Thanks, Madam Chair. It's nice to see you in the chair.
Welcome back, everybody, and happy new year.
I understand my colleague's point that this has never been done before, but I think that there's an opportunity here for us as legislators to change the status quo. What I mean by that is that in my community, for example, domestic violence is considered an emergency, and we're seeing this across the country, so why wouldn't we want to create legislation that is proactive? We also know that we have violent offenders out on the street, that crime has increased 40%, that public safety is a massive issue for this country and that people don't feel safe.
To the official's point—and thank you for explaining everything; I appreciate it—you're saying “less restrictive”. I think we are not in a position right now to be less restrictive. We have crises across this country of women and children who are unsafe, so why wouldn't we take this bill? It has been laid out by a senator whose own daughter was murdered as a result of domestic violence, so we know the intention is not partisan. It comes from a place of genuine intent to protect those he couldn't, to create legislation that should have been there for his daughter but wasn't.
I understand that right now maybe we don't have peace bonds of more than 12 months for people, but why? If we are here as legislators to create a safer community, to create more safety for women, and we know that there is an epidemic, a crisis across this country, why wouldn't we use this opportunity, then, to change the legislation and set the bar? We can say, “We are the status of women committee, and we actually care.” Let's try this. If it doesn't work, we'll come back and revisit it, but clearly what we have right now doesn't work because people aren't safe.
That would be my question to everybody in the room. I know we care. Why not set a different standard that says, “Enough”?