Yes. Our piece was submitted in due time, and I understand it has been translated so that your committee will have it.
I'll make just a few remarks and give a broad overview, and then—I think the devil's always in the details—we'll leave it for the questions.
In our piece we try to put things in context. We feel there are trends at play that are accelerating and that will accelerate into the future, so it's very timely that Bill C-26 is being brought forward.
The history of public agents as opposed to private agents, which our association represents, is a very brief one, less than 200 years old. Policing used to be an entirely private affair, and in the last almost 200 years it's become largely a public affair. The public model of policing probably reached its high-water mark in the sixties. Since then there has been a slow but inexorable move back towards private elements coming into the model.
The security industry as we know it today has risen to be a very robust, very large industry that now outnumbers public agents, police officers, by at least two to one. That's the most conservative estimate you can get. Some analysts go as high as five to one or six to one. This indicates that there are very real problems with the fully public model of policing.
The financial crisis that started in 2008 brought this into high relief. There are large layoffs taking place in public policing departments in the U.S. In Canada, there are various groups looking at policing. The financial model of public policing is non-sustainable as it's presently constructed.
In the future we will see more, not less, private agents being involved in enforcement. The drivers that started this industry in the seventies are still very much there, and the conditions are set to make the private sector even more prominent in the future. So Bill C-26 is timely.
We would like to also bring in the notion of technology that is starting to permeate certainly the private sector, which is ahead of the public sector in the use of technology in enforcement. In our recommendations, we draw attention to the requirement that “find committing” an indictable offence, that private agents or citizens...and they're the same thing here, for these purposes. The “find committing” requirement must take into account the use of electronics.
Picture a large modern regional shopping centre with a Walmart-type store with tens of thousands of square feet. The security is enhanced and abetted by pervasive CCTV surveillance. Crimes are observed in their commission with “virtual eyes”, with agents sitting in control rooms watching people stuff their booster bags or their garments with high-value small items and then heading out of the establishment past the last point of sale.
As a practical matter, these agents have to communicate with their peers on the floor through radio or texting and direct them to effect the arrest of the shop thief as they exit the premises.
Similarly, in malls, in what sociologists call semi-public spaces, which would include large malls, there's all sorts of activity that takes place—a whole range of criminal activity—and, once again, CCTV is pervasive: to protect the public. So when you redraft the “find committing”, please take into account that technology gives us new ways to find committing. Those should be held in mind as you draft this.
Also, in regard to the requirement that a private agent or a citizen—it's the same thing for these purposes—turn over an arrested person within “a reasonable time”, or make the arrest within reasonable time with a “find committing” of the offence, we should also take into account, once again, electronic aids that allow us to track, whether it be, through RFID, articles that are being stolen from retail environments, or whether it be large containers or tractor-trailers that are being stolen from terminals, which we detect through GPS tracking. Often before an apprehension can be made by public or private agents, significant time has elapsed and jurisdictions have been crossed as the stolen equipment is followed. This should be taken into account as well.
As we point out, the drivers that are growing the private industry are not going to abate any time soon. To go back to the example of loss prevention people, who make on average many more arrests than public police officers do, they spend an awful lot of time holding arrestees and holding prisoners while waiting for fully sworn public officers to arrive—for what are for the most part very, very minor offences—and to charge and release these folks at the scene. If we were to allow private agent citizens, who were trained and certified to do so, to charge and release at the scene, like bylaw officers can write various provincial offences tickets, this would represent a massive saving in police time. I think the police establishment would be very grateful if this could be envisioned in any redrafting.
By and large, we support these changes. We think they're in the spirit of what's actually happening out there and what's going to be happening over the next 20 or 30 years.
Thank you.