:
Ladies and gentlemen, this is the Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration, meeting number 15.
The orders of the day, pursuant to the order of reference of Wednesday, April 22, 2009, are that we consider Bill C-291, an act to amend the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, in particular the coming into force of sections 110, 111, and 171. This is a private member's bill of Monsieur St-Cyr.
We have before us ministry officials. The deputy minister is here, Richard Fadden, who has distributed his presentation to you. I will let him introduce his colleagues, if he wishes to.
Members, the procedure would be that Monsieur St-Cyr would start the proceedings for ten minutes and Mr. Fadden would continue for another ten minutes. Then we would have questions up until ten o'clock at most, when questions would end and we would start clause-by-clause consideration of the bill. If I don't hear any objection to that, it will be the procedure.
Monsieur St-Cyr, you have the floor.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I am pleased to examine the bill I have introduced, Bill .
At the outset, I would like to recall the text of the motion.
The Refugee Appeal Division is included in the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act;
Parliament has passed the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act and can therefore expect that it be implemented; and
The House of Commons and parliamentarians have a right to expect that the Government of Canada will honour its commitments;
The Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration requests that the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration implement the Refugee Appeal Division without delay.
That motion was unanimously agreed to by this committee, the House of Commons Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration, on December 14, 2004. Nearly five years ago, the four political parties around the table believed that the Refugee Appeal Division should be implemented without delay. I am convinced—and this is my greatest wish—that the same political parties meeting here today will consider that five years of waiting is much too long when they believe that something should be implemented without delay. Bill must be passed soon.
In the House, I have had occasion to name a number of organizations that formally supported this bill. I won't name them all again, but I would like to single out a number of organizations that themselves represent a number more, or that represent a number of people. They are as follows: Amnesty International, the Quebec Immigration Lawyers Association, the Barreau du Québec, the Canadian Bar Association, the Canadian Council for Refugees, the Fédération des femmes du Québec and the Table de concertation des organismes au service des personnes réfugiées et immigrantes.
Bill has received the widespread, not to say unanimous approval of the organizations involved in the advocacy of immigrant and refugee rights and from the legal community.
The reasons for this bill are very simple and can be divided into two categories. The first category concerns natural justice. The second is important for reasons of efficiency.
I'll start with the issue of natural justice. As you are no doubt aware, Mr. Chairman, in our Canadian legal system, it is still possible to appeal from court decisions. The same is true in the case of crimes and much less serious disputes, that is to say the consequences of which for individuals are much less significant than the consequences related to deportation to the country of origin of a person who seeks asylum in Canada because his life is in danger.
And yet there is currently no opportunity to file an appeal on the merits with the Refugee Appeal Division. These are decisions that may have serious consequences for the lives of individuals. These individuals may be sent to torture or even death. If provision is made for appeals to be instituted in cases where the lives of individuals are not threatened, it should be possible to do the same in these cases.
This is a matter of natural justice, and there must be an end to the arbitrary attitude that currently reigns. Arbitrariness arises in any organization composed of human beings. Human beings inevitably make mistakes and are not perfect. That is why our justice system provides for the possibility of appeal.
Although this is not true of the majority of board members, there are some who are simply incompetent. This may be seen from the refusal rates of some, which approach 100%. One seriously wonders whether some are not simply racist.
I would like to encourage members to do the following simulation in their heads. Imagine you are appearing before a judge—and I hope you never will—because a charge has been laid against you, and you learn that this judge convicts 98% of the individuals who appear before him. You inevitably think that this is all a masquerade, that you have no chance. And yet we tolerate that for refugees.
At the other extreme, some board members have acceptance rates of nearly 100%. As a result, individuals who are not refugees within the meaning of the act file claims and are lucky to be dealing with a fairly easy-going member who allows their claims and lets them enter the country as refugees.
Mr. Chairman, I would like to recall that there is no possibility of appeal on the merits. Of course there are a number of other mechanisms based on related matters, but none of them makes it possible to institute a genuine appeal on the merits. The pre-removal risk assessment (PRRA), enables a claimant whose claim has been refused to present new evidence before being deported. However, if the work has been done well at the time the refugee claim is filed, if all evidence has been submitted and there is no new evidence to provide, the PRRA provides no remedy.
As to the possibility of seeking a judicial review in Federal Court, first, it must be emphasized that this procedure is rarely allowed and, second, even where it is, it can only concern the formal aspect, the legality of the decision. In no case can a refused claimant or even the minister—because the Refugee Appeal Division could be used by the minister—ask the Federal Court to rule on the merits of the case.
Lastly, the permanent residence application on compassionate grounds is not a viable avenue either. By its very nature, it is a purely discretionary option, and thus just as arbitrary, and those who file such an application may always be deported before the decision is even rendered.
Mr. Chairman, with respect to natural justice, the Refugee Appeal Division will permit coherence among decisions. There's currently no way to know from the outset, in a definitely reasonable manner, what the board members' decisions will be. We have the example of two Palestinian brothers who were in the same situation and who filed identical claims. The claim of one of them was allowed by one board member, while that of the other was refused by another. This makes the system completely inefficient.
I now come to the question of efficiency. One may think that there will be fewer applications for judicial review with a Refugee Appeal Division. Lawyers currently use this mechanism, this option, somewhat out of despair, because they feel that their client has been a victim of an error. This is virtually the only method they see, but it does not work very well. Judicial review is a very costly method. These are very busy, unspecialized courts, unlike what a Refugee Appeal Division would be.
Lastly, the enhanced predictability of board members' decisions should result in fewer frivolous claims being received at the outset, since the minister would also be able to appeal from decisions. As a result, the lawyers of individuals whose claims have no chance of being allowed will no doubt be advised not to file them, since that would be pointless. We currently hear more and more about the board member “lottery”: you file a claim, you throw the dice and, if you are lucky, you get a good board member and your claim will be allowed, whereas if you're dealing with a bad board member, it will be refused. This is what must be stopped.
In conclusion, Mr. Chairman, I would like to recall that Parliament has ruled on this matter on a number of occasions. It did so for the first time in 2001 by passing the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. Then, in 2004, it unanimously supported a motion introduced by the four parties requesting that the Refugee Appeal Division be implemented, and immediately, as I recall.
In the last Parliament, Bill C-280, the intent of which was exactly the same, passed through all stages in the House of Commons. It was also passed in the Senate. Unfortunately, as you know, Mr. Chairman, the bill died on the Order Paper, because the House of Commons lacked the time to adopt the Senate's amendments.
I encourage all members of this committee to be consistent with the position they adopted in 2004 and to give their unanimous support to Bill C-291.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
May I start by introducing my two colleagues?
Micheline Aucoin is the director general of refugee affairs in the department, and Luke Morton is senior counsel in our legal services unit.
Let me start by thanking you for the opportunity to appear before the committee to discuss Bill C-291.
As members of this committee are aware, the Government of Canada is a firm supporter of the humanitarian dimensions of our immigration program. However, it does not support this proposed legislation. Although a lot of time and a lot of words have been expended so far on the proposed refugee appeal division, the government's position can be articulated quite simply. If Bill C-291 is passed into law, it will not help address the challenges facing the refugee status determination system, and in fact it will likely hinder the system.
As I will argue below, a system with multiple review and appeal points does not need another one. Indeed, the excessive delays found in the current system may to some extent seem to benefit individual applicants. In point of fact, I do not think this is the case, as the system spends far too much time dealing with applicants with little or no claim, to the detriment of those who have a real claim to make and who we have a responsibility to deal with in a reasonable timeframe.
[Translation]
Every year, Canada takes in nearly 250,000 new permanent residents who adopt the Canadian values of freedom, democracy, respect for human rights and the rule of law. They include thousands of refugees attracted by our values and the chance to start new lives. In the past three years alone, more than 80,000 refugees from around the world have been accepted through the Refugee Resettlement Program and Canada's refugee system. In fact, Canada is one of the three countries in the western world that admits the most refugees for resettlement purposes. We also know that the number of refugee claimants in Canada has risen at a higher rate than in most other countries of the world.
[English]
In 2008 there were almost 37,000 new refugee claims, as compared to over 28,500 in 2007. This represents an almost 29% increase in refugee claims. A recent United Nations report indicated that the percentage increase of refugee claims for Canada is almost three times the average of the 51 countries they studied. The welcome we extend has given us an international reputation as a champion of human dignity. Nevertheless, Mr. Chairman, this is a system under serious pressure. It is becoming clear that our refugee protection system, while recognized internationally as one of the fairest and most generous in the world, faces a number of challenges.
We know our in-Canada refugee status determination system is complex and can be slow. At the moment, even the most straightforward refugee claim takes far too long to be resolved. But it is the large and growing number of unfounded claims that is putting an incredible strain on our system. For instance, lately there's been a sharp increase in the number of asylum seekers from other countries with relatively low acceptance rates at the Immigration and Refugee Board. Mexico is a good example: almost 90% of claims from Mexican nationals were not accepted by the IRB last year. In fact, and it's important to remember this, last year only 42% of all refugee claims were found by the board to be valid.
We need to consider whether this is an efficient use of resources, or if unfounded claims are bogging down the system and slowing the process for those who truly need Canada's protection. In this context, I want to stress that even without Monsieur St-Cyr's proposed refugee appeal division, Canada's refugee status determination system meets all the requirements of the charter and all of Canada's international legal obligations.
Mr. Chairman, the government has maintained it is committed to exploring options to improve the refugee status determination process so it can better assist the people it was designed to protect and who Canadians want to protect. The question is whether Bill is the way to go.
Failed refugee claimants already have access to three recourse mechanisms that ensure no one is removed from Canada before all aspects of their case have been thoroughly reviewed. These failed refugee claimants can apply for leave to the Federal Court for judicial review, they can apply for pre-removal risk assessment, and they can apply for permanent residence on humanitarian and compassionate grounds. Indeed, these recourses are often available to applicants two, three, or more times.
I'd like to say a couple of words on the comprehensiveness of the judicial review available to failed claimants. You'll remember that Monsieur St-Cyr emphasized this aspect as well. It is sometimes asserted that the Federal Court does not review the decisions of the refugee protection division on the basis of errors of fact. This contention is not supported by the law, or by Federal Court jurisprudence. Parliament has given the Federal Court legislative authority to overturn a tribunal decision on several grounds, including an erroneous finding of fact that is made in a perverse or capricious manner without regard to the material before it. There are numerous examples in the jurisprudence where the Federal Court has remitted a matter to the refugee protection division on the basis of an erroneous finding of fact.
The point I'm trying to make here, Mr. Chairman, is that the Federal Court is a comprehensive appeal body from the refugee protection division. The Federal Court can review matters of law, matters of fact, and mixed matters of fact in law. It is in fact the appeal body Mr. St-Cyr is talking about in a different mode.
[Translation]
Implementation of the proposed bill would add an additional review stage that would further extend the process. In addition, Bill C-291 proposes only a paper review of refugee claims refused on questions of fact and law. It provides for neither the introduction of new evidence nor a hearing in person.
However, it will no doubt have the effect of increasing costs and further slowing an already overloaded system. The cost associated with the implementation of the Refugee Appeal Division is estimated at some tens of millions of dollars in addition to permanent annual costs that will have to borne by the federal government and provincial governments. In addition, it would extend the processing time for the files of refused claimants by at least five months.
Mr. Chairman, the fact that many refugee claimants are not genuine refugees offers food for thought. This means that we are devoting a large portion of our time to processing claims filed by individuals who are not genuine refugees and who are ultimately refused. As I've already said, our ability to assist individuals who are genuinely in need of help is thereby further reduced.
[English]
Minister Kenney has stated that he wants to look at changing the system as a whole. We submit that implementing the refugee appeal division at this time would complicate efforts to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the refugee status determination system and would make the existing system more cumbersome. I would therefore ask members of this committee not to proceed with Bill C-291.
Mr. Chairman, thank you. I would be pleased to try to answer any questions the committee might have.
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Mr. Fadden, good morning, and welcome once again to the committee.
Your minister says that this thing works. Sir, I have two cases in front of the minister, and these are cases of people from mainland China. Families came here and claimed refugee status. One individual got married. She has a kid about five months old, and your department, sir, is looking to deport her. PRA said to her, “Get a passport for little Kevin, because we're going to deport you.” So here we've got a mother, Ms. Guo, who's breastfeeding a young individual, and they're about to deport her. The system does not work, sir. It's broken.
If the mother chooses not to take the young individual with her because the father might not sign the passport, where does that put the mother and child relationship? We are not looking at the child's interests, but what we're saying is “Go.” The officer from PRA said, “Get me the passport of the child quickly so we can deport you.”
Tell me, sir, how the system works. Tell me where the rights of this young individual are, a five-month-old Canadian. The father is a landed immigrant and he has a business and he has people he employs. How is this family going to be kept together and how is this family going to be looked upon when they're separated for a year?
I have another case where the mother is a Canadian citizen, she had a child, and after she had the child she had difficulties and was put into a situation where she has to be in a clinic that provides for her and her well-being. We're saying to the father that we're going to deport him. He has to make a choice of leaving his family and his wife in the hospital while he's in China. We said that maybe his wife can bring him back to Canada, but because she doesn't work and she is in a mental institution, a clinic, she won't be able to provide for him.
The system does not work.
So tell me, sir, what I am supposed to tell these two families?
:
You probably saw me jump a number of times during his presentation. I'm pleased to have the opportunity you've afforded me to react to some comments with which I don't agree.
In fact, I'll first react to something I do agree with. Mr. Fadden emphasized that we recently observed a sudden increase in the number of refugee claimants from countries whose acceptance rate at the Immigration and Refugee Board is relatively low. The example he cited was Mexico, and he added that, ultimately, only 42% of all refugee claimants are processed and found to be valid. That's true.
In my opinion, that shows just how dysfunctional the system is. Is there another government system that has such a low success rate? Imagine if only 42% of passport applications were accepted! Someone would say that something's not working somewhere.
How have we come to this point? Contrary to what Mr. Fadden said, the Refugee Appeal Division is not only for refused claimants. Subsection 110(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act states: “A person or the Minister may appeal [...].”
What happens now? Since it's arbitrary, since there's no case law and the system operates like a lottery—the “board member lottery”—a lot of people file claims hoping they'll wind up with a sympathetic board member. If we had a system with good, well-settled case law, an effective appeal division, if people knew from the outset that they had no chance, because even if they wound up with board member X, the minister would appeal and they would lose, these people would not file. As a result, the success rate would not be so low.
There was another comment I wanted to react to. It concerns the possibility of filing an appeal. There is currently no opportunity to file an appeal on the merits. I moreover noted in my text that when we talk about other mechanisms, we prudently talk about recourse mechanisms, but we never talk about real appeal mechanisms. The reason for that is very simple.
First, very few applications for judicial review are accepted by the Federal Court of Canada. And when they are dismissed, no reasons are given. We can't know whether the court has dismissed them because it does not want to examine the issue on the merits or because of procedural issues: it does not give reasons for its decisions. Consequently, I do not understand how Mr. Fadden can come to the conclusion that the court engages in appeals on the merits: it does not give reasons for its decisions to dismiss.
Then—this time correctly—he recalled that the Federal Courts Act enables the Federal Court to overturn a decision based on “an erroneous finding of fact... made in a perverse or capricious manner”. It is these criteria that rule out the majority of cases. Obviously, in an extreme case where a decision has been made in a perverse or capricious manner, someone might have a chance to make his point in Federal Court. The fact nevertheless remains that, in the majority of cases—the Federal Court has said so in judgments—there is no opportunity for appeal on the merits.
I am not the only person to think this. There's the Canadian Bar Association, which knows the law quite well. There's the Quebec Immigration Lawyers Association, which also knows the law quite well.
In December 1997, the Legislative Review Advisory Group, appointed by the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, published a report entitled, “Not Just Numbers: A Canadian Framework for Future Immigration.” According to page 94 of the report, that working group, appointed by the minister, felt that the system of judicial review of decisions concerning refugees was too restrictive because of the requirement that leave be obtained to appeal and the fact that the grounds of appeal were limited to the legality of the decision.
In concluding, I'll give you a brief report on the discussion that took place before this committee on Tuesday, February 10, 2009. Mr. Thierry St-Cyr said: “However, the Refugee Board is the only tribunal in the Canadian justice system that does not provide for appeals on the merits. Am I correct in saying it is not possible to appeal on the merits?” In response, the Honourable Jason Kenny said: “Technically, you're correct, Mr. St-Cyr [...].”
In my opinion, when you make the laws, you make them so they will work. You can't say that, technically, there's no appeal on the merits, but, in certain cases, the courts may have the necessary discretion to provide for one.
Although it has to be admitted that there are other mechanisms, other remedies, there is no appeal on the merits, and that's a major fault in the justice system. In Canada, refugees are the only ones who do not have access to this elementary legal procedure.
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Mr. Chairman, UNHCR considers an appeal procedure to be a fundamental, necessary part of any refugee status determination process. It allows errors to be corrected, and can also help to ensure consistency in decision-making. Canada, Italy, and Portugal are the only industrialized countries that do not allow rejected asylum seekers the possibility to have first-instance decisions reviewed on points of fact as well as points of law.
This was written in 2002. I find it quite shameful that after six years, Canada still has not implemented the refugee appeal division, even though Parliament several times has debated this issue, several times has approved it, and said yes, we should implement the division.
In fact, we are violating an international legal obligation. We signed onto the 1951 convention relating to the status of refugees to protect them. Yet we do not have any appeal. What is the consequence? Well, to a person being sent back, a wrong decision could mean torture, persecution, sometimes even death.
In 2002 Parliament reduced the number of board members. There used to be three board members and then it was reduced to two and in 2002 it became one board member. So one single person makes a decision on life or death for some of these refugee claimants. I find it inexcusable to say that the only process one can follow is to go to court.
The court is not set up to deal with failings of the refugee determination process, because it's really expensive to go to Federal Court. It's expensive for the taxpayers of Canada, and it's expensive for the refugee claimants. By and large, refugee claimants don't have a lot of money. I don't know why we would end up pushing all these people into Federal Court. I've seen an explosion in the number of cases that go in front of the Federal Court.
In many ways the appointment process is flawed, in that there are no appointment committees, no appointment commissioners. Even though the Conservative government said they would do that, it hasn't happened. So you have board members who have publicly declared that homosexuality is a sin, and this board member could easily be dealing with sexual orientation cases in front of the refugee board.
I see no reason why we do not implement the refugee appeal division. I hope our committee will quickly adopt this and bring it back to the House of Commons.
It looks as if I still have one minute left. I don't know if Monsieur St-Cyr would know how much it has cost the Federal Court, or whether there would be any reduction of cost if the refugee appeal division could be implemented so that the Federal Court would not be clogged up with refugee cases.
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In all our justice systems, there are opportunities for appeal. However, lawyers do not systematically appeal. A lawyer appeals if he thinks he has a reasonable chance of winning or that he has been a victim of injustice at the trial level. Currently, the large number of appeals in the Federal Court of Canada is due to the lack of an appeal division. It is therefore reasonable to think that, with an appeal division, that number of cases would decline sharply.
If you want to calculate the costs associated with the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, the IRPA, you have to consider the fact that we've gone from two to one commissioner, which represents a saving of approximately 50%. Of course, introducing the Refugee Appeal Division would use up part of that saving, but, in net terms, there would still be a real saving.
Having said that, I would like to emphasize that we're talking about the lives of human beings and that if a party refuses to support this bill because it thinks it would be too costly, I would like that party to tell us from what price it would be prepared to implement the Refugee Appeal Division. What is the value of an appeal division that could prevent us from sending an individual back to torture and death? If a political party at this table is able to answer that question, I hail it; it's very strong. I wouldn't be able to do it.
I want to be very clear about the 42% rate, I didn't mean that we should accept people who aren't refugees within the meaning of the act. I'm saying that this is a symptom of a problem. In the case of employment insurance, allowed claims do not represent just 42% of the claims that are filed. Why is that the case? That's the way it is because people look at the criteria and see whether they are eligible or not. If they have a job or if they haven't accumulated enough hours, they don't file a claim; that's it.
Why do we accept only 42% of claims? Of course, Mr. Fadden is right, some people who file claims are not refugees. Why do they file claims then? Because there is no refugee case law. Consequently, they feel that, if they're lucky, they'll be dealing with a good board member and that, if their claim is allowed, the minister will have no opportunity to appeal it. If an easy-going commissioner grants refugee status to anyone, the minister's hands are tied. He has no opportunity to appeal from those decisions or to correct the situation.
I want to go back and get from Mr. Fadden his response to Mr. St-Cyr's comments.
One of the foundations that Mr. St-Cyr builds his case on is the inadequate success rate of our current system. It would seem to me that the success rate, quite frankly, has nothing to do with whether a process is working or not working. Some would argue that the less success we have, the better a particular system is working. Some argue that the more successful the system is and the higher the percentage of acceptance, the better the system is. This is not, as I understand it, why this....
The whole process that we have put in place as a federal government does not in any way, shape, or form, in any piece of the legislation that pertains to it, or any of the regulations, speak to some sort of informal or formal success rate of the applicants being a reason or what would justify an additional appeal mechanism for our system.
I would like to get your comments on that, just to really speak to that in itself as to where the ministry determines whether it's been successful or not.
And second, as a government we obviously are going to be bringing changes forward in fact to address some of the issues Mr. St-Cyr has brought forward. Perhaps you could indicate, or at least reinforce, that we realize there are issues within the system itself that we do want to change to make this process a much stronger and more formidable one.
I agree with Mr. St-Cyr on one thing, which is on the point that you've made. There's nothing magical about a particular percentage of acceptance or rejection. He can argue that 42% is too low; I can argue it's too high. That's not the issue.
I'm sorry Ms. Chow left. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees has said that Canada has the best refugee determination system on the planet. I sat opposite the high commissioner a year and a half ago and was told, “Sure, we're never going to say publicly that an appeal division isn't a good thing, but I'm telling you that if most of the countries on this planet had a system that was half as good as Canada's, we would be ecstatic.”
So the percentage of acceptance rates I think are not particularly important. What is important, though, is that our current system is being overburdened by an excess of applications that are not really sustainable in law. The addition of the refugee appeal division will add five months. It means that provinces will have to pay for education, for health, for welfare, by and large, for people who will not be held to be refugees. But because they have been enabled to stay in Canada longer, they will probably be allowed to stay for humanitarian and compassionate reasons. The practical effect of this additional five months will mean that non-refugees will be allowed to stay in Canada even though they should not be allowed to stay.
Mr. Dykstra asked if I could comment a little bit on the minister's proposals for making change. I can't talk about that in a great deal of detail. Mr. Kenney himself said on a number of occasions that we recognize the current system isn't working. It is devoting far too much time to cases where there's patently no basis in law for the person being made a refugee. I think we have to look that through.
The government has been quite successful in increasing the number of commissioners. That's been very helpful. But one way or the other, we have to find a way to deal with the increase in applications. With the world economic crisis it's going to get worse before it gets better. Adding an additional five months in a way that we believe will not substantively help the resolution of individual cases is not the way to go.
:
First, we're going to go back to the matter of the 42% acceptance rate. I know that Mr. Fadden is a public servant and not a politician. However, I would like to make sure I'm not misquoted or that my remarks aren't twisted.
My claim is not that that rate shows that we don't accept enough refugees. I don't believe we should accept a refugee who doesn't meet the legal definition. The problem is not that 42% of people are accepted; it's that 58% of people file a refugee claim without being refugees.
The question we must ask ourselves as a committee is why do those people, who apparently aren't refugees, file a claim? I respectfully submit to committee members the fact that we don't see these kinds of results in any other area of the federal government.
If one day we had come to the conclusion that only 42% of employment insurance claims are allowed, we would say to ourselves that 58% of claimants don't understand that they aren't eligible. If the same was true of passports, we would wonder why people are applying for passports if they aren't eligible.
So why do 58% of people who file refugee claims do so without being eligible? It's quite simple. It's because they don't know. There is no body of well-settled case law. Furthermore, while it is currently possible for refused refugees to appeal in Federal Court, it is still impossible for the minister to appeal, since section 73 isn't in effect either.
Currently, quite sympathetic board members—perhaps overly sympathetic—who almost automatically allow claims, make it so that people want to try their luck by filing a refugee claim, knowing that they probably don't meet the definition.
If we had a Refugee Appeal Division and it was genuinely possible for the minister to appeal in incorrect cases, decisions granting refugee status to people who clearly are not refugees, a fairly sound body of case law would be established to enable lawyers to tell their clients that, even if they win at the first level, they will lose on appeal.
Obviously, it's said that the Federal Court renders judgments on the merits, and that there is a possibility of developing case law. However, I would respectfully submit that this is relatively anecdotic, since only 10% of applications are allowed. Consequently, there is no case law in 90% of cases. There are no reasons. Even in the remaining 10%, most of the cases—I unfortunately don't have the figures to provide you, but all the lawyers in the Barreau will confirm it for you—concern procedural matters. On the rare occasions when the court rules on the merits, these are cases in which decisions were arbitrary or capricious. So that's not enough.
I would like to continue on concerning the alleged five additional months for the processing of refused claimants' files. Personally, I don't believe any of it. It is a management principle that an effective, coherent and efficient system costs less than an ineffective, incoherent and inefficient one. I don't see how the lack of a body of case law can make our system more effective and save us money.
:
You're entirely right, Mr. Paillé. I would add, however, that there is a matter of fundamental respect for democracy behind that. Parliament has spoken. It passed the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act in 2001. That act contained 275 sections. It didn't contain 272 or 250; it contained 275.
In our opinion, in our democratic British parliamentary system, once Parliament has spoken, the government has a duty to abide by Parliament's decision and will. When you study a part of the act such as, for example, the Refugee Appeal Division, you have to study it as a whole. So you can't say, on the one hand, that the Refugee Appeal Division would cost so many millions of dollars more and extend deadlines by so much, without considering the fact that it was adopted in the context of a reduction in the number of board members from two to one. I could very well say to Mr. Fadden that I agree that we should throw the IRPA in the waste bin: we'll have two board members to review claims, and waiting times will double. That's a coherent whole.
That's why you rightly point out that the assistant deputy minister at the time said that the Refugee Appeal Division was necessary. The minister at the time, Eleanor Caplan, also said that the appeal division was necessary to establish a balance. So there has to be a certain overall vision of the matter. We can't simply say that this particular measure will cost us a certain amount of money, since it was put in place to enable us to save money.
I'm going to draw a parallel. Some of us around the table are business men or women or have already worked in the business world. If you buy equipment and you record the value of that investment, you record the savings that you make as a result of that equipment. It's somewhat the same thing. If you consider the Refugee Appeal Division, you have to say to yourself that that is what enables us to go from two commissioners to one.
I maintain that this tribunal would increase the efficiency of our system. By having more consistency among decisions and the opportunity for the minister to appeal, which is not currently the case, far fewer claimants would file frivolous claims, knowing that they would have no chance of getting through the net. The acceptance rate would therefore increase not because there would be more favourable decisions, but because there would simply be fewer inappropriate claims.
Even if that were not the case, apart from this entire debate, are we going to gain five months, as I claim, or waste time? Is it a net real saving, when you take all parameters into account, or is it an expense, if you only consider the Refugee Appeal Division? I think this is a quite incidental issue.
For generations, civilized societies, western and otherwise, have fought against arbitrariness, have developed systems of justice based on the law and have established principles of natural justice that, apart from all the differences that may exist in the world, are universal. Among the basic principles is the possibility of appealing from a decision.
However, there is no real opportunity to appeal on the merits. I remind you of the comments made by the minister on February 10, 2009 in response to my question as to whether I was right in saying that is not possible to appeal on the merits. The Honourable Jason Kenney answered that, technically, I was right. I believe that in a progressive and modern society, even if it had the best immigration system in the world, that situation is unacceptable. I recall that Portugal and Italy are the only civilized countries that do not have a refugee appeal system.
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It will add another layer and the RAD would be a paper appeal. I would note that before the Federal Court it is not a paper appeal if you are granted leave.
I'd like to correct an incorrect impression that Ms. Chow left with the committee. It's not 10% of leave applications that are granted; it is 16%. It is almost twice what she was suggesting.
I wonder if we could just take advantage of the opportunity to make a small point. I think Mr. St-Cyr is taking the committee down the garden path on one particular point. To compare the determination of refugee status with a grant of passports or of EI is, to my mind, stretching credulity. The granting of a passport is a mechanical function in 98% of the cases. The determination of refugee status in every single case merits careful consideration of jurisdiction, law, and fact. So to compare this with passports or EI I think is underestimating the seriousness of the refugee determination system.
He also makes the point that way back when the law was passed, two commissioners determined most cases. At the time a decision was made that we wouldn't put the RAD into effect because there were two commissioners. In the end, the previous government didn't put it into effect because only 1% of the two-commissioner panels ever disagreed. So a conscious decision was made that we don't need this additional layer because we went from two to one commissioners.
In direct answer to your question, it is an additional layer. It is a paper layer. No new evidence can be introduced. We would not agree with Mr. St-Cyr with the view that just because you have a RAD, people will not go to the Federal Court. If people believe strongly in their files, they will keep going to the Federal Court.
Thank you very much for coming to our committee to present your view. I definitely agree with your report. This is exactly what I presented to the House when I was given the opportunity to comment on Bill C-291. On one hand, we agree that Canada has the most liberal refugee system. Therefore we have attracted many refugee claimants, whether they're genuine or not. That is the major challenge.
I agree with what you've just said, that Mr. St-Cyr's comparison of the passport success rate with the success rate of processing our refugee claimants is actually not an adequate comparison. The EI success rate should not be used as a comparison with the refugee success rate either.
I think we all agree, all of my constituents agree, and all of the other people I've been meeting agree, that there have been a lot of challenges in the refugee system, and therefore we do need reforms. We do need to change some of the things we have been doing so that we won't deter the legitimate refugees who, because of the present system, have to wait for a very long period of time.
In your view, will Bill C-291 actually be a solution to...? For example, as soon as people get on the plane, they eat their passports or they flush them down the toilet. Then, because they've landed, they have to go through the whole system.
Thanks to our government and Mr. Jason Kenney, the last 25 Vietnamese refugees staying in the Philippines will finally be arriving in Canada. The Vietnamese community thanks the government for doing that. Those are legitimate refugees who have been waiting there for so many years because of a system that needs reform and because of illegitimate claimants who came in a boat just off the coast of British Columbia. As soon as the boat enters our waters, they say “We're refugees.”
Those are the actual challenges. They even come in, again talking about Mexico....
I would like Mr. Fadden to comment on whether Bill C-291 would really improve the system.
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We don't think this is going to solve it. The practical effect of having the refugee appeal division will be, I think, that most people who are refused at the refugee protection division will go to the RAD. They will go relatively automatically, and it's not going to cost them a lot of money.
I agree with Mr. St-Cyr when he says that the Federal Court is a bit expensive. The RAD is not. So virtually everybody is going to go to the RAD. That means that whether it's five months or four months or six months, it's going to take time. You need to look at their papers, you need to review things. So to a process that already takes 17 months, without going to the Federal Court, we're going to add five more months.
If, in the end, they are refused, the fact that they have been in this country for an additional five months will mean that their chances of getting a humanitarian and compassionate grant are increased, not because they're refugees, but because they have a boyfriend or a girlfriend, they have children, they've put down roots in Canada. There's nothing wrong with that, except that's not the way we're supposed to deal with refugees.
The longer people stay in Canada, the greater the chance that they're going to go around our system and acquire the capacity to stay in Canada, in practice disregarding our believe that we should treat refugees in a special way.
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With your permission, I'll add something.
Ms. Mendes' point is very good. I don't think that the arguments about duration, deadlines and opportunities for appeal, which could benefit people who aren't genuine refugees, can be allowed in a system of law. I would point out that criminals and murderers remain at liberty longer because they can file appeals and use a host of remedies. We're not saying we want to get rid of appellate courts and the Supreme Court. We're not doing that because we are in a system of law and justice, and these are values that society has taken centuries to establish. We have to continue fighting to maintain them.
I would like to take this opportunity to raise another point. Earlier I was criticized for drawing comparisons between the acceptance rates of employment insurance services and those of Passport Canada. I would like to recall that the point in making comparisons is to highlight the characteristics of one system that make its behaviour different from that of another.
Why then do the employment insurance services and those of Passport Canada work, and why are their acceptance rates very high? It's because their criteria are well established. When you file a claim, you know in advance whether or not it will be accepted. I willingly admit that the definition of refugee status greatly complicates the handling of cases. I admit it and I'm saying that this is another reason to have a body of well-settled case law.
A number of lawyers, more particularly the vice-president of the Quebec Association of Immigration Lawyers, have previously confirmed to me that they had had no answer for clients who came to see them at their office to ask whether they had any chance of being accepted. They couldn't tell them whether they had a 10%, 50% or 90% chance of being accepted. They were forced to say that it would depend on the board member who heard their case.
I understand, I think, the argument you're making, that at the time Parliament enacted the law initially, there was a bit of a compromise between one to two commissioners and the RAD. But I also think it's important to note that when the system went from two commissioners to one, the acceptance rate did not go down.
I think we have to also consider that just about every quasi-judicial or judicial body in Canada and Quebec, at the first level, is with a single person. Appeal divisions have two or more; UI umpires, one; reviews in Quebec on the health side, one person. I don't think there is anything intrinsically valuable to having two people.
In response to your direct point, though, the acceptance rate did not go down. Both the previous government and the current government considered that given the totality of the system, it didn't merit the RAD.
Mr. St-Cyr is arguing that nobody is going to go out and recommend the abolition of the court of appeal or the Supreme Court. That's not what he's suggesting. He's suggesting the addition of another layer. Nobody is suggesting the elimination of a layer. He is suggesting the addition of another one. So I think it's a rather different argument.
As Mr. St-Cyr said, this has been a topic that has been of interest for some time. Not Mr. Kenney, but one of the previous ministers I worked with in CIC, had the high commissioner in Ottawa to talk about refugees generally and the Canadian system in particular. He basically said, as I stated earlier, that the UNHCR has no complaint to make about the Canadian system. He said that from their perspective we have the best one in the world. One of us who was at the meeting--I can't remember who--asked him, “What do you think about an appeal division?” I'm probably breaking a confidence, for which I'll have to suffer the pain, but he said, “Somebody in my position can never say that an appeal division is a bad thing, but in our view we stick with what I said earlier: you have virtually a perfect system; people are not thrown out of Canada arbitrarily and we really have no complaints.” As a matter of fact, the UNHCR regularly peddles—if that's the right word—the Canadian system around the world. They do that systematically.
We in our ministry have gone around the world explaining our system, because it is the best one that we have. At one level there's no perfect system. I'll be the first one to admit that. Putting in the RAD is not going to make it perfect. We could put in two RADs and it still wouldn't be perfect.
Mr. St-Cyr argues that a greater jurisprudence developed by the RAD would help materially in the management of the system. Well, I'm not so sure. The Federal Court's jurisprudence on refugee issues is quite comprehensive. There are a lot of cases that bind the refugee protection division. I would also note that the refugee protection division does not deliver reasons in writing, except in negative cases. So we have a system already that I think is quite significantly tilted in favour of those who might not get refugee status. We don't think this is going to help.
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In the end, if we have a RAD, we're going to have to ask the government and then Parliament for more money. People who are now spending their time and effort on the first level of determination are now going to have to spend it on appeals to the RAD. We think it's simply just going to add a layer of bureaucracy. The RAD is not going to be a court, so the amount of deference given to it by the RPD will be relatively limited as compared to the Federal Court.
I have to be honest with Mr. St-Cyr: the RAD is not going to grind the entire system to a stop, but it is going to add time, money, and burden. In the end, we don't think that individual cases are going to be materially better dealt with, because it's a paper review, there are no attendants, and there is no new evidence. If you take it to the Federal Court, you have all of those possibilities.
Mr. St-Cyr has argued on a number of occasions that the Federal Court cannot review sur le fond, as he says. I'm not here to act as a lawyer, but before the courts you have questions of law, of fact, of mixed fact and law, and jurisdiction, and nothing else. If that's not sur le fond, I don't know what it is. The Federal Court has systematically said that it can look at any aspect of RPD decisions. I agree with Mr. St-Cyr that the way the law is constructed, it doesn't appear that it can do that, but this happens all the time. Parliament says one thing and the courts take a different tack, and since they're the ones doing the judgments, they win.