Look, if you've been picked up for communicating or for whatever the new section will be called, then you do have the sword of Damocles hanging over your head. Are the police going to lay a charge if you don't give up information on somebody or on something else? I don't think that's a helpful way to deal with the issue.
Again, in Manitoba, not just our crown attorneys but also the Winnipeg Police Service and our other police services are very reluctant to lay charges in any circumstances, because they recognize the difference between sellers of sex and buyers of sex.
Looking at the Bedford decision, in my letter to Minister MacKay I quoted from the chief justice's comments, as follows:
As the application judge found, street prostitutes, with some exceptions, are a particularly marginalized population. Whether because of financial desperation, drug addictions, mental illness, or compulsion from pimps, they often have little choice but to sell their bodies for money. Realistically, while they may retain some minimal power of choice—that the Attorney General of Canada called “constrained choice”—these are not people who can be said to be truly “choosing” a risky line of business.
With those comments of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, if we don't amend this bill to remove those provisions, this will be a red flag for a challenge to this bill. I don't know if it will be successful or not. I think the chief justice, speaking for the court, has been pretty blunt about that. We think there are better ways to assist victims of sexual exploitation than to have the threat of criminal prosecution hanging over their heads.
Again, I do represent an area where unfortunately people do see street prostitution. I can tell you, from speaking with my constituents, taking off my Attorney General hat and putting on my hat as the member of the legislature for Minto, that the great majority of people in my area, I'm quite satisfied in saying, understand the need for a differential response and that the old law did not make sense. The provisions that were struck down in the Bedford case have some challenges. This is our chance to get it right. I don't think we do that by continuing to criminalize people who are the most vulnerable.