We already have in the current Divorce Act a section that talks about the maximum contact with the parents. What we're seeing is that, when a parent obtains custody of the child, basically they start excommunicating the other parent, removing the other parent completely from the life of that child. Our courts are basically giving.... When it comes to enforcing the act, as you already know, what happens in all cases is that it takes a lot of fight in the court. We have several cases where.... In Ontario, one of the cases went to court 40 times. Eventually the judge said that was enough.
This will always escalate the fights about these issues. That means we don't have access enforcement. We have child support enforcement. When fathers come to court to ask about the issue of access to their children, it's not given the same weight as for child support. By the way, the mechanism that we're introducing into the Divorce Act to enforce child support is completely separate and different from when we want to maximize contact. With the equal parenting concept, parents are always going to be equal. This is the main starting point of this whole process.
We can assure everybody else about the issues of domestic violence and the issues of child abuse and matters like that. We want the court to protect children from that. We want the court to protect fathers. We want the court to protect mothers, as well, from those particular issues, so there's no fear about what they are going to face. Their concentration should always be on their children's interests, and equal shared parenting will provide that principle for them.