Thank you very much.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and members. I am pleased to be appearing before you today alongside Commodore Geneviève Bernatchez, the judge advocate general. She does not like me to talk about this, but Commodore Bernatchez is the first woman ever to hold the position of judge advocate general in Canada. She was appointed in June 2018.
Before we begin, I'd like to thank Mr. Ferguson, Mr. Berthelette and their team for their hard work and insights on the administration of justice in the Canadian Armed Forces.
I also appreciate the committee's interest, and your contributions to enhancing military justice.
The military justice system is an important part of enforcing the high standards the Canadian Armed Forces hold themselves to.
An efficient and effective military justice system helps maintain discipline, efficiency and morale within the Canadian Armed Forces, which means that the Canadian Armed Forces is better prepared to defend Canada and Canadians at home or abroad in times of peace or conflict.
The Auditor General's report identified areas in the administration of our military justice system where we need to do better. We are committed to addressing them. We recognize that some of the Auditor General's observations reflect previous recommendations from other reports that were not fully actioned. We're acting on them now.
Commodore Bernatchez is implementing an action plan that ensures each of the Auditor General's recommendations is addressed and results in meaningful change.
This will allow the Canadian Armed Forces to strengthen the military justice system and ensure that the judge advocate general has proper oversight of that system. Today I will focus on what we've done in these areas so far and how we will continue to improve. I will keep these remarks short in order to leave more time for discussion.
The Auditor General identified a concern that some of our prosecutors and defence counsel have been rotating through their positions too quickly.
Commodore Bernatchez acted quickly to address this and has lengthened current postings to the recommended five years.
This will be the minimum duration for these positions from now on.
We also agree that the office of the JAG has not always had the information it needs to provide meaningful oversight of the military justice system. We appreciate the Auditor General's attention to this important point. We have been working on an electronic case management and monitoring system—namely, the justice administration information management system, or JAIMS—since 2017. JAIMS will track military justice files from the very first report of an alleged infraction through its investigation and the laying of charges to the trial disposition and review in both summary trial and court martial processes.
JAIMS will be used by key actors within the military justice system, including investigators, those laying charges, presiding officers, review and referral authorities, legal advisers, prosecutors and defence counsel. They will update JAIMS at each stage of the process so that files can be tracked in real time. JAIMS is nearing completion. We will begin pilot-testing it in early 2019. We are confident that this will improve the JAG's ability to oversee the military justice system and its administration.
We will also finish reviewing the time requirements for each stage of the military justice system early next year.
And we will establish clear new time standards, as the Auditor General recommended. These standards will respect the rules of fairness and legal requirements.
They will be incorporated into JAIMS so that key actors in the military justice system are prompted to move cases forward steadily. If anyone is unable to meet these time standards, the system will require that they provide reason for delay and they will tell us what has caused the delay so that we can figure out how to fix it.
These standards will also contribute to the timely disclosure of information to those charged with an offence, and these same time standards will be incorporated into the performance measurement system that we are developing. We will know when our standards are not met, and we will know why they were not met. That information will allow us to continue to improve the military justice system.
Because our work does not stop once we address Mr. Ferguson's recommendations.
We will continue to build on the excellent work that he and his team conducted with periodic, formal reviews of the military justice system.
We will act on the information that those reviews provide. The changes that we are making to how we manage our people, our communication and our case files will mean that the military justice system will be stronger. It will have appropriate oversight and will be responsive to the needs of the Canadian Armed Forces.
We look forward to discussing this in detail with you this afternoon, and we welcome your questions. Thank you.