Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
First of all, to my colleague Mr. Hoback, let me say thank you very much for bringing this forward. This is a very timely piece of legislation. I don't know too many people in Canada who haven't been affected by impaired driving or who at least know somebody who has been affected by impaired driving.
I was hit by an impaired driver in October 1993. I was hit from behind by a gentleman driving a five-ton delivery truck. My head went through the back window of my pickup truck because I was launched into the intersection. I had stopped to let a little old lady cross the road. This individual had been counselled, as I found out after the fact, by defence lawyers. When I approached him and said that we needed to call the police to the scene, he wanted to simply pay for the damage to the truck and call it a wash. I could tell he was impaired at the time.
He fled the scene. He drove to the Transit Hotel in Edmonton, Alberta, and started consuming alcohol, thereby disrupting the chain of evidence. This is what happens with people who are experienced with respect to impaired driving laws. They know that they can be.... I think they are counselled by somebody who knows how to counsel them in that defence, and these are the kinds of things they do.
I am of the opinion that we should be adding a clause to the Criminal Code dealing with vehicular homicide. I know that we have other colleagues in the House of Commons who are thinking of looking at that kind of legislation. I'm wondering what your opinion is on supporting something like that. I could easily have been killed in that particular incident.
Insofar as your bill is concerned, the changes you're proposing here are obviously meant to bring more certainty and a sense of justice to the sentencing on these convictions, but are you at all concerned about the fact that sometimes we can't even get the convictions because some of the issues surrounding impaired driving are so difficult to prove and sometimes the evidence is so hard to prove in a court of law? It's one of the most onerous charges that a law enforcement officer, a police officer can.... It consumes your whole day and then some, especially when you get to court. Is this going to make the difference that you really expect it to make?