Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thank you, gentlemen, for coming here as witnesses.
For Mr. Griffin's edification, I was also a breath tech for many years and did many hundreds.
I'd like to say one thing. If I were ever charged with impaired driving, I'd like Mr. Rosenthal to defend me. I've been up before what we consider to be high-priced impaired driving specialists, and it's never the innocence or guilt of a person; it's the mechanics part of it. I suppose in a country like ours that's good, because the police are kept on their toes, etc.
To let folks know, when we discussed this at our last meeting on impaired driving, we had some witnesses, and the defence counsel brought up the antiquated devices police were using. I think they were referring to the Borkensteins and the fact that they had been in service since the 1940s or 1950s. My son was telling me he's taking the transition training on Intoxilyzers, but even if we get the newer Intoxilyzers, there are still many defences, so it doesn't really matter what science is brought forward. We can go to the hospital and out of one drop of blood, or a very small amount of blood, they can tell you what your blood alcohol content is. Nobody disputes that, because it may or may not save your life.
I really don't think anybody here seriously wants to reduce and make .05 the impaired driving limit. What we want to do is reduce the number of impaired drivers on the road, by education as one part, but as legislators by working with other legislators to bring into effect those programs that would adequately serve the purpose of reducing impaired driving. As I said before, people who are killed by impaired drivers don't have access to the charter. Their charter rights are finished. The victim's charter rights are finished.
Thank goodness we have a charter, but other countries don't have it and they're able to reduce impaired driving. I think if we look at best practices, I don't think people like Mr. Rosenthal would stand in the way if we, as legislators, tried to do things—and he's already challenged it—with being stopped at a RIDE program. Right now police officers do have to smell it coming out of the car. They have to stick their nose in your mouth, basically, to smell your breath and be subject to all the things you're carrying.
My question to you, Mr. Momy, to the Insurance Bureau, to the Canada Safety Council, and to the defence lawyers is this. Could you help us out here and give us your two top priorities? I like to deal with priorities, and perhaps you could voice quickly here the two top priorities in order of preference, with the first one being what we can do to improve the situation without having to overtax the system. I'm saying reasonable priorities—the ones that don't cost an arm and a leg. In this day and age, folks don't have a lot of money to put forward to their government to bring in thousands of police specialists. But we are going to increase the number of police officers.