I thank the committee on behalf of the John Howard Society of Canada for the invitation to appear today. We appreciate the opportunity to meet with you to discuss Bill S-6.
In June 2010, I left with the clerk copies of our submission on the legislation presented to the Senate's Standing Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs. I made the same mistake as the Quebec bar, assuming that the submission would have been transferred over when the legislation moved.
There has been to date extensive and detailed discussion on the proposed legislation. As such, I will provide a brief opening statement.
The John Howard Society of Canada, as most of you know, is a non-profit organization whose mission is to promote effective, just, and humane responses to the causes and consequences of crime. The society has 65 front-line offices across the country delivering programs and services to support the safe reintegration of offenders into our communities.
The John Howard Society of Canada does not support this legislation. What we appear to have here is a proposed solution in search of a problem.
While the faint hope clause over the years has become synonymous with a claimed “soft on crime” approach, the data and our experience say otherwise. The faint hope clause, as you know, was introduced in 1976 as an offset to the abolition of capital punishment and the establishment of the 25-year minimum sentence without parole eligibility for first-degree murder convictions. Between 1961 and 1976, the average period of incarceration before conditional release was 15.8 years for those serving a sentence of capital murder. Currently, the average length of time served prior to conditional release is 28.4 years for first-degree murder convictions. How can this huge increase in time spent in federal penitentiaries, subsequent to the introduction of the faint hope clause, be portrayed as soft on crime?
The data also show, with regard to international comparisons with other western democracies, that the time spent in custody on first-degree murder convictions in Canada is double that of other jurisdictions. Again, where is the evidence of excessive leniency?
For those serving life sentences, the current process for obtaining a reduction in parole eligibility is rigorous. It includes reviews by a judge, a jury, and eventually the National Parole Board. The number of offenders applying under the provisions of the faint hope clause is low. According to the CSC figures—and they were adjusted somewhat today—1,062 offenders were eligible for review, yet only 174 applications had been received. These low numbers are evidence of an extremely limited self-selection process, resulting in very few, if any, frivolous applications coming forward. Those applications that are approved by a judge as having a reasonable prospect of success and which are then granted a reduction of time on eligibility by unanimous decision of a jury are, in the vast majority of cases, being granted conditional release by the National Parole Board.
So where is the problem with the current process that this legislation is attempting to address? Who within this process is being soft on crime: the judiciary, the juries, or the National Parole Board?
I would suggest the data clearly indicate that Canada, in comparison to other western democracies and our history prior to 1976, is in fact unreasonably tough on crime. Society is not well-served by long prison sentences. Legislation that increases the period of incarceration should not be accepted. This legislation is not an effective, just, or humane response to the reasonable management of life sentences. I recommend that the committee reject this legislation and turn its attention to a thorough review of how we as a country have moved from an average period of incarceration for those convicted of first-degree murder, from 15.8 years prior to 1976, to the current unreasonable 28.4 years.
I thank you for your attention and I look forward to your questions.