:
I call the meeting back to order.
Welcome back to meeting number 105 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on the Status of Women.
I think it's incumbent on me at this point to acknowledge, thank and give homage to member of Parliament for her commitment, compassion, dedication and advocacy on this file.
Thank you, Karen.
Some hon. members: Hear, hear!
The Chair: I would like to make a few comments for the benefit of the members and all witnesses.
Before speaking, please wait until I recognize you by name.
I believe we just have one member on video conference. Click on the microphone icon to activate your mic, and please mute yourself when you're not speaking.
This is familiar to you, MP Lambropoulos.
Although the room is equipped with a powerful audio system, feedback events can occur. These can be extremely harmful to interpreters and cause serious injuries, so be mindful of that. The most common cause of sound feedback is an earpiece worn too close to a microphone. We therefore ask all participants to exercise a high degree of caution when handling the earpieces, especially when your microphone or your neighbours' microphone is turned on. To prevent incidents and safeguard the hearing health of the interpreters, I invite participants to ensure that they speak into the microphone into which their headset is plugged and to avoid manipulating the earbuds by placing them on the table away from the microphone when they are not in use.
All comments should be addressed through the chair. With regard to the speaking list, the committee clerk and I will do the best we can to maintain a consolidated order of speaking for all members whether they are participating virtually or in person.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted by the committee on Monday, November 27, 2023, the committee will resume its study of the implementation of a red dress alert.
At this point, I would like to welcome our witnesses.
We have with us today the honourable Minister , Minister of Crown-Indigenous Relations. We have, from the Department of Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada, Valerie Gideon, deputy minister; and Krista Apse, director general of the missing and murdered indigenous women and girls secretariat. From the Department of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness, we have Kenza El Bied, director general, policy and outreach directorate, emergency management and programs branch; and Arjun Vinodrai, senior director, policy and programs development, emergency management and programs branch.
You will each have five minutes for your opening remarks followed by rounds of questions.
Minister, at this point, the floor is yours for five minutes.
:
Kwe kwe.
Ullukkut.
Tansi. Hello.
Bonjour.
Let me begin by acknowledging that we are gathered here on the unceded traditional territory of the Algonquin Anishinabe people.
I want to thank all of you for your hard work in supporting this initiative.
[Translation]
Thank you all for the work you have done on this important initiative.
[English]
I want to acknowledge and congratulate you, Madam Chair, on your appointment.
I also want to take this moment to thank the former chair, , for her long-standing commitment to this issue and her hard work during the committee process.
Let me also thank my colleague and friend Leah Gazan from Winnipeg Centre for her incredible advocacy in uniting the House in supporting the establishment of a red dress alert, along with my colleague Pam Damoff. We are indebted to you for your hard work and your resolve to get us here. This work will save lives.
As we all know, budget 2024 included an investment of $1.3 million to continue developing the red dress alert. This is exciting news that will help keep the momentum going.
Every indigenous person who goes missing and is not found is a failure on our part.
I know that there are some people who are frustrated at the pace of implementing the alert. There are some people who say that this can be done overnight. I do not subscribe to that belief. We need to keep the pressure on and move quickly, but we also need to get this right. There are many factors to consider, as you have heard throughout this study. Those include different regional contexts, strained relationships between communities and law enforcement, and jurisdictional considerations.
Moving the dial on this is not an option or a choice; it is a moral imperative. Despite only making up 4% of Canada's population, indigenous women and girls represent 28% of homicides perpetrated against women. An indigenous woman is 12 times more likely to go missing or be murdered than a non-indigenous woman.
Alerting systems in states like California and Washington are helping locate people. The studies show us that the hours after someone goes missing are the most critical time to find them.
In February, I drove the entire Highway of Tears in northern British Columbia. I listened to grassroots organizers on the front lines, like the Tears to Hope Society, who you heard from earlier this week. Alongside a red dress alert, they stressed the importance of resolving this systemic crisis.
At the Denny's where we met, the women told me how important ceremony is to them and how important it is to pass along traditions and languages to the next generation. In 2016, our government called a National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls after years of previous governments' refusals.
[Translation]
This June will mark five years since the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls released its final report—and the calls to justice.
[English]
The 231 calls to justice require investments in shelters, community safety, culture, housing and infrastructure. We are making progress in all these areas. Budget 2024 was another example of that, but I say this all the time: The calls to justice are not a checklist. They require urgent, sustained action and commitment from all parties. They're long-term, structural changes that help us undo the legacy of colonialism. This work is critical and it will not happen overnight.
Eventually, the hope is to get to a place where we no longer need the red dress alert, or, in other words, we build a future where indigenous people are safe. The government will be a partner in that journey.
I thank everyone who has contributed to this process in informing the path forward. Your work is invaluable.
Meegwetch. Qujannamiik. Marsi. Merci.
:
Thank you, Chair and committee members, for the opportunity to speak to you today.
Before I get started, I would like first to acknowledge that we are gathering today on the unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishinabe people.
In my role within public safety, I'm responsible for working with other federal departments and agencies, provinces and territories, national indigenous organizations and other stakeholders to advance and integrate a policy approach to all aspects of emergency management.
[Translation]
I want to begin by saying that I share your deep concerns that indigenous women, girls, two spirit and gender diverse persons continue to be at greater risk of abduction, homicide and other forms of violence.
I commend the work you are undertaking through this study.
[English]
To support your committee's work, I would like to speak about the national public alerting system, its governance and Public Safety Canada's role.
The national public alerting system provides federal, provincial and territorial emergency management organizations with the standard alerting capability to warn of imminent and unfolding threats to life. Like all emergency management functions in Canada, public alerting is a collaborative initiative between federal, provincial and territorial governments, as well as industry partners.
The governance of this system is complex. There is no overarching governing body. There are many players involved in this system.
First, individual governments determine who, within their jurisdiction, may issue alerts through the system on matters related to their responsibility. These designated authorities decide when to issue an emergency alert, the alert type, the message content and geographical areas affected.
Second, Pelmorex Corp. operates the system that validates and disseminates emergency alerts. Pelmorex is supported by a multiple stakeholder governance council, which provides direction and advice on technical priorities.
Finally, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission sets out the regulatory framework for the mandatory distribution of alerts.
With regard to the role of my department, we support the national public alerting system primarily in two ways. First, we support the coordination of activities of federal alerting partners with those of the provinces and territories. Second, we support collaborative work with provinces and territories to advance shared priorities for this system.
One of our key policy interests for this work is advancing a common approach to emergency communications, including the adoption of standards and best practices. With regard to federal-provincial-territorial collaboration, SOREM—made up of federal, provincial and territorial senior officials responsible for emergency management—is the primary forum where this occurs.
SOREM is made up of the heads of provincial and territorial emergency management organizations and the assistant deputy minister of the emergency management and programs branch of Public Safety Canada. SOREM is the steward of guidelines for the consistent presentation of alerts through the system, including the common look and feel guidance, the Canadian profile of the common alerting protocol and the broadcast immediate events list. These guidelines aim to ensure emergency public alerts are easily recognizable anywhere in Canada.
I want to conclude my remarks by emphasizing that Public Safety Canada is committed to collaborating with all public-alerting stakeholders to improve the effectiveness and continuity of emergency alerting in Canada.
With regard to exploring new uses of the system, I would note that SOREM has recently facilitated revisions to these guidelines to support a test by Quebec to evaluate the use of the system to distribute a silver alert.
In the context of your discussions, my team at Public Safety Canada has been supporting our colleagues at Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada in its red dress alert engagement. We have been providing subject matter expertise and considerations on the potential to use the national public alerting system for such an alert.
We look forward to continued collaboration with provinces and territories, including supporting Crown-Indigenous Relations' engagement at SOREM, as their work continues.
I'm pleased to take any questions. Thank you for this opportunity.
Thank you, colleagues.
Before I begin my questions to the minister, I would like to make an important comment about the election of the chair of this committee.
I want to welcome and congratulate the chair of this committee—it's nothing against you. We all look forward to working with you collaboratively, like our past chair was doing with us.
established her place here over the years. The previous chair of the committee made sure we worked well together, listened to the experts and, most importantly, produced many good reports. I've known her since 2017 and she made sure the committee produced a record number of good reports.
From the bottom of my heart, I want to thank for her passion and for her work for all Canadian women and girls through this committee.
I do not understand the decision of the to remove such a great advocate for women and girls, such as our previous chair for this committee.
With that said, we have important work to do, so I really want to thank her for her work. Let's work collaboratively, the way your predecessor established.
Now I'll go over to you, Minister.
Thank you for joining us today with your team. The committee's united in making sure that a red dress alert system is established and works properly to save lives.
This committee heard many times that the system should be indigenous-led. How do you plan to implement this important principle?
:
I understand. You are saying that it is moving forward and you have reached the codevelopment phase. What concerns me, however, is that in its budgets, the government announces investments with great fanfare, to carry out initiatives, but the money never makes it onto the ground. We see this too often, particularly when it comes to indigenous affairs.
My colleague who works on the Standing Committee on Indigenous and Northern Affairs reminds us of this regularly, within our party, and I am sure that my colleague could say the same thing. The money is shown in the budget and it looks good, but too often it stays in the government's coffers and is not used on the ground to implement concrete measures that are going to improve people's lives.
In the case that concerns us, it is women who are dying, murdered women and girls, Minister.
How are you going to make sure that this money does not stay in the government's coffers? I would point out again that this is an investment spread over three years and the next election will take place by that time, Minister. We can almost call this an election promise.
How are you going to make sure that this is not an election promise and the money shown in the budget will be used concretely on the ground as fast as possible, to ensure that this alert, which indigenous communities are asking for in memory of missing and murdered women, is implemented?
We hope that this alert will be created, so that those women will have not died in vain.
:
I also wanted to thank you, Minister. I know that you've prioritized MMIWG. That doesn't mean that you're not in the hot seat today.
I thank Pam across the way for starting the discussion with me. Quite frankly, all members of this committee have been tremendous in their support, not just on this study but on other studies to really support justice for indigenous women, girls and 2SLGBTQQIA+ people around the country. It's very touching. It shows that we can work across party lines to advance human rights in this country. I want to thank the committee for that as well.
I saw the budget. I have to say, Minister, that I was quite taken aback. I'm going to share quickly why, and I'd like a response.
The budget included $1.3 million over three years, knowing that we are in the process of an election cycle and knowing that this is timely. I was happy to see that there was $20 million put in place to search the landfill. I feel relieved for the families. Again, that's an action that has to happen, like the red dress alert, after women's lives have been taken.
The budget included $47 million to deal with the auto theft problem. Although I know that the auto theft problem is really tremendous in this country, the message is very clear that this country cares more about cars than it does indigenous women, girls and 2SLGBTQQIA+ people.
I'm wondering why there weren't more dollars put in specifically in the areas of prevention to deal with what has been acknowledged by your government and as an ongoing genocide.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair, and welcome to the committee.
I also want to recognize Ms. Vecchio. We are very good friends on this side.
I am a bit disappointed, even very disappointed, Minister.
Normally, Mr. Serré also participates in this kind of study. Today, however, we are all women here and we all agree that the red dress alert has to be implemented.
The government announced the meagre sum of $1.3 million in the budget. You will tell me that is better than nothing, but it is not much.
I did not really understand Ms. Gideon's answer a little earlier, when she said that you had not invested too much money because the investments were coming from partners. You can explain all that to us, but I am frankly disappointed.
I do not understand why, as we are speaking, you do not yet have a plan for implementing the alert.
If memory serves, the government held its first round table in January 2023. You have held only one meeting, and we do not know when the next one will be. You can explain all that to us.
The big question I am asking myself right now is whether you are encountering difficulties and resistance in provinces or territories or within organizations that would not approve the project.
Very sincerely, given everything there is right now, whether it be Amber alerts, grey alerts, or the experiences people have had more or less everywhere in Canada that we have been told about, what are you waiting for, to get moving and put this project in place?
It is not complicated. There are cell phones, there is television, there are programs, we have the CRTC, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission.
What is needed is political will. Do you have the political will, Minister?
We are very disappointed.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Before I start, I just want to make it clear that people should not be making assumptions. was a great leader, but we welcome you, Shelby. I don't want you to take this from anyone here at our team. We have worked very collaboratively together. I think making assumptions is the wrong way to go. I just want to set that clear for the record. Welcome, and thank you for being part of the team.
We also want to congratulate . She did a great job.
I want to start with Ms. Gideon. The minister's gone, but I would like your feedback on something.
Bill passed, receiving royal assent on June 30, 2021. The purpose of the act is to respond to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's call to action number 80.
I was taught as a child that actions speak louder than words. While this is a lovely sentiment, the action of the on the very first national day spoke volumes. Despite receiving invitations to spend the day with survivors and their families, he opted for a surfing vacation in Tofino. In my opinion, his actions spoke volumes to the importance he placed on reconciliation.
How much damage did his actions cause—
First of all, congratulations to you on this new role. I really wish you the best in the role.
I also want to say a big thank you to , who was an incredible chair for over six years on this committee. She led a very collaborative committee where all parties worked together in order to advance the cause of women in so many different ways. I really hope that we can continue that great work.
It doesn't say anything about you, Shelby; I don't know what's in store. I'm hoping that the removal of Karen as chair wasn't symbolic, but she was one of the members in the Conservative Party who cared more than anyone about women and girls, so I am sad to see her taken away from the committee.
Having said that, I have nothing against you. I actually like you, and I'm really hoping we can work together collaboratively.
On this important study, thank you to our witnesses for being here and for doing what they can to advance this cause. It's obviously a very important cause. We've heard from many indigenous women across the country on this study so far. We've heard what a red dress alert should look like. It should be led by indigenous women, and the decision-making table should include indigenous women. I've heard from you today that this is the case, that our indigenous partners are the ones who are taking the lead here and that we're consulting with as many as possible. That's great to hear.
One of the main concerns that we've spoken about at various meetings, so far, is the fact that police need to be involved in a red dress alert and in this situation. We've heard mixed reviews because there are some indigenous women who don't want police involvement because of the lack of trust that exists between indigenous communities and the police in different parts of the country.
We've also heard from different indigenous women that police are required because they do have the tools necessary to be able to help in these situations. In the calls for justice, it is specifically mentioned that there should be policies that are national in scope, so there should be police departments across the country that are following the same policies and the same guidelines in order to make sure that cases are taken seriously when it comes to missing and murdered indigenous women and girls.
Can you speak to that in terms of any work being done on that front? I'm thinking Public Safety, most likely, would be able to answer this question. Is any work being done to standardize protocols to work with police chiefs across the country to make sure there is something being done in this regard?
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thank you to the officials for being with us today.
We realize how truly unanimous opinion around the table is and we are very happy to have them here, to try to move forward on this issue.
We have hit a dead end, and I am trying to see how we can manage to unravel the knot or get out of this dead end. As was said earlier, on the one hand, this project has to be carried out by and for indigenous people, but on the other hand, there does have to be help from police services.
As the minister himself said, the main factor in the hold-up is the lack of trust on the part of the communities. How can that be remedied?
Apart from all that, what are you doing to ensure that the indigenous communities regain their trust in the police services, so that the alerts are representative of the needs and requests of the communities and they can call on the police services?
What efforts are being made to rebuild this relationship of trust between police services and the communities, to unravel the knot? It seems that this is where the hold-up is.
Thank you, again, to the witnesses here chatting about the red dress alert and implementing it.
We have the officials here today because there is consensus regarding this red dress alert, but we're trying to nail down the technical issues. There seems to be a little frustration with not getting answers today.
Blue Sky Net has found that of the 285 northern Ontario communities, only 74 had at least 50% of their households able to access 50/10 megabytes per second high-speed Internet equal to 26% of northern Ontario communities. The same report found that of the 187 communities with a population under 1,000, only 41 have at least half of households able to access a standard rate of speed.
The Minister of Rural Economic Development has spent $7.6 billion since 2015 to improve high-speed Internet access in underserved communities, but even if you get access—which we see in the Auditor General's report that you don't have—Canada still has the highest cellphone bills when compared to other countries. If you have service and you can't afford it, you might as well not have it.
There's a major gap here. They're called dead zones and they're literally dead zones for women who go missing.
My question for Public Safety is this: You're saying here today that this isn't necessarily your file, but how would you fix this? How would you go back and say, “Okay, we need to work with another ministry to ensure that this happens,” and put that on a timeline? For taxpayers watching at home, can you tell us what happens in that process? What happens so that you get, “Okay, I'm going to go talk to this ministry to ensure that this happens”?
I want to start by saying something that is not directed at you.
I do find it unfortunate that the current has removed a smart, competent, progressive Conservative woman as the chair.
It makes me sad, because has given her heart and soul to this committee. She was on the committee for nine years, seven as chair. I served for the first four years on FEWO with Karen. We did important studies. The very first bill studied by the status of women committee was Rona Ambrose's bill on sexual assault, and last year, I know for a fact, Keira's law would not have passed if it hadn't been for Karen's leadership.
She has relationships with women's groups across Canada. She has ensured that trauma-informed questions are asked, not only at this committee but at others, and she's always worked with women's safety and well-being ahead of any partisan interest.
I have no doubt that will continue under your leadership, Chair, but I do want to thank , from the bottom of my heart, for her leadership and for all that she's done for the women of Canada.
Thank you, .
My questions are for Public Safety. I'm the former parliamentary secretary for Public Safety and I find it really disturbing that you come here and say that you're not the lead on this.
You are emergency management, and I do feel that Public Safety really needs to start engaging in this more and taking this seriously, because a lot of what we need to do when it comes to the alert system rests with you. There's only so much that Crown-Indigenous Relations can do, and I'm really grateful that and have taken the lead on this, but it's time that Public Safety did as well.
Pelmorex has shown me their system. They're located in Oakville. If we wanted to add the red dress alert tomorrow, to Michelle's point, it could be done. They issue the alerts but they don't determine who does. It's a bit of a secret committee, this SOREM committee.
Can you tell us who's on that committee? Are there any indigenous people or are there any first nations police services on that committee?
:
I wanted to move this motion because, like other members, I was very troubled by the decision of the Conservative Party to remove . I share this not because of the Conservative Party, although I have much to share about the Conservative Party, as you know. I share this because there is a culture in this House of Commons that demoralizes and excludes the voices of particularly strong women. Karen Vecchio, I have had the privilege to get to know....
Before I go on, I want to be really clear for the new chair: I think you're lovely. I welcome the new chair to the committee. I want you to feel safe. I don't want what I have to say make you feel unsafe. That's very important to me. I really mean that.
I'm putting this motion forward because I think women need to stand up for women in this place. took the time to get know me as a friend, but, particularly, really listened to some of the issues that are very marginalized in this House and, I would say, particularly issues surrounding indigenous women.
Prior to my being elected in 2019, indigenous women were pretty much off the radar after the national inquiry. If it hadn't been for me pushing, along with the NDP, along with powerful women across party lines, as we have seen with the red dress study...without the level of passion that I have seen around this committee table, we would still be dying in the streets.
Inclusion and exclusion are intentional. I am really troubled that the voice of a woman who is highly respected by women across the country has been taken off the committee; a woman who was able to work across party lines so that this place, this committee, could be one of the only safe places in the House for women. This doesn't feel safe to me any more. This doesn't feel safe to me: that if parties see strong women in committees who threaten a political agenda, we can be silenced. That's how the right to choose gets threatened. That's how the rights of trans women get threatened.
This is the only place we have to lift up our voices to protect each other. I have gotten to know people around this table, and I consider you colleagues and friends.
I am so touched by the red dress study, and I am so touched by the work did in working as the chair to make sure that we heard what we needed to hear to advance this quickly. We are literally dying in this country: That's how critical this committee is.
I don't feel as alone in the House of Commons, because I've worked across party lines with every single woman in this room. They have my back. I'm going to have 's back this time. I'm going to stand up for Karen Vecchio. I'm going to stand up for Karen Vecchio and give the middle finger to partisan politics and political posturing, including by the Conservative Party right now, which gave the middle finger, as far as I'm concerned, to a functioning committee that is fighting for our rights.
Shelby, you are lovely. Again, I don't think you're going to do a bad job. I think you're going to be fantastic. I think you're fair. You are a diplomat. You are lovely. I want to be very clear that what I'm saying is no reflection of your competence or of your not being welcomed.
This is why I'm saying that I hope what I'm saying doesn't make you feel unsafe, because you know what, Shelby? I will have your back. If you do things that step out of line, like fighting for reproductive rights or trans women, I'm going to have your back.
I'm going to have your back because I know that our voices in this House are really minimized. I'm going to fight for this. There are hills you have to die on. For me, this is a hill we....
This is probably one of the only places I feel safe in this place—what I've called a misogynistic, racist, colonial shithole. This is especially as a minority woman—one of 10 indigenous people in this place—in a seat that I was never supposed to be in. I feel like my safety has been violated by another colonial violent act. It was a misogynistic act by the Conservative Party against .
The other day, I was wondering, “Where's ?” I don't know what happened; I don't know what led to this. She's a colleague, and she's also a sister. We're sisters in this circle.
After almost every meeting, I leave here and feel hopeful. I'm so hopeful that maybe some of the reasons I came here and maybe some of the people who want me to fight for issues.... I'm hopeful that maybe it can happen because I see what we do around this table. They have violated that trust. This is a place that is known to be unsafe for women. Women in politics get harassed every day in the House of Commons. It's a place where we have said things in confidence and upheld each other's confidence. I don't know what that's going to be like now.
Now, I have a wonderful relationship with every Conservative member on this committee, including you, Shelby. I have good relationships with all of the Liberal members. I have a wonderful relationship with Andréanne Larouche. Do you know why? When I come into this committee room, it's my place to stand up for us as women. It's not just for women's rights. It's for putting studies out that people feel proud of.
I was so proud of this committee when, under the leadership of , we put forward a study on the connection between resource extraction and increased violence against indigenous women and girls. That's something that some of the men might have found to be really controversial. However, we made it really clear that this wasn't about resource extraction. Whether you agreed with resource extraction or not, this was about how they need to stop raping women in indigenous communities and how companies need to be held accountable.
We stood up for women. We stood up for women instead of big oil companies with big resource-extraction money, companies that are making money off the backs of indigenous women. We stood up for that. Maybe that's controversial for some of the parties in this House—I would say the Conservative Party, certainly.
I'm talking about the Conservative Party specifically because I'm really disgusted by what transpired with regard to my friend, my honourable colleague, . It's garbage that, any time a woman stands with her sisters against violence, on studies like oil extraction, it's seen as rebellious and radical—like somehow the raping of women isn't rebellious and radical. Somehow, we have to turn a blind eye because we don't want to tick off big industry.
This is concerning to me. I don't know where this committee is going to go. Are we going to let toxic masculinity pollute this committee?
I'm not talking to you, Shelby. I'm speaking in general. I want to be really clear that it's not about you, Shelby. It's about the broader issues and the systemic issues within the House of Commons.
Any time women join hands and say no to violence, are we going to be punished? We know that some of the studies we've done in this committee have been pretty edgy. Even in studies where people had different opinions, we came out the other way. What does that say—throwing out? Who's going to be next?
Are we going to have to listen, mostly to men in leadership in the House of Commons, or else the girls are in big trouble in this misogynistic place?
I'm sorry I'm taking up so much time, but this is a bigger issue to me than just Karen; this is about the fact that there used to be—and I hope we have it again—a cross-party women's committee where women supported women in this place. I'm waiting for the day that a trans woman is in this place, and we're not passing motions that threaten their safety—not just outside but in the House of Commons—by the Conservatives. Karen Vecchio supported trans folk, by the way. I worry that some of her progressive decisions impacted her ability to safely stay on the committee when she stood up for human rights.
These are the most critical issues of our time. We see 12-year-olds in the States having to give birth because they can't access safe, trauma-informed abortion care. These topics are scary in the House of Commons, and even in this committee, because everybody is worried they're going to get in trouble, but not me, and not my party; we're clearly pro-choice.
I've never done this before, but I'm going to stand up for Karen, because if any of you get in trouble in this committee, I want to let you all know that I will have your back. I will fight hard. I am a huge defender of women's rights, and I will fight hard for all of you because you deserve that solidarity. I'm going to show that solidarity to Karen. She didn't deserve what happened to her because of some of her progressive views, including having to deal with, as the chair—
:
I call the meeting to order.
We're resuming meeting 105 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on the Status of Women.
On avoiding audio feedback, before we begin, a few things have changed. I would like to remind all members and other meeting participants in the room of the following important preventative measures.
To prevent disruption and potentially harmful audio feedback incidents that can cause injuries, all in-person participants are reminded to keep their earpieces away from the microphones at all times. As indicated in the communiqué from the Speaker to all members on Monday, April 29, the following measures have been taken to help prevent audio feedback incidents.
All earpieces have been replaced with a model that greatly reduces the probability of audio feedback. The new earpieces are black whereas the former earpieces were grey. Please use a only black, approved earpiece. By default, all unused earpieces will be unplugged at the start of the meeting. When you are not using your earpiece, please place it face down in the middle of the sticker for that purpose that you will find on the table as indicated.
Please consult the cards on the table for guidelines to prevent audio feedback incidents.
The room layout has also been adjusted to increase the distance between microphones and reduce the chance of feedback from an ambient earpiece. These measures are in place so we can conduct our business without interruption and to protect the health and safety of all participants, including the interpreters.
Thank you for your co-operation.
I would also like to make a few comments for the benefit of the members.
Before speaking, please wait until I recognize you by name. All comments shall be addressed through the chair.
As everyone is aware, we suspended the debate on Ms. Gazan's motion at the last meeting. We are now ready to resume the debate on that motion.
The text of the motion is as follows:
That the committee thank MP Vecchio for her years of service as chair of the committee.
Before we start, I would like to inform the members of the list that we had ongoing from the last meeting. The current speaking list is: Dominique Vien, Anna Roberts, Michelle Ferreri, Anita Vandenbeld and Pam Damoff. Since Pam is not here today, she is not on the list.
Please let me know if you would like your name added to or taken off the list.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
My first comments are for Ms. Gazan to thank her for moving this motion, which is entirely appropriate. It is to thank our esteemed colleague Karen Vecchio for her years of service in the position of chair of this committee. It is very well deserved.
I have also had the privilege of being her shadow minister, as we say in our parliamentary jargon, and I have seen what a dedicated woman and exemplary member she is, one who is valued by all parliamentary colleagues, particularly those who sit on our committee.
I would like Ms. Gazan's motion to be put to the vote, Madam Chair, without our having to spend a lot of time on it. If Ms. Vecchio were here, she would agree with me. I know her well enough to say that. What time we take to talk about this motion will be to say that we support it and we are ready to vote.
That is time we will not have for discussing some very important subjects, such as the study we are doing on the red dress alert. That study is also very dear to the heart of our colleague Leah Gazan, with good reason. The alert will mean that a process can be put in place, a system to protect indigenous women and girls, in particular, from dangers we want to see them protected against.
Thank you, Madam Chair. We observed your ability to bounce back and your sense of duty at our most recent meeting. We are familiar with your goodwill. I know you too. You are serious, dedicated and determined, and I am confident that you will be able to move the discussions along on the very important subjects we tackle here.
And so, colleagues, I am pleading with you this morning. Let us not make this motion a springboard for purely partisan and political discussions. Let us use this motion to say how much we value Ms. Vecchio and her work as a member of Parliament. We sincerely thank her for the work she has done.
Let us not go off on tangents that take us far away from what the motion is all about.
:
Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
I want to add my voice. I didn't have a speaking slot at the last meeting, so I didn't get a chance to thank Karen Vecchio for her tremendous amount of work on this committee. I've been on this committee; I was here for two years, before she was chair, when Marilyn Gladu was chair and did a wonderful job, but for the last three years as well, with Karen as chair. My understanding is since she became chair in 2017, our committee has done 45 reports. That is phenomenal, if you want to compare that to every other committee. The amount of work, the effectiveness and, I would say, the fairness with which she chaired this committee is something I think many other committees in this place could look to as an example.
I did want to say, today, that I have concerns. I am very worried about the committee, but not because of you, Shelby. I want to be very clear that I think every one of us is very proud of the work we've done and wants to work very hard to fight to keep this a space that does not give in to the toxicity we see in other parts of Parliament and in other committees.
However, I do think that the has been putting out a narrative that Parliament is broken, that democracy is broken, that Parliament is dysfunctional and that government members are so degenerate that there's no possibility of coming to consensus.
The way Karen chaired this committee is living, breathing proof that is not true. Every day that this committee was able to bring voices of women and girls, voices of non-binary and gender-diverse people who are not heard, and voices of victims and survivors, and work collaboratively with true respect and even friendship across party lines, we proved that Parliament can be functional, that Parliament is functioning and that democracy does work. I truly think that by removing Karen Vecchio as chair.... had to destroy that because it defies his narrative that Parliament is not working.
I'm imploring you, Shelby, because I think, right now.... I've done governance work for decades and worked with parliaments here and around the world, and it is about incentives. It is about what's punished and what's rewarded. Every one of us comes to this place wanting to do good. I don't think there's a person who puts their name on a ballot who isn't doing so because they want to make Canada a better place, particularly the women here who want to do good and bring voices of women into the halls of power in this place, where we have been absent for too many generations.
However, once here, what happens is the incentives are against collaboration. This is a very partisan place. The structure and the very way in which it is formed is based on two swords' lengths. It was created 150-some years ago. It was created by men, and it has been a very aggressive, very male-dominated place. Lately, there's been a toxicity that has come into our politics, whether it's here in Parliament or outside.
What Karen was able to do very effectively as chair was to keep that out. Whether it was through wedge issues, ambush motions that are meant to hijack agendas, the “gotcha” clips on social media or the character assassination that we sometimes see in our political discourse, she kept that out of this committee, and she was punished for it.
Shelby, it wasn't just about Karen. It was about learning lessons. It was about teaching that collaboration and bringing voices of women is something that is not to be rewarded. I think the lessons I would really hope you learn are the lessons from this committee of the last number of years. I do believe very strongly that you want this committee to work, and we will support that.
All members of this committee, and we've seen all the members speaking, will support you to make sure that what Karen did is continued: Instead of listening to the voice of any one member of this committee, she listened to the voices of the witnesses and the voices of the women who came here and needed us to give them space. We will support you in making sure you continue to do that.
However, it is an uphill battle because of the way this place is. I was a staffer here in 2002. I was in the Liberal research bureau for the democracy caucus when committee chairs were voted to be elected. For those of you who don't remember, this was 22 years ago. There was a motion of Parliament that was opposed by the government of the day, the Chrétien government, but supported by backbench Liberals and opposition members. They created the election of committee chairs hoping to bring in a whole new era where committees would truly be independent and autonomous, and that the chairs would truly be independent of their parties—whatever party that was.
Sadly, over the years, I think all of us know that's become a little bit of a rubber stamp. Yes, we elect committee chairs, but it's pretty much the whips, the House leaders and the leaders who decide who those chairs are. Because of that, the chairs are beholden to those whips, House leaders and leaders—whatever party it is. With that incentive structure it can easily be abused.
I would like to do something positive today and come up with some ideas on how we change, as women.... We've been able to do it here despite the way that Parliament is structured in this sort of very aggressive and partisan way.
As women, I think we need to—maybe this committee, maybe the all-party women's caucus—go back to look at some ideas of how committee chairs are selected so that what happened to Karen doesn't happen....
In the Quebec legislature, they actually have a double majority for committee chairs—a majority of government members and a majority of opposition members. If you can't get both sides to agree, then, at that point you cannot be the chair, so the incentive is for the chair to be fair to both sides, like what we're hoping you'll do and like what Karen did.
We had a Conservative motion in 2012—I think it was by Brad Trost—that committee chairs should be elected by the entire Parliament, the same way the Speaker is elected, with a preferential ballot before committees are even set. That way, committees and the chairs would be chosen by all of us, not by the leadership or the whips.
I think it would be really good for us as women, who have really given a space to other women to be able to be heard in Parliament, to champion those kinds of changes, because I think it is really important that what happened here does not happen ever again.
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
I too want to thank Ms. Gazan for moving the motion. I also want to thank Ms. Vien. I understand what she is saying. I do not want to make a speech, and I am not going to take a lot of time. I would just like to say a few words, obviously, to thank Ms. Vecchio.
As well, I want to offer my congratulations to Ms. Kramp‑Neuman for her appointment as chair of the committee.
Madam Chair, we have some things in common.
[English]
Your father was an MP and my father was an MP. Daryl, your late father, passed away in February—my sympathies to you and your family. I know it was just recently. My father passed away too. I know you've lived in politics, and you understand the nature of working together and collaborating, so I'm looking forward to your being the chair here.
Obviously, as indicated in the past here from other members, there are some concerns about how we elect chairs, and that's something we maybe could address later on. I've been on this committee now since 2015. was the first chair, and then obviously Karen came on. As indicated earlier, it's really something that we should be proud of.
[Translation]
We have done a lot of work here. We have had something like 50 meetings. I think it is important to take time to thank Ms. Vecchio for the way she supported all members of the committee, including me. That is why I wanted to speak today.
Ms. Vecchio did exceptional work that was based on her understanding of the issues and her desire to make changes to improve the lives of women across Canada. That was really important to her. She worked hard and she will be much missed on the committee. If my calculations are correct, she actually chaired this committee for seven years.
Ms. Vecchio showed leadership and encouraged collaboration here on the committee. We really want to keep going on that path, Madam Chair. There is no doubt about that. There is no toxic work atmosphere here on the Standing Committee on the Status of Women.
[English]
In the past when Karen would do some sessions here on the Hill, she would always mention how proud she was of every member of this committee. She would say that for all of the women in the status of women committee, and Marc. She would always just add that little caveat, so I'll miss her greatly. I think she's the only person who called me Marky-Marky.
:
I'll be quick, because I already congratulated you, Shelby, and I already said that I'm sad that Karen is gone. But I've reflected a little bit.
I think the only thing I want on the record is that this place, Parliament Hill, is a very difficult place for women to be, because it is a male-dominated area, and I don't appreciate when women are just tossed aside and replaced because of a difference of opinion or because they stood up for something they believed in or because they were doing their job. I can't say for sure, but I'm pretty sure that's what happened in this case. It's sad to see it happen to a fellow woman parliamentarian who has given her all for this place and for the benefit of all the women we've fought so hard for on this committee.
I just wanted to say that. I've been here on Parliament Hill for seven years, and it has been a struggle. I am sure all parties deal with this, and all women in all parties deal with this, but it's hard to see it happen to somebody who was so collaborative and who really helped move the dial forward for women across the country. That's all.
Karen, you will be greatly missed. I am really sad this has happened.
Shelby, I really hope we can continue the great work we've been doing on this committee, but we should be standing up for each other when these things happen. If it happens to one woman, it can happen to all women. When we move backwards in circumstances such as these, well, it's a really dangerous step in the wrong direction. It could be slippery and it could lead to more and more women getting treated this way.
I just wanted that on the record. I think we should be standing up for each other, no matter who it happens to or when it happens. Unfortunately, it happens to women more often than it happens to men, even though we're a minority in this place.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
I had quickly thanked Ms. Vecchio last week. I will also be brief, but I wanted to do it again. Since 2019 when I was elected, I have worked with Ms. Vecchio on the Standing Committee on the Status of Women. When I initially accepted this role, I was well aware that it was not a priority committee, unfortunately. Status of women issues are often seen as secondary, as less important.
These issues were my sole concern. First, I was happy to be appointed as status of women critic, within the Bloc Québécois, and then as vice-chair of the Standing Committee on the Status of Women, but, on the other hand, I was worried, because I did not know what issues I would be able to make progress on. We work within a society that is still far too misogynist, just as is still the case in politics, where I sometimes have the feeling I am in an “old boys' club”, if I may say that.
I was nonetheless proud to have raised problems in other committees, whether it was assaults in the Armed Forces or the issue of assaults in sport, which we first tried to take to the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage.
Recently, on March 8, I gave interviews to some journalists. I talked about my pride. During those interviews, one journalist asked me a surprising question. He wanted to know why we still need a status of women committee in 2024. I was floored. That was when I realized all the work this committee does, all the work done by an exceptional chair, a strong and open-minded woman like Karen Vecchio. That has enabled us to do an incredible number of studies and produce reports that I hope will not be left on the shelf. Given that our committee is often seen as secondary, there is often a tendency to shelve our studies. I hope we will be able to continue our extremely productive work.
Madam Chair, I want to welcome you here and I congratulate you on your appointment. We have a lot on our plate. We must remember that we need to defend our committee, to stress the excellent and important work we do. There is still a lot of misogyny in our society and we have to point out that the work we do is done in partnership, hand in hand with men. You are welcome here, Mr. Serré.
Our battle is not with men, but too many men believe the feminist movement is against them. This gives rise to online misogyny and hate movements that are especially violent against women. We must denounce this violent speech, these online “men's rights” movements.
On the committee, we have to stress the importance of our work and we have to defend it. Our committee is not secondary. It must not be constantly pushed aside to make way for other committees.
I will stop there. I have already spoken for longer than planned.
Once again, congratulations to Ms. Vecchio. Welcome, Madam Chair, and let us now move on to serious matters. Let us vote on this important motion and continue doing the good work of the committee together.
Thank you.