Thank you, Madam Chair.
Ms. Chambers, thank you for being with us this afternoon. Since I don't have a lot of time, I'll get straight to the point.
Regarding the article that our colleague Ms. LaRouche mentioned, I read it this morning and found the statistics it provides spine-chilling. It also suggests an interesting angle on which I'd like to get your opinion. The article reads as follows: “To take action upstream, Quebec could also draw on Clare's Law, under which it would be possible lift the veil on the past of one's spouse.” That British law was enacted following a murder in the United Kingdom.
The article also mentions that staff at shelters in the regions, in particular, have realized that women often fall victim to the same man.
Some Canadian provinces have enacted a version of Clare's Law in order to obtain information on a violent man. That's the case, for example, of Alberta, Manitoba, Newfoundland and Labrador and Saskatchewan. It's not the case of Quebec, however. Have you heard about that, and what you think about it?