Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Gentlemen, thanks for being here and sharing your views with us today.
I'd like to start with Mr. Caylor. You mentioned--and I took your point--that in order to properly prosecute white-collar crimes, the courts need more resources. The prosecutors need more resources. The investigators need more resources. We certainly think that is a priority the provinces should focus on. As you know, administration of the courts is their direct responsibility.
Since 2006 our government has increased the provincial transfer payments by $12.7 billion, and in fact in the 2010 budget we increased the transfer payments to the provinces by a further $2.4 billion. Part of the reason for that is to give them the resources to do these sorts of things, which obviously will require forensic accounting, and to give them more resources for the courts. As we've seen in Toronto and other places, these trials take a long time, and there are a lot of cases before the courts.
In addition to the financial assistance to the provinces to help them deal with the increased case burden, you may know that we've also introduced Bill C-53, the Fair and Efficient Criminal Trials Act. It's a list of a number of procedures that will assist judges and case managers to speed up the criminal trial process. There are 14 or 15 different specific procedures. I won't go through them in detail, but this strengthens case management, reduces duplication of processes, and improves general criminal procedures. Our hope is that this law, when passed, will make these kinds of trials more efficient when you're dealing with multiple and similar kinds of cases and a number of victims--for example, in a white-collar crime case involving many victims.
Hopefully, the combination of those things will address the issue you raised. Do you have any comments on Bill C-53?