Thank you very much, Ms. Lynch, for attending.
I want you to know that my concern is with the principles involved, not with the particular personalities. I'm also grateful to hear the suggestions that surface from time to time from you regarding potential reform and amendment.
I want to begin with your comment that ordinary Canadians do not have to fear. I'd like you to adjust your mindset just a bit, because when I go door to door and I hear about this issue, as I have, I don't regard it as Canadians expressing fear to me. However, I do regard it as Canadians expressing to me a very fierce affection for freedom of expression, and I'm sure you would agree that's a good thing. You correctly put your finger on the issue before us, which is how to balance the limitation of freedom of expression with other concerns.
The difficulty I'm having is that while we may say that the Human Rights Code is not a penal statute or punitive in nature, in fact the consequences of findings under the code are quite punitive at times, ranging at the present time from fines to compensation to lifetime bans on expression. I come from that approach. And having been involved in the judicial system for almost thirty years, I know it makes mistakes, even though we have all kinds of safeguards to protect accused persons: we have a right to counsel, we have rules against hearsay, we have high burdens of proof on prosecutors, we have provisions that are quite tightly defined, we have legal aid, and even with all those safeguards the judicial system makes mistakes.
I think what causes my constituents concern is that their freedom of expression doesn't have those safeguards before the tribunal. It doesn't have those safeguards when it comes to the commission deciding who will be prosecuted or who will not and who will be aided.
For example, when you say that costs should be awarded only in exceptional circumstances, I say to myself, if my right to freedom of expression has been unjustly challenged and I succeed in affirming it, why shouldn't I have costs in every case? Do you think we could make recommendations that would safeguard freedom of expression and the interests of freedom of expression in the tribunal and the commission processes?
Thank you.