Thank you, Chair.
I want to thank both these witnesses for being here today, but I also want to thank them for their work back in 2021 on Build Back Better, fighting that legislation in the U.S. to make sure we still have an auto sector here in Canada worth talking about.
If it weren't for their hard work...and I know you were a key member, Mr. Volpe, in making sure the government was aware of what was actually going on down there.
I know you did a lot of work in Washington, too, Mr. Kingston, so I just want to make sure you get patted on the back and get the credit you deserve.
Mr. Kingston, you talked about new technology. I bought a new truck about a year ago. About six months later I went into Saskatoon and I thought I'd start my new truck in the parking lot so it would be nice and warm when I got into it. On my app it said that it had a couple of flat tires; that sucked, it was a new truck. I went out to the parking lot to see the new truck, and the tires were good, but it had not started. What in the world was going on? I looked on the app and it was my old truck in Redwood Falls, Minnesota, that had just started up and had two flat tires.
That's an example of how technology really can't be trusted necessarily, no matter how good it is, to alleviate that, and you've talked about this many times. Maybe AI will improve that. There are always new technologies.
It comes back to what is happening in regard to Canada being the place where these thefts are happening versus other jurisdictions around the world, and it has to come back to the legal system.
We've heard Alistair talk about that capacity in the legal system, but it seems like the judges don't want to exercise their ability to actually put in harsher sentences, especially with repeat offenders. I don't think anybody wants to go after somebody who just went out for a joyride and they're 16 years old—we don't want to destroy their lives over that—but with somebody who is part of a gang that's been doing this over and over again, you definitely want to make sure they don't do it again.
Do you see that happening here in Canada, in different areas of jurisdiction, where maybe one area is more severe and the judge is actually clamping down on this versus other areas of Canada?