with cultural communities in the law enforcement field. If we really want to address the problems of crime in general, we need to have the communities involved.
So I would ask the members of the committee to adopt this motion. It does not specify an amount which the government should allocate, etc. It simply seeks to make sure that police departments, Correctional Service Canada, the National Parole Board and the ethnocultural communities are all part of the solution, and that they be given the resources and the means they need.
I would like to point out that there is a typo in the word ethnoculturelle in French: the "t" should be before the "h".