Thank you very much, Mr. Dykstra. I am pleased to comment on that.
To the extent we can make changes that help improve, as you say, the efficiencies of the courts, this is a good idea. It saves money, saves time, it makes our system work better. What happens is that we at the Department of Justice get these suggestions that are made to us and we try to put them together and put them into a bill like the one you have before you. This has been consistent with the practice over the years.
I was a member of this committee for nine years, and I believe on at least three or four different occasions we were given bills that had a look at anomalies, inefficiencies, and gaps in the existing legislation, and we tried to put it together. I can't speak for this bill, but certainly when I had the opportunity to look them over, they sometimes weren't always the most exciting or the most dramatic changes to the Criminal Code, but my view was that it was a necessary part of the legislative process to have a look at these things. I believe we can all take some satisfaction that it helps to improve the Criminal Code. These are generally welcomed by practitioners and people who are involved with our criminal justice system.
For the reasons you indicated, it's a step in the right direction on just what you said, the efficiencies to make the court system work a little better, and we all have a stake in that, quite frankly. A system that gets bogged down or moves more slowly and doesn't adequately protect people's rights or give them access to an expeditious hearing is a challenge for us, but we try to meet that, and certainly the bill that you have before you is a component of what we're trying to achieve.