Mr. Speaker, within coming weeks the government will introduce measures that will deal with child support to improve the present system in three important ways.
The first will have to do with the method by which the amounts of child support are determined. At present that is left to the uncertain and expensive process of litigation. We will propose that such amounts be fixed by regulation on a statutory guideline or formula geared to income.
The second element has to do with the tax treatment of child support both in respect of the consequence for the payor and for the recipient. Since the budget of 1994, and indeed since the judgment of the Federal Court of Appeal in Thibaudeau a year ago, that has been a matter of both public consultation and careful consideration. We will be making the position of the government clear on the issue in the weeks ahead.
The third has to do with enforcement because the proper amount with the appropriate tax calculation is meaningless unless the order is actually paid.
I am working with my colleagues, the Minister of Human Resources Development, the Minister of Finance, the Minister of National Revenue and the Secretary of State for the Status of
Women. We will include in our proposals a national strategy for the enforcement of child support orders to ensure that those who are required to pay, support their children.