Okay, thank you, Mr. Chairperson.
Thank you everyone for the opportunity to comment on Bill C-14.
My comments are going to be brief and focused on the bill. I've already spoken in front of the joint committee, and I initiated some private members' bills in the previous Parliament on this issue. I've also written a book called Master of My Fate on the parliamentary process.
I would like to first of all commend everyone involved. This is a difficult issue. There are some very good things in the bill. I found in many ways that it mirrored the private members' bills that I had introduced. This includes the provisions around making sure that people who may have a vested interest in the demise of an individual are not involved in the decision-making process. I encourage you to keep that in the bill. It's not an amendment; it's a thumbs-up for what is there.
I would also say that on the age of consent at 18, the bill is probably realistic at this time.
I think, though, that we need to collect empirical data over the next few years to find out where the demands and the needs are, and why people would request a physician-assisted death, by having a mandated parliamentary report that is public, with empirical data. It could perhaps be funded through the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. In order to make good public policy, you need good empirical data, especially on such a difficult issue as this.
Now, on the amendments, the Supreme Court was very clear that sections 241 and 14 of the Criminal Code unjustifiably infringe on section 7 of the charter and are of no force or effect at this time. Moreover, the Supreme Court made it very clear that the prohibition for physician-assisted death for a competent person “who...clearly consents to the termination of life and...has a grievous and irremediable medical condition (including an illness, disease, or disability) that causes enduring suffering that it is intolerable to that individual in circumstances” that they find themselves in....
The bill clearly is not consistent with the Supreme Court decision on the issue of terminal illness and that you have to be on a trajectory of end of life in order to take advantage of one's charter rights. I can understand, politically, why this was done, but it is quite frankly something that will go to the courts, and it will be changed to what the Supreme Court says. You cannot deny someone their charter rights because they happen to have a disability that may last 40 years, or an illness that goes on forever.
There are unfortunately many such situations that exist, such as ALS. There's also MS or stroke victims. There are many permutations of illness, and by saying that they have to be on a death spiral essentially denies them their charter rights.
The other comment I would have is on proposed paragraph 241(b). It's not clear to me that someone would be made aware of all their charter rights, including physician-assisted death. It seems to say that, if you raise it with someone, you are in deep trouble. I think people would like to know the entire range of options is available to them, including physician-assisted death in some cases. It seems to forbid medical practitioners from expressing that—or anyone else for that matter.
Regarding advance consent, I think this should be part of the mandate of whatever you decide to do for the future. It may be a bridge too far this time around. We've come a long way in a couple of years, but I can understand the challenges with that. But again, if someone has dementia or something happens to them in the future, why can they not state what their preferences are before they lose their cognitive ability? There's nothing in the Supreme Court decision that would prevent that.
Finally, there's been a lot of drama around the Supreme Court decision in the last year, and people are trying to weave their way through a difficult legislative process. I very much get the challenges that you have as MPs, but at the end of the day, it's all going to come back to what the Supreme Court has said.
Committee, without the amendments, particularly in proposed section 241, you're going to have to decide if you are going to force people who are disabled or have a disability or illness to go to the Supreme Court to exercise their charter rights or if you accept what is inevitable and just replace the wording with what the Supreme Court said in the first place.
I'd like to thank everyone for the opportunity to be here today. Of course we always have to realize that offering more resources for people is important, but sometimes all the resources in the world don't make a difference or can't make a difference, and people are suffering every day. We need to be empathetic to those people.
Thank you very much.