Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I will be sharing my time with Mr. Picard.
My thanks to the witnesses for being here. It is very interesting and it is a fine document. This will be my “bible” for the weekend. I will try to come to grips with it and have it at my fingertips.
When we began the study on Air Canada, I was fairly impartial. I wanted to know all the ins and outs of Air Canada. However, I still remember the appearance of the president and CEO and his way of looking at things, which I would call cavalier and unconcerned about the seriousness of the complaints. That's the image that stayed with me.
I followed on the website the adventures of Mr. Thibodeau, one of the complainants challenged by Air Canada. He took up the challenge. I heard a lot of evidence. In addition, last week or the week before, Transport Canada officials basically told us that Air Canada was pressing hard to remove the requirement of compliance with the official languages. That was my understanding. I may have misunderstood, but frankly, my opinion is starting to be tainted by Air Canada's goodwill, or lack thereof, to fully comply with the Official Languages Act.
I do understand, however, that the number of complaints—as Air Canada put it—should be put in context: how many passengers are there and how many complaints are there? There are a lot of passengers, there are thousands and thousands of passengers a year, but the number of complaints is much lower.
In spite of that, I very much appreciate your suggestions for deterrents. Coercively, we are trying to force someone to honour their commitments, agreement or contract. These disincentives are truly interesting. There are four of them and a mix of the four would also be perfect.
I do not have an opinion on the order of precedence, but have you considered the possibility that, if administrative monetary penalties were imposed on Air Canada, the costs incurred by the complainants would be reimbursed? In any case, for complainants, it is complicated to complain. I was a lawyer, and justice is often very just, for those who can afford it.
To file a complaint from New Brunswick, Cape Breton, Vancouver or northern Saskatchewan, you have to go through the federal courts. That is a significant cost. It is probably included in the administrative monetary penalties.