Mr. Chair, through you to the honourable member, you're quite correct that Ontario and Quebec will not be as affected by these proposals as the other contracting provinces will, because the RCMP doesn't assume the role of the provincial police forces—the OPP or the Sûreté du Québec. Indeed it doesn't fulfill the role of the municipal police force, which it fulfills in some 200 municipalities and another 400 Indian reserves.
In terms of our being able to share information with the provincial ministers, I'm more concerned about those provinces in which the RCMP does act as a provincial force, for a very practical reason. There may be an issue in any province where the RCMP is the provincial force. A complaint can be made. We advise the RCMP. We advise the complainant. We advise the member. But we don't advise the minister who is going to be the one responsible for responding to the public. In my opinion, that's just not appropriate.
What we can do.... Let me give you an example of our ties with ministers. One of the authorities that is currently given to the commission is the power to initiate a review of a matter. Since I've been the acting chair, it has come to my attention and to the attention of the commission that it was certainly an issue in Nova Scotia, where an individual threatening suicide very tragically lost his own life in a confrontation with the RCMP. It did appear appropriate to institute an investigation into this matter. In that instance, as the complainant, we could communicate with the appropriate officials, but we cannot normally do so. That's a significant concern.