At the risk of wearing out yet another microphone, I'll add my further comments.
I thank Mr. McKay for his support.
Once again, Mr. Chair and colleagues across the way, the notion there's a problem with the grievance system didn't fall out of the sky. The former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada was given the task 10 years ago in 2003 to look into these matters, and he had a recommendation, number 74:
I recommend that going forward, there be a time limit of 12 months for a decision respecting a grievance from the date that a grievance is submitted to a commanding officer to the date of a decision by the Chief of Defence Staff or his delegate (under my proposed modified grievance system). This 12 month time limit would apply to all grievances, excepting those that must be personally adjudicated by the Chief of Defence Staff because they fall within the guidelines to be established by the Chief of Defence Staff.
This hasn't happened either.
If the one year time limit is not met, subject to the exception for grievances that the Chief of Defence Staff must personally adjudicate, a grievor should be entitled to apply to the Federal Court for such relief as that court may deem appropriate.
The exact words we're using here.
The grievor should also be entitled to his/her costs on a solicitor client basis, regardless of the outcome of the case.
Why would Chief Justice Lamer put that extraordinary remedy there, that particular part of which has been ruled out of order because of the need for a royal recommendation?
Okay. We accept that. If a royal recommendation is not forthcoming, it's not forthcoming. But why did Chief Justice Lamer put that in? You don't get your costs on a solicitor client basis unless you shouldn't have been in court in the first place, and the judge decides you shouldn't have to be there because you should have your matter decided.
Chief Justice Lamer saw that the system was so egregious to grievers who were trying to get their thing solved that he wanted to have this extraordinary remedy there.
Yes, there has been progress. Why? Because it's been so bloody embarrassing to the government and so necessary to try to come to a solution that efforts have been made and enough public and private complaints have been made about it, enough awareness of the morale problems caused to the ordinary enlisted men and women who try to serve this country to the best of their ability with bravery and sacrifice and all the things we're so proud of, that these people deserve, Chief Justice Lamer said, to have their grievances resolved in a reasonable period of time, which he said was 12 months.
If we can't put that into legislation and say that's a reasonable expectation for the men and women who join our forces, who serve their country, who risk their lives, who do all the things we ask of them, and they are put in a justice system that we have heard is for good reasons harsher than the civilian justice system, and we have all those legal parameters around them to control them, to discipline them, to make a cohesive force so they will do the job we ask of them, surely there's another side to this.
Surely there has to be a bargain here of some kind, a social bargain, a responsibility that okay, we're going to do this to you, we're going to expect you to obey orders without question, do the job we ask you to do, risk your lives, take it on the chin and do all this, but if you have a grievance, we're going to resolve it in 12 months one way or the other. You're not going to win them all. You might not like the result, but we'll have a result for you in 12 months. If we don't, you can knock on the door of a judge of the Federal Court, and he can make whatever order is deemed appropriate.
They don't make orders willy-nilly. They are not going to decide the grievance. They are going to make an order that it be dealt with. They are going to ask questions. And maybe the mere fact that this authority is here will speed up some matters that might be proceeding a little less quickly than they should.
It's not necessarily because matters are so complex they can't be dealt with in a year. We have our limitations here. You have to lay a charge within six months on a summary trial, and you have to be over with it in 12 months. These are hard numbers.
What's wrong with a hard number on a grievance? If there's a problem, then a judge is going to make an appropriate order. Go to the court. Convince the court that this is so complex it couldn't be dealt with within a year. But don't go to court and say, well, it was on the back burner along with 50 other recommendations because the guy who was supposed to deal with it had an accident and we didn't get around to replacing him. That's not a good reason.
If we're going to be taking this grievance procedure seriously and we're going to follow Mr. Justice Lamer's recommendation, which was made some many years ago now.... Let's assume that it might have caused some hardship five or six years ago. Whatever the circumstances were then, they're much better now. We're agreeing that some progress has been made. I don't know where we are; we haven't received any numbers. We're hearing vague generalities from the other side.
Justice Lamer could say when he made his report that 12 months was reasonable and facts should be put into law. And to the point that failure to deal with it would give an individual the right to go to Federal Court and get the military to pay for his lawyer, that's what it says. Getting your costs on a solicitor-client basis means that you hire a lawyer, go to court, and you will get an award from the judge that says “he shall”. That's what the recommendation was: the griever should be entitled to his cost on a solicitor-client basis regardless of the outcome of the case.
That was a pretty strong recommendation from Chief Justice Lamer, who wanted to ensure the military was going to take this process seriously. The hope would be that no one would ever go to court because that prohibition and that remedy would be enough to ensure grievances would be dealt with in a timely fashion. If that meant hiring more people or assigning more people to the role of resolving grievances, so be it.
What Chief Justice Lamer was saying was to put the resources in place: treat these things seriously; don't let them languish, and resolve them. That's all he was saying. We're not saying resolve them in favour of the griever. We're not saying that the grievers are always right because obviously they're not.
A grievance is simply a disagreement about whether you're entitled to a certain benefit or whether a certain rule applies or doesn't apply to you. These are sometimes complex matters, but that's what the grievance process is for. That's what the people are there to deal with. That's why they're assigned. That's why they have legal advice. That's why they have people with experience who can deal with these things. And there's no reason they can't be dealt with. Justice Lamer certainly felt there was no reason that they couldn't be dealt with within 12 months. He not only felt there was no reason, but that in fact it was an imperative for the purposes of maintaining morale and doing justice to the claims of individuals who have no right of representation.
You know, we put people in the military. People join the military. We had a dean of a law school who said you go into the military and you sign away certain rights. He went so far as to suggest that you sign away your charter rights. I don't think you do that. I don't think anybody signs away their charter rights in this country. I disagree with him on that.
One of the things you don't have access to in the military is a union. I practised law for 30 years, and I represented a lot of unions. I know how it works. You have the collective agreement. You have the right to a grievance process. It's in the control of the parties to decide who's going to be on an arbitration board. If you win your case, you can go to court and get it enforced if the employer doesn't pay. There is a process that ensures you can get your grievance heard and that you're going to get paid.
Now, we've just decided that we're not going to send a clear message that the CDS doesn't have the final authority. We didn't do that. We know we have a problem with that. We haven't solved it. We know we have a problem with grievances not being heard. We've had it since Justice Lamer made his recommendation. Can't we do something? Can we say to the men and women in uniform who work in the forces that if you have a grievance it's going to be resolved in 12 months, and if it's not, you can call us out on it?
It's essentially saying you have a right that it be resolved in 12 months. You don't have a union. You don't have the right to have a union. You can't collectively bargain. You can't go on strike. You can't withdraw your services. You have to obey your senior officers and all of that. But if you have a grievance, we're going to deal with it in 12 months. If we don't, then you can go to court and the judge will decide whether we're being reasonable and he can make whatever order is appropriate.
I don't think that's too much to ask for the people in the forces who are giving up the right to bargain collectively and do all those things that other citizens have the right to do.