Thank you very much, Commissioner, for coming this afternoon. I'm going to start by making a couple of statements and then soliciting a response to a few questions that I'll be posing to you.
First I want you to know that I was a proud member of the Ontario Provincial Police for over 30 years, and I'm even more fiercely proud of the men and women who go to work every day for the RCMP and do their job free of any political influence, probably not knowing a lot about what goes on in this place, except that they know they have a job to do and they're going to go out and do the best job they can each and every day.
That's one of the challenges I've put on myself as a member of this government and as a member of this committee. Thank goodness we have the Brown report, which addresses many of the problems that I think are challenges to you and the RCMP every day.
My experience in a deployed police force is quite frankly that when changes occur at the top that are good, they rather quickly filter down to the bottom.
I also want to address one of the other issues that was brought up with regard to your not being a regular member of the RCMP and now being commissioner. I can recall again in my previous employ a commissioner who was not a member of the OPP and who did become commissioner of the Ontario Provincial Police and who faced some of the same questions you are faced with. Quite frankly, he is looked upon as one of the best commissioners ever in the Ontario Provincial Police. So whether or not you look at that as a compliment, I can assure you that it was meant as that. He did bring about a lot of changes because he had a slightly different perspective, but he also realized that he had a duty to respect the fact that he needed the help of those who were members.
I have one other comment, and I apologize if I'm on my soapbox, but quite frankly I think it needs to be said. I only hope that never would an RCMP officer, no matter what the rank is, be influenced by a politician or by a person's standing in the community when it comes down to the exercise of his or her duty. That would be the death knell to all police officers and all police organizations in this country.
So it doesn't matter when you are assigned an investigation, if the evidence leads you into an investigation, you do it at that time and you do it irrespective of what's going on around you and you do it in the best and the most professional manner.
I'd like to go back to the Brown report. I know that you and the Minister of Public Safety are looking at that report. I am wondering if you could expand on any of the issues that are solely the responsibility of the RCMP, changes that you envisage taking or that you may be commencing that might be of assistance to the committee.