Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'm very pleased to be here with all of you, with Minister Blaney and our officials, to discuss the government's respect for communities act, a bill that protects and ensures public health and public safety in our communities.
Before I begin in earnest, I want to say that our thoughts and prayers remain with the family and friends of Corporal Nathan Cirillo of the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders of Canada. Likewise, of course, our thoughts and prayers remain with the family and friends of Warrant Officer Patrice Vincent, who was killed by an ISIL-inspired terrorist.
Last week's events, which unfolded in parts of these very halls, were a grim reminder that Canada is not immune to these types of attacks that we've seen elsewhere around the world. I've been very moved to see Canadians pulling together with the kind of firm solidarity that has seen our country through many challenges. Together, I know we will remain vigilant against those at home or abroad who would wish to harm us.
Mr. Chair, I'll turn to the business before us today, which is the respect for communities act. It strengthens Canada's drug control framework, codifying the factors laid out by the Supreme Court of Canada. Our government takes very seriously the harm caused by dangerous and addictive drugs. These drugs tear families apart, they promote criminal behaviour, and they destroy lives. They make our streets less safe, and have harmful impacts on our communities. Indeed, the level of drug use in Canada remains concerning. Amongst youth it is still far too common. The ripple effects of drug abuse are being felt throughout our society.
Our government is taking action to address these problems, through the respect for communities act, to protect the health and safety of Canadians and the communities in which they live. This legislation was not prepared overnight or on a whim. This bill was drafted to specifically codify a detailed ruling by the Supreme Court of Canada in September 2011 on a supervised injection site. In this ruling, the Supreme Court was crystal clear. They ordered that I, in my capacity as Minister of Health, must consider specific factors when reviewing applications that grant exemptions from Canada's drug laws allowing for such sites.
I do not have an option to ignore these factors. Those factors are included in this legislation, and are as follows:
...evidence, if any, on the impact of such a facility on crime rates, the local conditions indicating a need for such a...site, the regulatory structure in place to support the facility, the resources available to support its maintenance, and expressions of community support or opposition.
I feel, Mr. Chair, that the last point is particularly important. Our government sincerely believes, and the Supreme Court agrees, that communities deserve a say when there is a proposal to build a supervised injection site.
The court wrote that their ruling was:
...not a licence for injection drug users to possess drugs wherever and whenever they wish. Nor is it an invitation for anyone who so chooses to open a facility for drug use under the banner of a “safe [consumption] facility”.
Our government respects this ruling by the highest court in the land. It with that in mind we are moving forward with the respect for communities act. This bill amends the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, which is Canada's federal drug control statute. It has a dual purpose: the protection of public health and the protection of public safety.
While prohibitive in nature, it also provides for exemptions for the legitimate use of controlled substances and their precursors. Exemptions are currently prescribed as being for medical or scientific purposes or otherwise in the public interest. It's one of my roles to sign off on these exemptions as Minister of Health. Exemptions that I see most often are for use in clinical trials, research in universities involving controlled substances, or for delivering aid in other countries. In all of those examples, the activities being exempted from the provisions of the act involve controlled substances accessed through a legal source. Exemptions of this sort, involving activities where controlled substances are accessed through a legal source, account for almost all of the exemptions that are being granted.
This bill's provisions begin where we see requests for exemptions of a different sort—to allow for activities with controlled substances that have been obtained through illegal sources. The serious risks associated with these substances are amplified when they are obtained from an illicit source, as all of us agree that these substances are dangerous and produced in uncontrolled environments. Given the severity of these risks, any application to undertake activities with these illicit substances needs to be assessed using rigorous criteria that include the factors directed by the Supreme Court that I mentioned earlier.
It's for this reason that the respect for communities act proposes to add a new section to the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act. This new section will deal specifically with applications for activities involving illicit substances, and includes a portion that is specific to supervised injection sites.
This bill sets out the information that an applicant seeking an exemption for activities involving illicit substances at a supervised injection site would be required to submit in advance to be considered for their application. Until all of the information required is provided, their application for an exemption relating to a supervised injection site would not be considered. This requirement ensures that I, as Minister of Health, can effectively carry out my responsibilities in weighing the merits of an application to establish a supervised injection site as ordered by the Supreme Court. The criteria included in this bill are based upon those factors dictated by the court.
One of the more important elements included, and the one that has led to the most debate, has been the Supreme Court requirement that expressions of community support or opposition should be considered. With this new legislation, applicants will have to seek input and local perspectives from provincial ministers responsible for health and public safety, the heads of local police forces, and the lead public health professionals in the province or territory, in the form of a letter outlining their opinion on the proposed activity. They will also be required to hold consultations with relevant professional licensing authorities in the province, and a broad range of community groups in the municipality. They will need to provide reports on these consultations, including summaries of the opinions that they heard, copies of any written submissions they received, and a description of any steps taken to address any relevant concerns that were raised during the consultation.
Our government recognizes the importance of consulting with relevant community groups about a proposed supervised injection site, and is pleased to follow through on a Supreme Court ruling in this regard. As I mentioned earlier, one of the main purposes of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act is the maintenance of public safety. This is achieved largely through minimizing the risk of diversion of controlled substances to illicit markets for use. This is being further enhanced through the respect for communities act's proposal for pre-inspection authority to allow Health Canada to verify that the information provided in the application is accurate and that all required measures are in place. In the event that an exemption of this nature is granted, the site would have to comply with clearly established terms and conditions, and would be subject to compliance inspections.
Given the inherent dangers of these substances, it's paramount that Health Canada be given the tools it needs to ensure the safety of these sites for both its staff and the community at large. As with any other exemption granted under this act, if the terms and conditions of an exemption are not being met, or if there are issues of non-compliance, the exemption can be revoked. By the same token, when exemptions granted under the provisions of the bill are set to expire, applications for extensions are provided for and criteria are set out. For the renewal of any exemption, the applicant would have to provide further information dating from the time of the first exemption, when the first exemption was granted, to the time of the most recent application. This information would then include details of any change in crime rates in the vicinity where the site is located, and information on any impacts that the activities at the site have had on individual or public health.
Given what we know about the risks associated with possession, use, and production of illicit substances, it's just common sense that exemptions to undertake activities with dangerous drugs should only be granted in exceptional circumstances once rigorous criteria have been addressed. This makes for good public policy that provides for the maintenance of public health, ensures public safety, and most of all respects our communities.
The Supreme Court has directed that I must consider those five factors as set out in its decision. This bill sets out the way in which we will accomplish that. Our government is taking action to ensure that the proper tools are available to do just that. This new approach will bring greater clarity and transparency to the way in which I, and future ministers of health, assess applications to establish supervised injection sites. The proposed approach also provides the legislative structure needed to properly address public health and safety concerns, but most importantly it allows the public and the community to have a voice in the process.
Just to wrap up, Mr. Chair, the respect for communities act is an important and necessary element in our government's commitment to address dangerous and illicit drug use. It complements our government's national anti-drug strategy, and provides for an application process that respects our communities. I encourage members of this committee to consider carefully the provisions of the respect for communities act and its genesis in the Supreme Court's 2011 ruling.
The Supreme Court has been very clear in what my responsibilities as Minister of Health are. I believe that the respect for communities act provides the tools necessary so that our government can comply with these rulings.
Just on a final note, Mr. Chair, we believe the communities deserve to have their voices heard in these considerations and these consultations and that public health must remain a priority so that our streets are kept safe.
Thank you.