Thank you very much, Mr. Dechert. I know that you and many members of this committee took part in the consultation and in the formulation of the bill itself.
This was one of the glaring shortcomings, if I could put it that way: basic information for the victim was sometimes missing. It caused a profound sense of exaggerated harm, uncertainty, and anxiety, particularly when court dates were changed and no explanation was given, or, as I spoke of earlier, an offender may have been released into the community without proper notice.
In many cases I truly believe this is never done with any sense of malice or even out of error. There is sometimes a genuine disconnect; one department or one individual may think that somebody else has already informed the victim. We heard this often during the consultation: the police thought the crown had informed them, or the crown thought victims services had done so.
I believe this bill will clarify people's roles, bring about greater certainty of responsibility in the sharing of information, and to the greatest extent possible, provide victims with the firm understanding of the guarantee to the information they're entitled to. That information can now include such things as court orders of restitution; court orders of the conditions that attach to the offender upon release, for example, in a bail hearing; a picture, a recent photograph, a recent image, of the individuals if they had been incarcerated for some time; information, in some cases, where the victim is registered with corrections and conditional release, about how the offenders have responded to treatment or whether they have expressed remorse. These are sometimes things of great importance to the victims, to know how the offenders have responded or whether they have sought treatment, whether they have demonstrated an effort to rehabilitate themselves.
This bill sets out to the greatest extent possible what information should and must be available to the victims upon their request.