Mr. Speaker, I congratulate the members for Surrey North and Langley—Abbotsford for the leadership they have shown for so long on the issues of victims rights and justice. My hope is that the government will listen to the many eloquent suggestions they have been putting forth for a long time and that it will employ them.
Perhaps Bill C-79 is an example of the failure of the government to listen to what the opposition has been saying for so long. Many years ago the Liberals, not the current group but the previous group, decided to make a change in the way they dealt with justice. Their view was that no longer would the justice system be primarily responsible for or have as its primary goal the protection of innocent civilians. According to the Liberal government of late seventies-early eighties the primary role of the justice system was the rehabilitation of criminals. We want to change that around.
We in the Reform Party believe the primary role of the justice system is to protect innocent Canadians from being victimized. That is not to say we want to ignore those who commit crimes. Far from it. The member for Elk Island eloquently mentioned the need for early prevention from the time a person is born.
I would suggest we need to work before that for some very pragmatic reasons. How do we do this? We are dealing with Bill C-79 and the issue of victims rights. Victims have rights and for too long those rights have been pushed down by a system that supports the rights of the condemned over the rights of the victims.
There are good parts in Bill C-79. There are parts about the right of the victim to put forward a victim impact statement and very importantly for the victim to have choice of whether or not to say it or to introduce it as a piece of paper. We applaud that as it is something the Reform Party has been pushing for, for a very long time.
We also want to see a way in which victims can know things about when the person who violated them is getting out of jail, where the person is going, and what conditions are being placed on the person. To my knowledge that simply is not happening right now.
Imagine rape victims finding out by chance or down the line that the person who violated them has been let out of jail. They do not know where the person is or where that person is going. They look over their shoulders hoping and praying the person is not after them.
This is the reality of the lives of many people who have been victimized and the government needs to change it. It needed to change it yesterday but having failed to do that it needs to change it now. Many times my colleagues, as well as members of the Liberal government and members of the other political parties, have presented constructive solutions to change this gross inequality in our justice system.
We also believe in the concept of restitution, that those who have committed a crime should do restitution to those who are victims. That would send a very clear message to the criminal that he or she we will have to pay the victim and society many times over the cost of the crime. The concept of restorative justice is a good one and one that we will support the government in pursuing when and if it chooses to do it.
The concept of protection of victims too is important. Right now we have a justice system that sentences people to a certain amount of time. Do the people serve that time? No, they do not. Not even for first degree murder do they serve the full sentence they are given. For everything but first degree murder people can be eligible for parole after serving one-sixth of their sentence. They are condemned, convicted of a serious offence such as attempted murder or rape, sentenced to 12 years, serve 2 years and released on parole.
What kind of message does that send to the criminal element? It says if they commit a crime they can get away with a minimal penalty. If we look at the two years that can be served in jail, the person who has been victimized will be paying the penalty of that and suffering long after two years are over. They will pay the price of their victimization long after the person who committed the crime is out on the street. What can we do? My colleagues have mentioned many constructive suggestions.
I will talk for a moment about the offender because therein lies a number of failures but also a number of opportunities to engage in some proactive issues. When I worked in jails I found that many of the people there had unfortunately not had treatment. The resources were not there to treat the underlying problems of why they were in jail in the first place. Their drug abuse and psychiatric and psychological problems were not being treated.
As a result we see a door that goes around and around with people being convicted, let out and convicted again. We do not break the cycle of crime, punishment and incarceration that condemns many people to a life that we would not want. I would argue that they do not want it either.
There are things we can do. I draw the attention of the minister to the fact that the people who are doing the psychiatric treatment and educational training are not getting the support they require.
Furthermore there is not an obligation on the part of criminals to engage in the activities that will prevent them from reoffending. They are essential but they are optional. We need to make it absolutely mandatory that if criminals ignore the required treatment for them to break the cycle of crime, punishment and incarceration, five-sixths of their sentences is not automatically removed on the basis of good behaviour to which they have not been committed.
We need a system where people will have their sentences reduced for good behaviour if they engage in good behaviour and not because it is automatic. They have to engage in the treatment required, the educational options to be employable when released, and the drug training and drug treatment programs that are necessary for them to break the cycle that contributed to their being in jail in the first place. Then they can have time knocked off for good behaviour, say a third of the sentence.
For heaven's sake, five-sixths of their sentence should not be knocked off just to have a revolving door and turf people out of jail because there is not enough room. If there is not enough room and a person is a danger to society, I guess we will have to build more prisons.
We also have to divide the prison population up into two groups: violent and non-violent. There is no way non-violent individuals, those who are not career criminals, should be stuck in with the violent criminals. Those who are not career criminals who made a mistake should have other options for serving their time. As I mentioned before, restitution is one of them. Treatment is another option that they have to engage in. Hopefully when they get out they will have kicked the drug habit, had the psychiatric help they required and be employable and functional members of society. Only then can we save our system a lot of money and also save other people from being victimized in the future.
We also need to look at the police. We saw recently a report from the exiting chief commissioner of police in Vancouver who lamented very clearly the fact that we have created a revolving door in our justice system. He despaired not only for himself, but more important for the men and women in uniform who serve and protect our communities. The police are being demoralized in part because they do not have the support of the justice system.
The justice system is not giving the penalty that is appropriate for the offence. As a result, the police wonder why they are putting all their work and effort into getting a conviction when the justice system is not giving the penalty. Many career criminals think it is a joke for obvious reasons. That has to change.
We have to support the police as they support us and that includes that the justice system attach the penalty that fits the crime. If you commit a violent offence, if you are a repeat offender, then you are going to meet the full force of the law. For others, there are different options.
The RCMP do not have the resources to do the job. They had to close down their training facility. They do not have the money for overtime to engage in the prosecution. They do not have the helicopters they require. They cannot even fix their patrol cars because there is not enough money. How can we have a justice system when we cannot support it?
Justice does not come unless we have a police force to support it. If we do not have a police force, then we approach anarchy. Nobody in the House, no law-abiding citizen in the country wants anarchy.
The hands of the police are tied on how to deal with organized crime. Organized crime is massive in this country. The police lament that the government has not given them the legislative tools to deal with organized crime, which has a huge penalty for our entire country. We need to do that. We need to give police those tools.
Let us look at what has happened historically in the amount of time that is required to achieve a conviction. The amount of work police officers have to put in is far greater than what they had to do 10 years ago because of the hoops and the loops the government has put in their way. We do not want sloppy police work, but we want to give the police the ability to do their job. Why put in numerous unnecessary bureaucratic hurdles?
I challenge the Minister of Justice to look at the justice system, look at the hoops the police have to go through. Remove the unnecessary hoops and keep those that are necessary for the rule of law to be upheld.
My colleague from Elk Island articulated the issue of prevention very clearly. A few weeks ago I was working as a physician and I came across a patient I had seen in the past. She was one of three girls I had treated in the past. She was the last one that I had seen recently.
She was 13 years old when she was put on the street by her mother to prostitute to get the money to pay for her mother's drug abuse habit. I was quite surprised that she was alive. I did not expect her to be alive because I had seen her a few years ago. She came into where I was working with track marks up both arms, some were infected and some were not.
The life she has been living is remarkable. It is a life that nobody in the House would want for anybody. She has been engaging in a great deal prostitution in part to support her mother's drug habit, but also to support her own. Like many other drug abusers she is spending between $200 and $500 a day on drugs. I asked how she was getting the money when she was unemployed. Prostitution and other criminal activities such as break and enter is the price society pays.
This situation did not materialize for this little girl as a 13 year old. She came from a tragic environment. I had met her two other friends a few years ago. I saw treated them in jail. They were 14 and 15 years old at the time. They had already been on the streets prostituting for a while. They were IV drug abusers. After examining them both I told them they would not see their 19th birthday. They laughed and giggled and said they did not really care because they were having fun. I was wrong.
I was reading the newspaper a couple of years after and one of the girls had been found dead on the side of a lonely road, murdered while engaging in another trick. A year after that I found her friend. I was walking through a pediatric ward and I saw her there. She had had a massive stroke in her teenage years from shooting up with IV cocaine. This is not uncommon.
If we examine the history of these girls and many of the people in jails, both adults and juveniles, we see a history oftentimes marred by improper nutrition, violent sexual abuse, and the witnessing of violence.
In up to 50% of the cases in adult jails, many of the people suffer from fetal alcohol syndrome or fetal alcohol effects. It is the leading cause of preventable brain damage in our country today. It is a silent epidemic.
The average IQ of these people is 68. They have a great deal of difficulty with cognitive functions and basic processing in their brain. When they attend school they cannot function properly because their brain is irreversibly damaged. There is no going back. They become isolated within school and act up. They engage in behaviour that puts them at the periphery of society. As they get older they often but not always engage in illegal activities. Then they end up in front of our justice system.
What if we could prevent that? What if we could prevent that person from having brain damage? We can and need to do it. We must do it. No longer can the epidemic of fetal alcohol syndrome be buried under the carpet and considered as something that affects people out there. It involves whole communities.
I remember flying in a chopper last year to an aboriginal reserve to do a clinic. I would venture to say that perhaps 25% of the people I saw were suffering from fetal alcohol syndrome or fetal alcohol effects. One-quarter of the people on the reserve had it. That is a guess but that is approximately the number of people I saw.
These people can never engage in being cognitive, interactive people in society. It is very difficult for them to do that. How do we prevent it?
The Minister of Labour and her husband started the Moncton Headstart Program in 1972. It was a leader in its field. Essentially they wondered how they could prevent children from running afoul of the law. How could they make them the best citizens possible? How could they change the course of their lives from what their parents had, which perhaps had been a life of crime, a life of poverty? How could they put them on a level playing field with others?
Essentially they worked with prevention. The parents and the children were brought together to strengthen the bond. Bad parents were taught how to be good parents. They were taught simple things such as disciplining a child. They were taught proper nutrition and the fact that a can of coke and a bag of potato chips is not good nutrition. The parents were taught how to engage in proper discipline, how to set boundaries, how to be a good parent.
We recently saw reports in the newspapers about studies that had been done. These studies looked at 1,600 random samplings of parents. Nearly 70% of those parents did not know the basics of good parenting. Seventy per cent across a wide spectrum of socioeconomic groups did not know how to be good parents. This may seem subtle but the impact on the future of our society can be dramatic.
The Moncton Headstart Program has been profoundly effective at reducing teenage crime rates, teen pregnancies and keeping kids in school longer with less dependence on welfare. There is a $6 to $7 saving for every dollar invested.
The same held true in the Perry Preschool program in Ypsilanti, Michigan and the Hawaii headstart program. The Hawaii headstart program used trained volunteers to work with families and saw a 99% drop in child abuse rates. The findings in Moncton were shown again in the Michigan program which has a 30 year track record of early intervention.
We have been trying to get the human resources development subcommittee to deal with this issue. It is studying children at risk right now. Let us look at implementing a national headstart program using existing resources. Have the feds take the leadership role by working with the provinces to prevent these things from occurring. There is a track record of prevention. There are pragmatic doable solutions which we can employ now. What a great thing if the House could do that for the children of this country. We can and must do it for all the children.
I asked that the House pass a motion calling for a national headstart program last year. I implore the minister to work with her provincial counterparts to deal with this. I implore the subcommittee chairman to deal with this.
Together we will be able to build a program, not just for the poor at risk, but for all parents. This cuts across socioeconomic grounds. Even children from affluent neighbourhoods and affluent households who are latchkey kids and who do not have appropriate parenting need the love, care and security that all children require. As we all know money and material things are no substitute for love, care and security and a secure home.