Good morning, and thank you for giving me the opportunity to speak today. Allow me to introduce myself. I am the department head responsible for administering the Youth Criminal Justice Act, the YCJA, at the Centres jeunesse de l'Outaouais located just across the river, under the authority of the provincial director.
I have been working with young people and their families in the Outaouais for over 20 years. I have long experience in child protection and juvenile delinquency. Through direct intervention with young people and their families, I have been in a privileged position to observe the impacts of poverty, substance abuse, violence, all kinds of abuse and the distress and social exclusion that are often associated with the emergence of delinquency in our young people.
I am currently responsible for the YCJA department, which includes the team of probation officers responsible for all stages and avenues of treatment in young offender cases. I am also responsible for the custodial unit, which houses young offenders from the Outaouais who are sentenced to a specific term of custody or who are in pre-sentence custody at the Apprenti residence.
Representatives of the Association des centres jeunesse du Québec, the ACJQ, have already laid out the provincial position of the youth centres and provincial directors, the PDs. Obviously I support that position, but I am here before today to provide, I hope, some further information about that position by talking to you about the day to day experiences of young people and their families living in the Outaouais.
Let's talk about the position taken by the ACJQ and the PDs in Quebec. The ACJQ is sensitive to and empathetic toward victims, and they, like many experts, believe that the public is best protected by rehabilitating and reintegrating young people into society rather than by punishing them. The message sent by the present federal government is the opposite, and its effect is to create a false sense of security by implementing harsher measures. An information campaign would in fact have the advantage of promoting an informed message among the public based on the studies that have been done. Harsher sentences and an essentially punitive or deterrent approach have never been shown to be effective with young people.
The ACJQ and the PDs strongly oppose the desire to make denunciation and deterrence of unlawful behaviour in fact the primary objectives of sentencing. These are principles imported from the adult criminal justice system and transferred to the youth criminal justice system. To date, there is no evidence that harsher sentences have any deterrent effect on either young people or adults. The real effect of that approach would be that young people would be treated in a manner similar to adults.
Young people all have a sense of invulnerability. They share the perception that nothing can happen to them. This is a good characteristic, and leads to discoveries made during adolescence, but for some of them those discoveries take them down the wrong path. They have the impression that consequences only happen to other people. If a young person who is also a delinquent sees a peer getting arrested by the police, the limited reasoning ability and mistaken thought processes of an adolescent will persuade them that the other person was the victim of their own lack of skill, a mistake or simply bad luck, regardless of the seriousness of the consequences associated with the criminal act, because the young person believes that they will never get caught that way.
As well, the harsh maximum sentences introduced by successive amendments to youth criminal justice legislation are rarely applied by the courts. The case law, legal practice, assessments of young people's situations and protection factors identified by courts at all levels often mean that the judicial system shows a degree of clemency to young people. We believe this stems from the judicial system's recognition and consideration of the fact that a young person is, in fact, different from an adult, and is not fully formed, and that the sanctions imposed on them must be tailored to fit.
Rather than just come down hard on them, at the same time as protecting society, the goal is to offer the young offender an opportunity, through rehabilitation services, to acquire a prosocial lifestyle. Young people have to be held accountable for their actions. That means that measures must be taken that take into account their level of maturity, so that they understand the extent and impact of their actions, and alternatives to those behaviours.
We would also point out that serious and violent crimes, for which the federal government intends to toughen sentences, comprise only a tiny fraction of crimes committed by young people. Experience also shows that those young people are not necessarily on a distinctive path of criminal behaviour. Studies show, in fact, that they present a lower risk of recidivism after treatment, and their other offences are less violent, than young people who commit property offences.
In the Outaouais, last year, we offered services to nearly 900 young offenders, out of a population of 28,500 young people between the ages of 12 and 17 years.
A majority of requests were handled through diversion, outside the courts, with a success rate of nearly 95%. In cases where a sentence was imposed, for a total of about 274 young people, two thirds received probation with supervision, of which 15 involved intensive probation; 10 received suspended custodial sentences; and 33 received custodial sentences, that is, 33 young people were placed in the custody unit. It will be observed that 33 out of 28,500 is a minority.
Some of the young people in our secure custody unit at the Apprenti residence had received multiple short sentences, the average sentence being 30 days, because of sentencing criteria that limit the use of custodial sentences for young people who are on their first offences.
When we went from the YOA, the Young Offenders Act, to the YCJA, we lost opportunities for meaningful intervention and rehabilitation work with younger offenders, for whom crime is not yet a crystallized way of life. While we could previously intervene for a few months and guide the young person for a period that reflected their needs, access to longer sentences is available to us now only in late adolescence, for young people whose path is more often more firmly formed by then. It must be kept in mind that the centres, the custody units, in Quebec are first and foremost rehabilitation centres.
The law provides the tools that are needed for intervention, but access to those tools is limited, for example in terms of sentencing criteria that reserve access to the rehabilitation centre to young people who have committed more serious crimes, or multiple repeat offenders.
In 2009, in the Outaouais, no young person was sentenced for murder, attempted murder or serious sexual assault. All of the young people who occupied spaces in the custody unit for longer periods were repeat offenders whose crimes involved property or drug-related offences.
Based on scientific data and what the case law tells us, the ACJQ and the PDs are asking the federal government to preserve a separate criminal justice system for young people between the ages of 12 and 18 years. A young person who is still developing has different needs from adults, and intervention must therefore be appropriate. Only an intervention that takes into account, in addition to the nature and consequence of the offence, both what its meaning is to the young person and their individual needs is likely to bear fruit. It must be based on an assessment of the young person and their situation, to determine the measure most likely to succeed in rehabilitating them and consequently protecting society.
Young offenders nearly all have maturity levels below their age. The personalities of young offenders are not completely formed. Early intervention based on their individual needs is the key to effective intervention in this case.
In fact, the Supreme Court of Canada delivered an important judgment in 2008. It held that the provisions relating to the presumption of adult sentencing of young people and the presumption of publication were unconstitutional. The Court therefore acknowledged that because of their age, young people are more vulnerable, less mature and less capable of exercising moral judgment. That decision helps to explain the importance of distinguishing between the treatment of young people and the treatment of adults.
It is also proposed that the name of young people 14 years of age and over who are convicted of violent offences be made public. The age limit may vary from province to province, and so the legislation in force in Quebec would mean that this law would apply to young people 16 years of age and over.
On that point, the ACJQ and the PDs call for the identity of young people 14 years of age and over to continue to be protected, to guarantee that they can be rehabilitated and reintegrated into society and thus avoid the risk of recidivism. Labelling, perhaps even stigmatizing, these young people makes it more difficult to reintegrate them and for them to acquire prosocial behaviours. Long-term protection of the public will be jeopardized, since that measure could increase the risk of recidivism on the part of a young person who anticipated more limited opportunities for reintegration.
The ACJQ reminds us that Quebec is in the vanguard in the world and has the lowest crime rate in Canada. The Quebec model for rehabilitation has stood the test and has made an impression outside its borders. In the last few years, international delegations have been meeting with actors in the Quebec system in an effort to adapt this model of intervention to their countries. In 2009, in the Outaouais, we hosted delegations from South America, and we were invited to Jamaica to explain our system. We have a solid partnership with the academic community, who are also receive international requests.
The ACJQ and the PDs have always advocated a balance between protecting the public and rehabilitating young people. The government should invest in social services, particularly in concrete measures to reduce poverty; it should implement programs to integrate young people into the workforce and promote access to housing, instead of taking the path of punishment and toughening the laws.
We have experienced a population increase in our region, and so have had increased pressure to respond to all requests, without investment being made to support interventions with young offenders. In the last year, we have developed an intensive intervention program for cases at higher risk of recidivism, which are dealt with in their home setting. The program is a fine example of collaboration with the partners in the network, where each of them has agreed to contribute to provide a better response to our young people's needs and target their risk factors. The interventions deal with autonomy, employability, substance abuse, peer influence, victimization and management of their financial and legal situation.
The government should invest in measures like these, measures that have a direct impact on long-term protection of the public, through supervised and ongoing rehabilitation and social reintegration for our young people.