SPECIAL JOINT COMMITTEE ON THE CHILD CUSTODY AND ACCESS
COMITÉ MIXTE SPÉCIAL SUR LA GARDE ET LE DROIT DE VISITE DES ENFANTS
EVIDENCE
[Recorded by Electronic Apparatus]
Tuesday, March 31, 1998
• 0903
[English]
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson (Ontario,
Lib.)): Good morning. Welcome to the 13th meeting of
the joint parliamentary committee on custody and access.
I'd like to start the session by reminding people of
the basic terms of reference. We've been appointed to
examine and analyse issues relating to custody and
access arrangements after separation and divorce, and
in particular to assess the need for a more
child-centred approach to family law policies and
practices that would emphasize joint parental
responsibilities and child-focused parenting
arrangements based on children's needs and best
interests. Those are our terms of reference.
We're happy to welcome this morning Deborah
Merklinger, who will start; Dr. Marty McKay, who will
continue; Barbara Chisholm, who will speak third; and
Gillian McCluskey.
We'd like to suggest that you speak as briefly as
possible, close to five minutes, because what's most
interesting for us is the opportunity to question your
experience and help to build our own knowledge.
Would you please start, Ms. Merklinger?
Ms. Deborah L. Merklinger (Family Mediator): Thank
you very much for
including me in this forum and in this potentially
revolutionizing process.
Just as a brief introduction, I'm a lawyer, social
worker, and mediator, and I have a private practice where
I work strictly as a mediator and therapist and focus
on the areas of custody and access, separation, and
divorce.
• 0905
I've attempted to work towards bringing out two
recommendations that I believe would assist us in
dealing with the mandate you have already stated,
which is working towards a more child-centred approach
to family law policies and practices and one that would
emphasize joint parental responsibility and, most
important, child-focused parenting agreements.
I've come to my recommendations
as a result of my work on a day-to-day basis with
families and children who are going through the
separation process. As a result of the difficulties
I've encountered and watched other people
experience, most importantly the children, I would like
to address two areas that I believe need some
attention.
First, one of the things I would like to see
happen is the implementation of what I, for lack of
better words, call a mandatory screening process, which
separated or separating parents would be a part of.
The goal of the screening process as I see it would
be, while possibly manyfold, at the very least
twofold.
First, it would be to assess where in the
separation process parents are emotionally,
financially, logistically, legally, and practically.
This screening process would be handled by skilled
professionals who would be knowledgeable in the areas
of law, mental health, and of course issues of domestic
violence and spousal abuse.
Secondly, the goal of the screening process would be
to ensure that these parents, who are screened and
assessed as to where they are in a continuum of coping
and their emotional wherewithal and legal status,
would then be referred to an appropriate dispute
resolution mechanism, such as, for example,
conciliation counselling, mediation, or possibly
custody and access assessment, hopefully primarily with
a mediation emphasis; or, at the latter end of the
continuum, arbitration, and in only the most necessary
cases then, litigation. The professionals who would be
involved in delivering these aforementioned processes
would be made available to clients or parents through
possibly an approved roster or panel of skilled
professionals in each of the designated areas.
The way I see it, the referral process would have
as its mandate a commitment to ensure that parents
would be put into the least intrusive mechanism of
dispute resolution, which would thereby enable them and
assist them to resolve their outstanding parenting
issues in the most humane way possible. As we
all know, we're here because of the children, and the
most holistic approach possible and the least
intrusive mechanism would without doubt be the best.
I would suggest that the referral process be
management or monitored in a timely fashion with
regular status reviews.
Basically what I'm suggesting is that the goal
of this particular recommendation would be to ensure
that our family law policies and practices maintain and
support an infrastructure that would ensure parents the
maximum opportunity to work together from as early on
in the process as is possible so that it's feasible for
them to reach child-focused parenting agreements.
I would also recommend that the screening process
be made available not only to people who are
bringing on applications or some sort of legal action,
but also to parents who have not yet begun to take
legal action, so that entire step can be avoided.
With respect to whether or not the screening process
should be mandatory, it's my idea that the screening
process should be mandatory. Certainly it's up for
discussion as to whether or not attendance at the
referral placement be mandatory or voluntary. I
believe that if the referral to the next stage were
voluntary and parties were sent to the most appropriate
dispute resolution mechanism, most would utilize such a
potentially conflict-resolving and conflict-minimizing
process.
So that's my first recommendation.
• 0910
My second recommendation is to review and amend the
language in the legislation regarding custody and
access.
For example, eliminate terminology such as
joint custody, full custody, and access. Instead,
use words like parenting agreement, time sharing,
the child's home with mother, the child's
home with father, the child's home with
grandparents, etc.
Moreover, by changing the language, I would recommend
that parents be required to detail understandings in
the form of agreement regarding all areas of
decision making, such as issues surrounding children's
health, education, religion, extracurricular
activities, travel, mobility, etc., as well as detailed
commitments regarding parents' agreed-upon time sharing
plans, both on a day-to-day basis and
regarding holidays and special occasions, etc.
My hope or fantasy is that many battles fought
over labels and terminology and power might in some way
be eliminated by doing away with the harsh terminology,
such as access.
Instead, we should encourage
and support parents to focus on the substance
of their agreements, instead of simply the form,
and really put their attention toward the
children.
Possibly, we might even have a standard parenting
agreement that could be filed by all parents that would
cover the various areas that must be dealt with—these
are all parents who separate—unless they show that the
particular area is not relevant to their
families.
Once again, I'm suggesting a goal of encouraging
parents to focus on children's needs and best
interests, and eliminate unnecessary power struggles
that waste both the time and money of the public and
private sectors and that,
moreover, is of no benefit to
the nation's children.
Finally with respect to the shift in language,
let's reserve words like “custody” and “access”
for legislation like that of the
Criminal Code.
Thank you very much.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Dr. McKay.
Dr. Marty McKay (Clinical Psychologist): Good
morning.
I'm a psychologist, and I'm here to speak to you about
my 20 years of carrying out custody and access
assessments, the pain that I have seen in the lives
of children, and the difficulties that I have
experienced in continuing in the role of an assessor
due to what I feel are significant shortcomings and
room for abuses that prevail in our family law
system.
I have always been interested in vulnerable groups.
I consulted to the Children's Aid Society for 15
years. I worked with battered women in transition
homes.
Within the past 10 years I've come to see that men,
or fathers, constitute a vulnerable group within the
family law system. By a decision for a women to
leave a marriage, a man may be bereft of his children,
falsely accused of abuse, have his children
coached to give evidence against him, and end up
fighting for his reputation, access to his
children, and his freedom in some cases.
I have seen some terrible cases that have caused me
great concern for the future of children who are being
deprived of half of their heritage and who have half of
their emotional life torn away from them.
I'm surprised, starting out as a feminist myself and
one concerned about abuses and unfairness toward women,
to reach a position where I am genuinely concerned
about the future of fathers.
• 0915
My position is that assessments are being used to
deprive children of meaningful relationships with both
parents. They're being misused. They're being
informed by a political attitude that see a woman's
word as much stronger than a man's; that on the basis
of an accusation a man cannot clear himself. It
doesn't matter if he passes a psychological assessment,
a lie detector test, or even a penile measure for child
abuse. He could still be on a child abuse register and
prevented from seeing his children, except under the
most rigorously supervised conditions, when he has done
nothing wrong.
I'm well aware that abuse exists. In 15 years of
consulting with the Children's Aid Society, I know that
children are abused sexually, physically, emotionally.
That's why I feel it is so important not to give
credence to false allegations, especially when
children's lives and futures are at stake.
My position is that joint custody should be the de
facto position, and that mandated mediation should be
required for up to two years post-divorce to settle
disputes that arise between ex-spouses.
I believe that without the adversarial system and the
ease with which false accusations and adversarial fires
can now be fuelled and burned, without those
opportunities, most couples can come to reasonable
arrangements in caring for their children post-divorce.
But they need education, they need the assistance of
professionals—professionals who are committed to
fairness, who do not see one parent as virtuous and
another parent as evil, who give both parents the right
to continue having meaningful relationships with their
children, who are not informed by some kind of
misguided political correctness.
Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you very much.
Dr. Chisholm.
Ms. Barbara A. Chisholm (Ontario Association of
Social Workers): Thank you, Madam Chairman.
I am speaking today representing the Ontario
Association of Social Workers, which is one of 10
provincial membership organizations of professional
social workers in the country that belong to the
Canadian Association of Social Workers. That
organization, in turn, is a member of 55 international
federations, so that we represent a body of opinion.
The philosophy that underscores our recommendations
today may be stated in four areas:
1. Continuing relationship with and contact with both
parents, including step-parents, following separation
and/or divorce is the entitlement of the child, and
exists regards of the nature and status of the adults'
relationship with each other, with one exception: where
contact with a parent or former caretaker places the
child at risk physically, psychologically or sexually.
In such situations, restricted or even no contact may
be indicated, and indeed may be in the child's best
interests.
2. The arrangements for access and the observance of
those arrangements should not be a bargaining chip in
any other arrangements—for example, financial.
3. Each situation of the reorganization of a family,
especially where the ongoing parenting of children is
concerned, deserves to be addressed on its own merits,
rather than through generalizations that may be
inappropriate—for example, that small children should
always be in the custodial care of mothers.
4. The idea of mandatory family mediation of custody
access disputes following separation or divorce should
be approached cautiously as government policy, and
should not be undertaken in those situations where
there are or have been allegations of family
violence, physical or psychological or both,
even if the
allegations remain unsubstantiated, or in instances of
significant economic disparity, because of the
potential for an imbalance of power.
• 0920
Our recommendations to you are these.
First, the Ontario
Association of Social Workers suggests that a major and
fundamental step that would lead to significant
improved resolution of custody and access disputes is
to require special training for judges appointed to
family law divisions, to be provided before such
appointees sit. Such training should address the
following topics: the ages and stages of childhood,
especially the first five years; what attachment theory
means and the consequences of an attachment disorder;
the implications of access arrangements that set up
travel and separation for the very young child; the
place and use of mediation or assessments and how to
utilize them; current research on gay and lesbian
parenting; gender bias in custody preferences; and
lastly, the difference between the blood tie and the
so-called psychological parent tie.
Second, guidelines should be established to assist
the court in considering parental relocation plans
involving the children.
Third, parental alienation, sometimes called a
syndrome and sometimes called a symptom, does exist and
should be recognized as a behaviour requiring
professional intervention. Guidelines should clearly
indicate that if the behaviour does not significantly
modify or change, transfer of custody may be indicated.
This behaviour differs from sincere allegations of
wrongdoing. Those are two very separate behaviours.
Fourth, special masters should be appointed to deal
with high-conflict cases where the parties are enmeshed
in the quarrel. This would take these often very
time-consuming cases out of the mainstream court load.
Such special masters should receive particular training
in alternate dispute resolution techniques and be
prepared to monitor the cases on a long-term basis.
Fifth, restrictions on the number of adjournments
allowed in custody access disputes should be put in
place, as well as restrictions on the number of returns
to court. After these limits have been reached, the
matter should then be routinely subject to referral to
the special master mentioned in four above.
Sixth, training for lawyers should be broadened to
recognize that in family law matters, counsel
representing a parent is functioning within the shadow
of the children's future. Thus, the obligation to the
parent-client is different to that extent from the
obligation and other aspects of legal practice. The
adversarial approach should be modified so that in fact
the children's interests are paramount.
Seventh, adequate funding for supervised access
programs should ensure facilities that cannot only,
really, facilitate the contact between child and
parent—for example, matters of space, equipment, staff
ratios, security, and so on—but also ensure provision
of such facilities in all communities across Canada.
Eighth, mandatory parenting education programs for
parents unable or unwilling to resolve their dispute
should be a part of any resolution, especially for the
high-conflict cases.
• 0925
In our professional opinion, failure to implement
these recommendations will result in a continuation of
the current clogged court system that is providing
inconsistent results and is sometimes exacerbating
quarrels between the two parents, rather than resolving
them.
Thank you very much.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you very much indeed.
Senator Jessiman.
Senator Duncan James Jessiman (Manitoba, PC): I'd
like to direct this first question to Dr. Merklinger.
Is your mandatory screening process to apply before
you get a separation order from the court, as well as
after a divorce?
Ms. Deborah Merklinger: I'm
suggesting that the mandatory screening process be
applied to anybody who has made any sort of
application. Before any kind of court process begins,
the parties will have been through the screening
process. I'm also suggesting, though, that it be made
available to people who have not yet begun any kind of
application but want assistance in order to avoid any
sort of court application.
My thinking is focused on how, at the very earliest
point in time, we can get people into a process that
will help them find the right place to work on what
they need to do around their children's needs.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: So would you suggest that
this be voluntary before they get to the point where
they want something from the court in the way of a
document, such as a separation order?
Ms. Deborah Merklinger: Yes.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: If they then want
something from the court, are you suggesting to us that
it should be mandatory?
Ms. Deborah Merklinger: Yes.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Should we have something
to that effect in our legislation?
Ms. Deborah Merklinger: Yes.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: You go on to suggest
that, also voluntarily or mandatorily, we should have a
dispute resolution mechanism. I'm assuming you're
going to conciliation, where you have a conciliation
officer who talks to both parties and hopefully gets
them to agree. Secondly, you might have arbitration,
where someone is going to decide it. Would you suggest
that this arbitration be binding on both parties?
Ms. Deborah Merklinger: I'm suggesting that the
arbitration should still be at the latter end of the
continuum. It would go from conciliation counselling
to mediation. But in terms of my thinking through
whether or not parties must attend mediation, there are
different reasons, different camps around whether we
support mandatory attendance to whatever it is.
In terms of my own personal view around mediation, I
also agree with Dr. Chisholm. In any
case in which there is an indication of family
violence—allegations and/or occurrence—or where there
are severe power imbalances, mediation is
contraindicated.
We can go into whether or not there are different
contexts of mediation, such as caucusing and so on. I
must say that I, in part, have some thinking around
whether or not there's an alternative process that is
mediation oriented but that we can use with cases of
violence. If I put that aside and speak to cases in
which there is not violence or has not been an
indication of it, though, then I personally believe
mandatory mediation—or an attempt at mediation at the
very least—would be a useful thing.
I personally have worked in a mandatory jurisdiction
in the state of Florida. There, prior to being heard
in court, parties have to attempt mediation before they
are able to go before the judge. They have to come in
with a form that says they have attempted mediation.
I believe this would be extremely useful and we
would avoid many cases going that next step.
• 0930
Senator Duncan Jessiman: I'm certainly not
against what you're suggesting. I just want to make it
clear so we know. I would like to think...but you
have to tell me; I'm not a witness, I'm just here asking
questions. What I got was that you thought it
would be in the interest of everybody—the parents who
are separating and the children who are involved—that we
do have in the legislation something that says they
must have some form of conciliation. I understood then
that we'd go to the next step if the conciliation
hadn't worked, because the conciliator is just that; he
doesn't decide anything, he just hopes he can get
both sides to agree.
The next step is arbitration. Then you said as a
last resort you go back to court. In arbitration, as
you know, there are arbitrations and arbitrations. Some
are binding on the parties and some are not. Would you
think that under some circumstances the court itself
could determine that arbitration be mandatory, or
should arbitration always be just arbitration and let
the courts decide at the next level?
Ms. Deborah Merklinger: No, I think that in
certain cases arbitration should be binding.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Senator
Jessiman, we're trying to work on the five minutes per
question.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Why, is my time up?
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Your
time is up. Can we put you down on the list at the
bottom again?
Senator Duncan Jessiman: I can sit here all
day. I'm not ignoring you. I have lots of questions
for everybody.
Thank you very much, Deborah.
Ms. Deborah Merklinger: You're welcome.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Mr.
Szabo.
Mr. Paul Szabo (Mississauga South, Lib.): Thank
you.
Dr. McKay, I was very interested in your
comments. When you have 20 years of right-on-the-ground experience
with couples, I think it's important that we hear
a little bit more about your experience.
You may be aware that in Edmonton, about four or five
years ago, they started a program called the
Parenting after Divorce program. And their survey
shows that among people who've gone through the
program, 90% rated it as very helpful to them. It's by court
order and it's on a pilot basis. I understand now the
attorney general there is contemplating province-wide
implementation. And just on March 7 there was an
article in the Toronto Star, where the Attorney
General of B.C. has announced pilot programs in
Burnaby and New Westminister along the same model.
We've heard a lot about mediation, courses,
counselling, or whatever, and I think it's important
for the committee to hear from you about what you feel,
in terms of parents or couples who are coming before
the system, is their vital need, the first-effort need.
Is it mediation on issues they've identified? Is
it talking to them and making sure they're
educated about what they're into?
Could you also
comment on whether, in your experience over 20 years,
you have some indication or some feeling that when
parents come before you in this situation they're more
preoccupied with their conflict with their partner or
are they more preoccupied with the well-being of their
children?
Dr. Marty McKay: They would all, of course,
say they're concerned about the well-being of
their children, but when people are going through a
divorce they often become very self-centred, and
unfortunately their respective lawyers promote that by
doing a good job for them. They're there to represent
them and their interests. But in the course of that
they become more and more oppositional to each other.
My focus is to tell them they're still a family.
They may be a family that's split and separated, but
they are still a family, and until their children reach
age of majority they are a family and it's in their
interest to get along so that their children don't
suffer.
I feel that mediation can be successful if it's
taken.... The family law has to be taken out of the
adversarial system. As long as it's there, it's going
to encourage each party to present themselves as the
most wonderful person on earth and the other person as
the dirtiest dog in creation.
And in the process, a lot of lying goes on
and there are a lot of false allegations.
• 0935
I feel that mediation needs to be done even when there
are allegations of violence. There's a joke that's
going around that's really not very funny: all men are
suspects until accused, at which point they become
guilty. When we're talking about allegations of
violence, I think the pictures in people's minds are of
men battering women. If we reverse it and say that a
man alleges that his wife hit him over the head with a
frying pan, do we then scuttle the mediation process
too, or are we thinking that men are the abusers? In
my experience, it's about 50-50.
Allegations are things that come up in the course of
assessments, and I think they come up because people
want to get an edge, they want to come out on top. As
long as it is a contest, people are going to be
motivated. And there aren't that many negative
ramifications to someone launching a trial balloon of
abuse.
So to answer your question, I think that mediation is
helpful and should be carried out in almost every case.
Mr. Paul Szabo: I have one last quick question.
Some have suggested that the courts have been
inconsistent in their rulings. Would you comment on
the following fact? Since over 80% of custody awards
are to the mother, would you be surprised if we came to
the conclusion that maybe the courts have erred in
judgment in a lot of cases?
Dr. Marty McKay: Yes, I think they have. My
finding is that there are a lot of very nurturing
fathers out there. I've had some women tell me that
they don't care how the assessment turns out because
they're going to get custody of the children anyway,
“because they always give custody to women”.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you.
Senator Cohen.
Senator Erminie J. Cohen (Saint John, PC): I want
to thank all the witnesses this morning because I feel
very comfortable with all of your presentations.
You've hit all the right buttons as far as I'm
concerned. I hope we will get a copy of Dr. Chisholm's
recommendations.
My question is for all of you. In the past few years
studies have come forth, many of them—and we've heard
from many witnesses—that show us the importance of a
father in the child's life. Given this information and
these studies, why have fathers not been granted better
and more generous access arrangements in the courts?
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Does
somebody want to answer?
Senator Erminie Cohen: I want a comment on that
for the record, about education—
Ms. Barbara Chisholm: I think the reason is
historic. In medieval times fathers were the sole
owners of their children. Mothers had absolutely no
rights at all. If they wished to leave their husbands
they sometimes had to do that at the penalty of losing
any contact with their children. Over the centuries
that position modified, and we have come in our current
time to the recognition of the entitlements of mothers
as being equal to those of fathers, combined with the
other influences of understanding something more about
human nature and about the importance of relationships
to very small children and the importance of women as
people in their own right.
As a result of that, there has been an important and,
on the whole, valuable emphasis on the need of
“mothering” and that was translated into mothers as
such. In point of fact, the research and the early
important writing that was done spoke about
“parenting”, and the parenting issue became
translated into a mothering issue.
So the deciders in our society were
educated to assume that the only reliable parent for
the young child was its mother.
• 0940
I think this is now in the process of again being
rectified and the extremes levelled out, so that we now
can come back to talking about the value of reliable
parenting for the small child.
Senator Erminie Cohen: You mean the pendulum
started here, and went all the way over here, and now
we're hoping it's going to come back and be fairer.
Ms. Barbara Chisholm: That's right. There are
many cases in which I've been involved in my private
practice of the last 20 years, in which I have
recommended that the primary caretaker be the father,
because this person was by far the more reliable
parent.
Senator Erminie Cohen: Do you think that has to do
also with the education of judges?
Ms. Barbara Chisholm: Absolutely. Absolutely.
Senator Erminie Cohen: Yes. I wanted to hear
that.
The second part of that question is, how do you think
we should handle the custodial parent who violates the
access agreement? What type of...I hate to use the word
“punishment”, but there's too much of it happening. I'm
like Dr. McKay; I was a very strong feminist, and all
of a sudden another door has opened in my head and I
realize there's really an imbalance there.
I was wondering, anybody at the table, how you handle
situations of denied access, violation of the custody,
the access by the custodial parent.
Ms. Barbara Chisholm: May I speak to that?
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Dr. McKay.
Sorry, then you can...sure.
Dr. Marty McKay: That's a very important issue,
and I think that's another reason why, if post-divorce
mediation is required, one parent can call the mediator
and say, “Look, I haven't seen my kid in three months.
I go to the door and there's always some excuse that
she can't come.” The mediator acts as a go-between
and says, “Look, we have a problem. What's going on
here? Do you want me to come out and see? Bring your
daughter in if she doesn't want to see her father. Let
her tell me about it.” We should take those steps first.
I've had success with using that, but the professional
has to stay involved over a course of time. I've found
that if couples mediate and agree to post-divorce
mediation, the calls start to become fewer, and
there are fewer and fewer problems—usually. Within
two years you don't hear from them any more, and that's
really nice. But there has to be some post-divorce
follow-up by a professional who has a working
relationship with each of them, who's not biased or on
the side of either one, and is working in the best
interests of the child.
Senator Erminie Cohen: Thank you.
Ms. Barbara Chisholm: I tried to make some
reference to that in my comment about parental
alienation—that it does exist and we must accept the
fact that it exists. The assumption that all
separating and divorcing parents can sit down as
reasonable people and use language to negotiate
agreements is naive and wishful thinking.
We have a spectrum, from people who don't need us at
all, who settle themselves and don't need us to
intervene—and we shouldn't be messing around in their
lives; they can do it; their children will be fine
because they are fine—all the way to the people who,
as I suggest, need special attention.
The special master concept is an attempt to
address those people who are what's called
“entrenched” in their quarrel, where it's become a
way of life. Those people don't rely well on
conventional mediation. They need the imposition of an
authority decision, with some very strong potential
consequences that I allude to in my recommendation.
Ms. Deborah Merklinger: I think what you're
speaking to in part is enforcement, and I think that's
one of our biggest problems—what do we do to enforce
these agreements once parties have reached them?
As we all know, most agreements are only as
good as the two people who are a part of them.
I agree with Dr. McKay. My position is
starting with the least intrusive mechanism, that if
parties can mediate out this issue, that's the best
place to start.
But ultimately, as Dr. Chisholm has said, we have
people out there who go from one end of the
continuum—those who don't need any of us—to those who
need more than most of us can offer.
I think there does need to be some kind of enforcement
mechanism that an obstructing party is well aware of in
case of obstruction of access.
There is a piece in the legislation that speaks to it,
and the basic gist of it is that if one person is
sabotaging the access of parent and child, there is
the possibility of a reversal of custody.
• 0945
The likelihood, though, in the past, of that ever
happening, has been slim to none, in that the custodial
parent has basically been given carte blanche to do
what he or she will.
That needs to change. There needs to be a common
knowledge that this is not acceptable, and that in the
event that happens, and if we are truly talking about
parental alienation, there are penalties in place,
and we can sit and think about what the
appropriate thing is. I guess really at the end of the
day what we are possibly talking about is a reversal of
custody or a shift in custody.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): We'll go
to Dr. Bennett.
Ms. Barbara Chisholm: May I add one comment, just
to clarify? There is a very significant judgment from
the family law division in Quebec, the citation of
which I will be happy to send you—I don't have it with
me—in which the parental alienation syndrome was
reliably described, very clearly described, by the
judge. The custody of all but one of the five children
was transferred from a father back to a mother on the
basis of the father's behaviour. This was a very, very
critical Canadian judgment and has been the basis of
precedent decisions in other jurisdictions.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Ms. Bennett.
Ms. Carolyn Bennett (St. Paul's, Lib.): Thank you.
That actually was my question. Does parental
alienation in its barest definition include the
situation where the child thinks they don't want to see
the other parent any more? I think that's
certainly a situation that in family medicine we see a
great deal.
Are we doing enough in terms of educating parents to
fast-forward to 10 years from now to see how the child
will see the situation then?
I just wondered if you had any advice as to.... I
mean, it's pretty fancy words for us to actually then
be able to do something about it, unless people actually
understand the psychological impact on that child to
later be able to parent, later be able to trust this
mother who said, “It's bad for you to see your dad”, or
these kinds of situations. Why aren't we seeing this out
there as a public education issue?
Ms. Barbara Chisholm: For one thing, I think there
has been a perceivable backlash in the
courts—certainly I and my colleagues are aware of it
in Ontario—against women. There has been a
perceivable shift of attitudes.
When a mother complains or raises an allegation that
she believes something inappropriate is happening to
her children when they're with their other parent, there has
been a shift away from believing, and a belief and
almost an attitude now that she's simply making
trouble, she's simply being difficult, she's “only”
doing this or that.
When these behaviours on the part of the children
develop, as you're referring to, it is essential that
responsible, reliable and competent professional help
look into finding out what's behind it.
Children by themselves need permission to go on loving
people who don't love each other any more. This is a
very, very, very important differential—that children
can still love people who don't love each other any
more. Therefore, they're very vulnerable to the
influence and the atmosphere in which they live. If
very angry people are name-calling—and they do;
believe me, they do—the children are going to pick
that up right through their skin, never mind their
ears.
• 0950
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: My question sort of came up a
bit yesterday. The minute a child says they don't want
to see the other parent, you're saying that then there
should be significant professional intervention.
Ms. Barbara Chisholm: There needs to be some
understanding of what that's all about. I am uneasy
about the assumption that we're going to have, first of
all, enough professionals to do all this intervention
of the hundreds and thousands of separations in this
country every year, or secondly, that there will be the
money available for such activities.
But I think a parent who becomes concerned about their
child's resistance does need to consult somewhere.
That's why I've raised the question that if we do
anything in terms of something mandatory, it should be
around parenting education courses that will help to
alert parents, both genders, about the signs and
signals of concern.
It may simply be that the child is
angry at the other parent, who was a better
disciplinarian and has said, “I'm not going to be a
sugar daddy; I'm going to be your daddy, and the
answer is you go to bed now”, whereas at home the more
comfortable, relaxed discipline appeals more. So you
want to understand that it isn't always pathology that's
behind it, but if it is, then we need to know that.
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: I guess I also feel that we
can't afford not to be doing this in terms of the
physical nature of this problem.
Ms. Barbara Chisholm: Yes.
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: In turn, what keeps coming
back to the committee is the availability of resources,
whether that's to the courts, or to counselling, or
whatever.
We keep coming back to these high-conflict
relationships not being suitable for mediation. This
panel was interesting in saying that there's this
continuum from conciliation to mediation, but then to
some sort of alternative dispute resolution, where these
people may not be able to sit in the same room but you
could mediate something or you could determine
something less adversarial or less court-laden—at
least having a go with that before we go full bore into
lawyers and—
Ms. Barbara Chisholm: I call that—and I do
that—my Kissinger technique. These are a couple who
cannot sit in the same room with each other. The
eruptions are far too intense and angry, and you lose
sight of what you're trying to do, because everybody's
so upset. With their agreement, what I undertake to do
is see them separately and carry the messages back and
forth, which is why I call it the Kissinger technique.
I have had some reliable success with
that technique, with people who have a chance to sound
off without getting the other person inflamed by
hearing all the accusations, and who are a little more
prepared to finally focus on the children. The comment
that was made earlier is so true, that very upset, very
angry people in the middle of this experience find it
very hard to really focus on their children, in spite of
saying so.
Dr. Marty McKay: Yes, I think even high-conflict
couples can mediate successfully if you take the time
with them, to meet with them individually and act as a
go-between, and finally bring them together. I've had
a couple of cases where the couples actually got back
together and reconciled and are living happily as a
married couple and intact family again, from saying “I don't
want to ever see that person; I'm afraid of him; he's
going to kill me.”
One thing that hasn't been mentioned is the
money factor. Money is a wonderful motivator.
Sometimes people can say “I could have put all four kids
through the U of T for the money I've paid on lawyers.”
I respectfully submit that the money that would
fund the professionals for mediation would be a drop in
the bucket compared to the legal fees that are now
expended by persons.
And there needs to be reform to the legal aid system.
I have seen cases where the woman is funded by legal
aid, and she can go on fighting ad infinitum, ad
nauseam. The husband, on the other hand, has a job and
he is bankrupt.
But if you can get the people and say, “Look, do you
want to go back to court over this issue and pay
$2,000 or do you want to pay for a couple of hours of
our time together and sort this out? Which is
it?” usually people will say, “Oh, I hadn't thought of that;
that's a good idea.”
• 0955
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Senator
DeWare.
Senator Mabel M. DeWare (Moncton, PC): Thank you.
I just wanted to say to you, Deborah Merklinger, that
we totally agree that we should change the definition
of custody and access. Even when we were dealing with
Bill C-41 last year, we discussed it at that time.
Because this bill came through the Attorney General's
office and they're dealing with the Criminal Code, they
wanted to keep all the words the same, but we feel
very strongly that they have to be changed.
I also liked your point that the parenting plan to
establish the responsibilities of the two parents has to
be done before any decision is made in the courts or
through litigation. We have to remind them that there
is a responsibility here, even though it could be
highly volatile at that point. The parenting plan
could, as you say, be almost a mandatory thing: you
have to sit down and decide who's going to be
responsible for what and look at the child's future.
When you have to sit down and make plans, it's like
setting up a budget; you do have to stop and think.
You have a very good suggestion there.
Ms. Deborah Merklinger: Thank you.
Senator Mabel DeWare: You are saying some
sort of draft plan could be made available.
Ms. Deborah Merklinger: I am suggesting....
You know, I must say that
when the invitation came last week to attend here, I
was overwhelmed by the invitation. Then I thought,
well, I'd better think through now what I'm going to
say. So my thoughts aren't completely played out
yet, but in their infancy last night, as my nerves were
beginning to set in, I started to think it through. As
I said, it's still in its infancy.
My idea is, yes, we could have some kind of standard
form to cover all the different areas. There are
certain things that are unpredictable and idiosyncratic
to each family, and certainly the parenting agreement
could differ from case to case. We all know the Smith
family is different from the Jones family. But we also
know that where children are involved, there are many
standard issues that families do face and need to think
about. They could be enunciated in an agreement.
My idea is that we get people talking, thinking, and
communicating about children's needs, and we shift the
focus from that me-centred approach and the
all-encompassing power struggle and potential conflict
that distract parents at a time when really they need
to be attending to what's in the best interests of the
kids.
If there were something out there that said, “This is
what you have to be thinking about; this is what you
have to be talking about”, we would be doing a lot to
get people on the right track from very early on.
Senator Mabel DeWare: Usually, I suppose, in
your experience, the break-up had nothing to do with the
child at the time. The break-up was for other
reasons.
Ms. Deborah Merklinger: I don't think I've ever
heard a couple come in and say, “We broke up because of
Johnny”.
Senator Mabel DeWare: Right.
Also, I would be interested to know from Dr. Chisholm,
maybe I'm naive in this question, but what is a special
master? I haven't heard that phrase before.
Ms. Barbara Chisholm: This is a program that has
begun in the States and in Australia. It's the
appointment of a judge—a qualified, experienced
judge—to a special status. It would be a new status
of judicial appointment for someone who would receive
special training and be available to deal specifically
with the high-conflict cases, the ones that come back
and back, where people fire their lawyers because they
don't like the advice they get and shop for another
lawyer and fire that one.
I have recently been involved in a situation where the
mother had five and she's now on her sixth lawyer. She
doesn't like the advice she gets, so she lawyer-shops.
Her position is very much, “My answer is no. What did
you say the question was?” She's intractable and
extremely difficult to work with. She's one of the
people with whom I've been doing Kissinger work,
because she can't sit in the same room with her former
husband without an incredible outburst. We were
successful in getting a completely designed spring
break arrangement for where the children were going to
be and how they did it.
We have now begun to work on the summer break.
We are beginning to get special plans for special
occasion things.
• 1000
It happens that you can work with some of these people
sometimes, but there are cases that really I do
believe need the imposition of authority. These are
people who are in need of, for want of a better word, a
parental kind of “you shall”. This approach would be
where we would say that this
would be the end of it, we don't want to hear any more
from you, and go do your homework.
For those people, we should have someone with special
training whose skill and authority to make an
order allows him to receive the cases that are clogging
our courts, taking up hours of time, and not getting
resolved. They're just getting worse and going around in
circles. So the title for this person is special
master.
Senator Mabel DeWare: Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you very much from this panel. You've been really
helpful. I liked the precision of your
recommendations, and we appreciate your
being here.
Could the next panel now move up? It's a
heavily charged day, but we need to hear everything
people have to say.
Welcome to our hearings. We're pleased to have you
here.
We have
representatives from the Assaulted Women's Helpline,
Beth Bennet and Pauline Delahaye.
We also have representatives from the
Ontario Association of Interval and Transition Houses,
Eileen Morrow, and Ruth Hislop, vice-president.
From Families against Deadbeats,
we have Renate Diorio and Ilene McGillis.
Would you start, please?
• 1005
Ms. Beth Bennet (Program Director,
Assaulted Women's Helpline):
My name is Beth Bennet, and I'm the program director at the
Assaulted Women's Helpline.
The Assaulted Women's Helpline is a non-profit,
charitable agency that serves women in the city of
Toronto. The agency's inception more than 12 years ago
was formed from a need that grew out of Toronto
women's shelters and the local distress centre to
have a telephone crisis line dedicated to serving
abused and assaulted women.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Excuse
me, before you start, I think you all have been
informed previously that we try to keep your
presentations as short as possible so that there's time
for questions.
Ms. Beth Bennet: Right.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): So if I
make signals at around five minutes' time,
that's because you're
going over your time.
Ms. Beth Bennet: Okay.
We offer crisis counselling and emotional support. We
advocate on behalf of assaulted women. We have the
ability to serve women in 140 languages through the
use an AT&T interpreter service. In 1997, the
agency received over 26,000 calls.
In preparing this presentation and brief that will
follow it, many women representing various agencies
participated in this process: Pauline Delahaye
and Ruth Bockner from Nellie's Shelter;
Valerie Packota from the York Shelter for Women;
Vivien Green from the Metro Woman Abuse
Council; Marsha Sfeir from Education Wife
Assault; Rosalinda Tijam and Lee Gold,
from the Assaulted Women's Helpline;
Kathryn Penwill from Oasis Centre des Femmes;
and Karen Engel, from the
City of York Child and Family Centre.
All of us who currently work in the field of women
abuse recognize that problems related to custody and
access present one of the biggest hurdles for women who
are trying to escape from violent partners.
Some observations are as follows.
It is custody and access,
as currently enshrined in law and interpreted
by the courts, that keep women trapped in abusive
relationships, since the two most common threats an
abused woman hears from her partner are that she'll never
get the children if she leaves him and that he'll kill
her if she leaves him.
It is access ordered by the courts that
allows men to find their ex-partners and kill them
after they leave. This also includes the murder of
children.
It is custody and access that make it
impossible for abused women to make a fresh start free
of abuse.
It is custody and access that judges do not
understand in the context of violence.
It is custody and access that allow abusive men
to continue to abuse, creating the
intergenerational effects of family
violence.
Peter Jaffe's research demonstrated clearly
that witnessing violence has the same effect on
children as being abused directly.
Past conduct has not been considered relevant by the
courts unless it is deemed relevant to the ability of
that person to act as a parent.
The onus needs to be shifted so that abusive fathers
will have to prove that access is in the best interests
of the child. A man who abuses his wife has committed
child abuse, and any new custody and access legislation
needs to be framed in such a way that this reality is
acknowledged.
Both witnessing wife abuse and/or being abused have
long-term and devastating effects on children.
Therefore, men who abuse their partners should have no
right to continue to abuse their children.
Any new legislation should be drafted in a manner that
reflects an understanding of the pervasiveness of wife
abuse in our society and an understanding of the effect
on children of witnessing wife assault.
The assumption that as much access as possible to both
parents is good for children must be challenged. Such
a right should only be earned by a history of involved
parenting and a past free of spousal abuse.
The tone of this committee's mandate implies that
separating parents are articulate, reasonable, and able
to work out their disagreements amicably. It also
appears to have been framed in the context of a white,
middle-class, anglophone couple.
The most recent Statistics Canada study revealed that
one-quarter of all women have experienced violence at
the hands of a current or past marital partner, and
one-half of women with previous marriages reported
violence by a previous spouse.
These women deserve protection in law and by the
courts. Failure to protect their children by granting
access to abusive fathers also subjects women to
further abuse.
We find the committee's mandate to be narrow. This is
extremely problematic, especially in the lack of
definition of the terms used. The term “child-centred
approach” needs to be clearly defined, as does “best
interests of the child”.
Further, it is our position that the push toward law
policies and practices that would emphasize joint
parental responsibilities becomes a non-issue when abuse
is present. Joint parental responsibilities in matters
where abuse is not present are still not
necessarily conducive to a child-focused parenting
model, and hence not in the best interests of
the child.
• 1010
The Assaulted Women's Helpline, in consultation with
other agencies, has a number of recommendations.
Separate the issue of access and support. Support does
not equal access.
“Primary caregiver” should be
defined as the individual overseeing and/or performing
the tasks related to the day-to-day life of the child.
Promising to do these things is not the same as
actually doing them.
Implement training and monitoring of judges, lawyers
and Children's Aid workers on the impact of woman
abuse and its impact on children. This should be done
through community-based agencies within the violence
against woman sector.
Find and make accessible supervised access centres
operated from a women's centre perspective.
Make legal aid accessible to women on the same basis
as it is currently accessible to men.
We would also like to comment on the process of the
Special Joint Committee on Child Custody and Access.
If the federal government is serious about the
consultative process, it will have to fund a thorough
process of community consultation. It is
unconscionable to reform custody and access legislation
of such far-reaching importance without appropriate and
widespread community consultation. We therefore ask
that there be an inclusive and broadly based
consultation to draft legislation that takes into
account the reality of abuse in the lives of women and
children. Such a consultation must be made of
paramount importance.
Men who abuse their partners are not fit parents. The
abuse continues after separation, and more women are
killed after separation than before.
A new law needs to be drafted in such a way that men,
who usually have superior financial resources, cannot
subvert it by hiring lawyers to delay settlements that
exhaust and bankrupt women.
We expect that you will give these responses the
careful consideration that the Assaulted Women's
Helpline believes they deserve, so that children are no
longer treated as property, and so that parenting is
viewed as a responsibility that fathers earn by treating
women and children non-violently.
I would also like to say that the Assaulted Women's
Helpline and all of the agencies represented at our
community consultation would like to endorse the brief
submitted by the National Association of Women and the
Law. The recommendations outlined in its brief
are critical and should be implemented in their
entirety.
Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you very much.
We'll go to our next witness.
Ms. Eileen Morrow (Lobby Coordinator, Ontario
Association of Interval and Transition Houses):
Thank you very
much. My name is Eileen Morrow, and I work for the
Ontario Association of Interval and Transition Houses.
OAITH is a sixty-member organization primarily
of first-stage shelters for abused women and their
children in Ontario, and it is the largest shelter
association in Canada.
As representatives of first-stage emergency shelters
for abused women and their children, we're very well
placed to hear from the front line on a daily, 24-hour
basis, about the concerns of abused women and their
children with regard to custody and access and other
family law issues that will not be addressed during
these hearings, but which we also think are vital to
the freedom of women and children in abusive
situations.
When we work at the front line in shelter
organizations, we're very aware on a daily basis of the
high percentage of cases of custody and access disputes
where violence against women and their children, both
through direct violence against the children and
through the witnessing of violence by the children, are
present. We know that statistical research has also
shown that there is a high degree of violence against
women and children when custody and access is in
dispute within the court system. We also know that
most custody and access and marriage dissolution
situations are resolved without court intervention, and
we know that in those cases that go to court there is a
high degree of violence against women present.
It is our position that violence against women is a
women's equality rights issue and a human rights issue.
The safety of women and children and their right to
personal security under the Constitution of Canada and
the Charter of Rights and Freedoms is at risk when
family courts refuse to take an equality rights
analysis for all women and children when making
decisions on custody and access and the best interests
of the child in these matters. We would like to see
these hearings take note of that analysis.
These hearings should also take note of the fact that
the federal government has committed itself to an
equality rights analysis of all its legislation under
the charter. It is enshrined within our laws and
within our Constitution that it is the duty of the
Government of Canada to ensure that security rights of
women and children are protected.
This is not a matter of
choice. It is not a matter of discretion. It is the
duty of the court.
• 1015
I'd just like to give a couple of minutes to Ruth
Hislop, who will talk a little about her experience
with child witnesses of violence and the impact of
violence against women on children.
Ms. Ruth Hislop (Vice-President, Ontario
Association of Interval and Transition Houses):
Thanks for the opportunity. I'm a front-line worker in
one of the metro shelters and have been a children's
advocate worker for the last ten and a half years, so I
think I can bring some insight to this in terms of some
of the concerns that children have.
One of the biggest dilemmas is that children are very
often at a very confused stage in terms of the roles of
the parents, and when we look at what the best
interests of the child is, I think we really need to
take into consideration the fact that the mothers are
often reinforcing what the best interests of the child
is.
With regard to the issue of access to the father,
oftentimes there's a lot of confusion in terms of what
the children want. At times children do want to have
access to the father, and that's reinforced by the
legal system. The drawback is that oftentimes when
that access is desired there are no supervised access
centres that are able to provide the space for the
volumes of children needing to have a safe environment
to visit with their father and/or reinforcing that the
mother also needs to be safe during the access visits.
And certainly, as Eileen has alluded to, there is the
issue that access to the father during visits often
increases the violence.
Our position is very clear. In an ideal sort of
situation we'd like to suggest that there's no access.
We recognize that when violence is witnessed by the
children it has an intent, and men's rights to degrade
and dehumanize their partners in front of the children
and the implicit threat against the children themselves
serve a purpose and have clear effects on both the
mother and the child.
If the purpose is to have the children have access to
their father, then we need to ensure that we have
supervised access centres available where safety is of
paramount concern. There is a very strong emotional
toll for children in terms of the dilemma around the
parent. One of the big concerns is in terms of not
having centres where there is a safe place for the
children to visit with their father without
ramifications in terms of the violence continuing
beyond the visits.
Ms. Eileen Morrow: I just would like to say in
closing that we support the submissions made by the
Assaulted Women's Helpline here today. We also support
the submissions of the National Association of Women
and the Law, which does give a more fuller context to
family law for all women in Canada.
There isn't an opportunity for us to make a full
presentation to you, and that's unfortunate. We do
have a brief for you today.
Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you.
I'd like to reassure you that even though your time
here in front of us may seem too short, your written
briefs are part of the record and are read by all of
us. The way we've organized this now is really to
enable the interchange with the members of the
committee.
Ms. Diorio.
Ms. Renate Diorio (Founder, Families Against
Deadbeats): Good morning. My name is Renate Diorio. I
am founder of Families Against Deadbeats. I would like
to take this opportunity to define our terminology
for “deadbeats”.
We do not consider an individual, non-custodial parent
who is paying for his child or who has access to his
child a deadbeat. We deal with the individual who has
clearly misused his title as parent and who takes no
part whatsoever in his children's. That is our
terminology for “deadbeat”.
To give you a little bit of history, in March 1993
FAD was created after sheer frustration with my own
struggle in not obtaining child support after my
husband walked away, leaving me to pay all his debts,
which I'm still paying to this day.
• 1020
I obtained legal aid for four years. Now I'm with a
legal aid lawyer that has done absolutely nothing for
me. I'm basically stuck in the system right now, and I
cannot even afford a lawyer.
My father, the late Heinz Paul, and I co-founded
FAD and lobbied the provincial government for tougher
enforcement measures to assist families who could not
obtain child support.
We started out with our MPP, Joe Spina, who has
been very supportive and has backed FAD's membership
since the very beginning. Through his assistance we
were able to meet with the attorney general and his
staff to present our proposal to change legislation.
As a group, we have achieved great success in our input
on Bill 82, or the Family Responsibility and Support
Arrears Enforcement Act, 1996, but now we feel that
our work must carry on to another level.
The family law policies in Canada require more
effective measures to ensure that the children's best
interests are taken into account. These policies have
fallen short of focusing on the children. Instead,
only parents' concerns have taken precedence. The
family unit that the children were used to changes
drastically during separation and divorce. If we can
minimize the negative effects of family break-up, those
children will have a brighter future.
Parenting has to provide a positive environment for
children. The decisions regarding custody, access and
support must be decided on the ability of the parents to
commit to the lifelong responsibility of raising their
child. The forum chosen to decide custody matters
should be decided by the parents. The choices
currently available are not feasible. They are
limited, prohibitively expense, and excessively stretched
out over many months or years, not to mention stressful
and confusing for the children.
The simplest solution is mediation. The majority of
support and custody orders now before a family court
judge could have been decided in mediation in a few
hours for a few dollars, compared to lawyers' fees.
Ladies and gentlemen, we all know that this is a
win-lose situation. We all know who the winners are:
the lawyers.
In comparison, in family court, custody and access will
be decided a few years from now by a number of judges'
notes, tens of thousands of dollars recklessly wasted,
ending up in an adversarial situation. Through
mediation, the agreements arrived at will eliminate the
possibility of falsifying information on affidavits
when presented to the family court. Choosing mediation
will also afford parents some control over the
decisions regarding custody, access and support for
their children.
We realize that mediation will not be
effective in settling divorce and separation issues in
all families, but it could ease the burden of cases in
the family court. In situations involving abuse of any
kind, abandonment, hostility and blatant disregard of
the mediated agreement, a separation/divorce case will
have to be resolved in family court.
Custody, access and support for the children must be
the focus of the parents, separate from the issues of
separation and divorce of two adults. The
parents' responsibility to their children is lifelong,
and an agreement for their upbringing must be enforced.
FAD fully supports the issues brought forward today.
Although FAD's membership is comprised of over 250
single parents not receiving child support, we are also
concerned with the importance of custody, and consistent
access and support, comprised of not only financial
support but emotional and spiritual support as well.
Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you very much.
Senator Jessiman.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Thanks, Madam Chair.
I don't there's anyone on this committee who isn't
sympathetic to those who find themselves in the
position where the court has ordered custody payments
or maintenance payments to be made and they're not made.
Bill C-41, brought in just about a year ago, really
strengthened that situation. So if a non-custodial
parent does not pay, we now have not only the court
that can put him in jail...which really is not the
answer, because if you put a person in jail, either
party, you're depriving that person from earning a
living so he can pay the support. So they've come
along and they've strengthened it to the extent that
they can take away their driver's licence, their
passports, other licences. That's fair, and we all
agree with that.
• 1025
But would you not agree—and I know from where you're
coming, but I want you to try to be as honest with us as
you can, because you've heard others before you just
today—there is another side to this?
Let's assume we have these people who are not
deadbeats, as you say, because they're paying their
support, but for whatever reason the custodial
parent—and usually it's the woman—decides in her
wisdom she's not going to give access to that child.
We also know that there is the law and if a person
is in contempt of court that custodial parent could be
put in jail. And that's actually happened in Ontario,
but it took 22 times of contempt of court.
My question is, would it not be reasonable on the same
basis it's reasonable for non-payment, that if they
don't give access when the non-custodial parent is
paying—not a deadbeat—the custodial parent also
lose her driver's licence or her passport or get
similar treatment, so that she would know in advance
that, if she didn't do this, it was a possibility? I
ask any one of the three groups.
Ms. Renate Diorio: I agree with you. I think
there should be harsh punishment on that side as well.
However, we experience that—within our membership we
don't get child support from our ex-spouses—access is
in place and these parents do not exercise their right
to see their children, some of them going back for ten
years. And we just admire anybody who wants to see their
children. Our hearts expand when we hear about a
parent or a father who cannot see his child, when here we
have fathers who have all the rights and can see their
child any time they want to and just can't be bothered.
I agree with you that there should be a punishment on
denial of access, absolutely.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Thank you. Does anyone
else want to answer that?
Ms. Beth Bennet: I think there are things we need
to look at, and one of those things is that abuse is
often very hard to prove in court. If the court has
ordered access to a father who has been abusive...abuse
is not only a physical punch or a slap; abuse is
mental, emotional or psychological torment, with the
goal to control a woman's behaviour.
So while I can
agree that with a proven case where abuse is not present
there be some kind of...I don't want to call it
punishment, but the same sort of thing that is going on
with Bill-41. I think, again, that because of the lack
of awareness and understanding of abuse we have to
factor it in.
A lot of women are in that situation, and it might be
why they are denying access or attempting to obstruct
it in some way—for the safety of their child or for
their own personal physical safety. I think that needs
to be taken into consideration.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: I think you'd also
agree, and I'm sure if you were here earlier.... And
this was a surprise to me. I knew there was some of
this out there, but not to the extent that the
professional people—who weren't representing mothers
or fathers or the children, but they're professional
people who have statistics—we're telling us, that in
50% of the cases these accusations are not true.
So my question to any of you, because you're telling
us you're dealing with these kind of people, is do you
find in your work that some of these people are not
only exaggerating but not telling the truth?
Ms. Beth Bennet: I think that number is so
minuscule that it's not worth discussing at this point.
On our helpline alone—
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Excuse me, let's just
get it clear on the record. Are you saying, then, that
the professionals who came before us just a few minutes
ago and gave us—
Ms. Beth Bennet: I would have had to hear them,
sir. I didn't hear them. I didn't hear what their
stats were. I'm only speaking from the perspective of
the work we do at the helpline, and that would
reflect....
Alone, our line receives
26,000-plus calls a year, and we're operating at a
third of the capacity we should be operating at.
• 1030
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Yes, but you're talking
about wife abuse as opposed to child abuse.
Ms. Beth Bennet: Assaulting a woman who is—
Senator Duncan Jessiman: No, but just answer.
That's not a.... I'm here to try to get information. I
don't want to argue with you.
Ms. Beth Bennet: I'm not arguing with you.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: I'm asking you, are
you dealing only with wife abuse or are you dealing
with child abuse?
Ms. Beth Bennet: I'm having an issue with you
attempting to separate that, okay? If a mother is in a
home, her child is there, and she's being assaulted or
put down on a continual basis, that is child abuse,
sir. There are many studies that will show the impact
of that kind of violence on children is very severe.
So to separate it.... It's not dissociable, from my
perspective. I think Eileen Morrow and Ruth can
speak to that as well.
I heard a comment in the background, “What about
abuse of men?” I'm sorry; I'm not here to speak about
the abuse of men. I'm here to speak for women who have
been assaulted and the effects of that on their
children. You need to get an expert who will speak
to that. That's not what I'm here to do.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you. I think we'll move on to the next question.
Paul Szabo.
Mr. Paul Szabo: Thank you very much for your
interventions.
I did spend five years on the board of my shelter for
women, Interim Place in Peel, and spent a lot of time
helping them organize and arrange the construction of a
second facility, so I'm aware and sensitive. But as
legislators, we have to also make sure the laws can
work in all cases.
I heard some very powerful statements. It started off
with, “Abusive partners have no right to see their
children”, but then it got a little more specific and
said, “Men who abuse their partners are not fit
parents and should not get access”.
I would ask OAITH and the Assaulted Women's Helpline
representatives if they believe in the principle that a
spouse who abuses another spouse is not a fit parent
and should have no access. Do you support that
principle, whether it be the man or the woman?
Ms. Beth Bennet: I would support that principle.
If a child is being victimized, whether it be by a man
or a woman, the child is being victimized. They are
the priority. Again, I'm speaking from my realm, which
is assaulted women. So, yes.
Ms. Eileen Morrow: It's interesting that when we
start to talk about woman abuse, the subject is always
changed to abuse of men. I don't think anybody here
has actually made the statement that there's no such
thing as a man who's been abused.
It's really interesting that every time we start to
talk about women who are abused in their relationships
and the impact of that abuse on their children, which
is our expertise, we end up being shifted into this
other subject. I'm not sure why that's happening or
what that's all about, but this started with a question
about access.
I would actually like to see
definitive studies that show that access denial is a
huge problem. For women we work with, exactly the
opposite is the problem: either women are assaulted on
access visits or else access visits are not utilized and
children are left waiting for fathers who never show up
or are subjected to violence when fathers do show
up—violence against the woman, messages given to the
children to take back to the woman, such as, “Tell
Mommy I've got a gun” and so on. We know that
sometimes children are in fact murdered on access
visits, and sometimes women and children are murdered
on access visits.
I am hoping that during this hour we have before us,
in terms of our presentation, this committee will be
wanting to hear about the women we work with and the
children and women we are trying to protect, and that
we won't be shifting to the subject of abuse against
men. If in fact it is occurring to the same level as
is being implied, I hope that those people who are
working in that area will give you that expertise and
you will be able to act on that, and that they will
also give you the definitive facts and studies
that prove it is in fact occurring.
• 1035
Mr. Paul Szabo: Okay. Here's my last question.
You're aware that we have had some testimony from
people who have credentials that the numbers...and
there's some disagreement. I think you're absolutely
right when you say there should be more information
about it. I've done a little research and I think the
50-50 number actually has come up more often in the
American states research than in the Canadian research
I've seen. But notwithstanding that...I know you want
to talk about men's abuse as a separate issue, but I
think maybe it's time we started understanding that
it's not just a woman's issue; it's a societal issue
and it requires attention.
The question I have is with regard to access. The
courts have awarded custody to the mother in over 80%
of the cases. In fact, a number of fathers will not
even seek custody because the cost, etc., is
prohibitive, so I must suspect—
Ms. Eileen Morrow: Women don't have as much money
as men and they seek custody, and the cost is very
prohibitive for them, I will tell you that for sure.
Mr. Paul Szabo: —that there seems to be a very
significant skew in terms of the mother—
Ms. Eileen Morrow: Because men don't seek custody.
Mr. Paul Szabo: I understand that, but we're here
to deal with problems, perceived and real problems—
Ms. Eileen Morrow: But you also have to look at
the fact that when men do seek custody, they receive
custody in 50% of the cases.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Please
wait until the question is completed.
Mr. Paul Szabo: And access is really a very
important issue here. The question I want to ask you
is whether or not...you tend to think that access
should just be cut off, and I'm wondering whether or
not you have any room in your heart for some sort of
mediation or counselling or assistance to couples with
children who are going through this situation where
their family life is being broken down.
Ms. Eileen Morrow: I think you need to take a look
at what we're dealing with here. We are not talking
about a family situation that's broken down. We are
talking about a systematic pattern of escalating
violence against women and children, which takes place
over the period of a relationship, done by that person
who has made a choice to dominate and who will dominate
to maintain power and control.
And that is what breaks down the marriage. The
marriage does not cause violence; violence causes
marriage breakdown.
I am asking you to look at those situations from
our position, with our expertise. I am asking you
whether it's in the best interests of the child to be
learning that violence and to be learning that value
system. We are asking you to keep those children safe.
I'm asking you to stop abusers who want to kill their
children so their wives will not get access.
I'm asking you as a matter of human rights. It's
not a question of what's in my heart here; it's a
question of what's in your heart today in terms of
whether or not you, with the power you have to make
these decisions, are going to protect the lives of
those women and children.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you.
Madame St-Hilaire.
[Translation]
Ms. Caroline St-Hilaire (Longueuil, BQ): I'm really pleased to
hear the women's point of view. It differs from what we've heard
before.
I think the problem is that there has been a tendency to
generalize, up until now, when in fact each case is different.
It has often been said that women are making false
accusations, that they can be as violent as men and that they're
using the legal aid system to push men to bankruptcy.
I would like to know how you manage to prove violence when you
go to court. Isn't mediation, mandatory or not, better than court
litigation since violence against women and children is so hard to
prove anyways?
[English]
Ms. Eileen Morrow: No, I don't believe mediation
is appropriate for women in abusive situations, because
de facto in abusive situations the entire relationship
is a power imbalance, and any good mediator will tell
you that you cannot mediate in a situation where there
isn't equal bargaining power.
In an abusive situation,
the very nature of the relationship is that there is no
equal bargaining power.
• 1040
Abusers do not negotiate fairly, and they cannot
negotiate fairly, in mediation. No mediator, no matter
how well trained, has the skills to
militate against five or ten years of that power
imbalance and the impact it has on
the victim of it.
Ms. Ilene McGillis (Families Against
Deadbeats): I suggest to everyone in this room, I
don't think anyone would allow his or her own child
or a grandchild to get into a car with someone who's
been drinking, to go near a person with a gun or a
knife or to be around a bully in a school yard, be it a
parent, grandparent or anyone who will or has caused
them any harm.
This is happening to children, morning, noon and
night, at home, during access visits and during weekends
away with the parent they don't live with. This has to
stop and it has to stop now.
It nearly destroyed my son, who tried suicide three
times after access. He's alive at 17. He has no
intention of ever seeing his other parent again. He
was nearly killed on the 401. His father was drunk,
driving at 140 kilometres per hour and his blood alcohol level
was 2.1. He was driving him home after visiting. So I
suggest to you all, don't go near that person, he might
hit you. Don't go near that person; he might kill you.
It has to be told to them in very blunt, honest terms.
There are children who don't need that kind of access.
They should be protected at all costs. I don't care
about the other parent. If he's going to hurt my
children, I don't want them around him. If any of you
came near my children and were going to hurt them
mentally, physically, spiritually, sexually,
financially—any way—you wouldn't be allowed access to
my children.
The official guardian of Ontario did an assessment and
said a child should have access to the non-custodial
parent; even if it's a bad relationship, a bad
situation, he or she should have some contact.
Supervised access would be fine. He came with the
girlfriend. He and the girl abused my daughter during
supervised access. She came home hurt. Supervised
access ended that day.
The last time he beat up his son was the last time I
lived with him.
This is very real—really real. You
all have to know this. Children should not be around
people, kids, relatives, or a parent who's going to
hurt them in any way.
The focus has to be children, children, children. It
shouldn't be whether I like him or not. I might be
madly in love with him, but if he's going to hurt
children, sorry, no access to children at all, ever.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Senator
DeWare.
Senator Mabel DeWare: I'm a little concerned
about starting because I may get into some
confrontation here.
First, I would just like to speak to Renate. What
happened after Bill C-41 was put into place and the
grid was put into place that says
your non-custodial spouse is required to
pay so much to your support according to his salary?
On the basis of fighting that, can't you get that
legalized?
Ms. Renate Diorio: No. In my situation, after he
left me $210,000 in debt, he went on welfare for three
years. I called the snitch line. Fortunately I got
him off after three tries. Good for me. But I still
didn't get any money. He worked under the table while
he was on welfare, and I have facts to verify that. The
whole point is he knew every avenue to take to not pay
me.
My parents and I co-signed a loan to help him with the
debts, but we didn't think he was
just going to walk
off and leave me with two kids and all this money to
pay off, while he was living a happy life with all his
new girlfriends.
Bill C-41 cannot help me. That's why I have a legal
aid lawyer, and he can't help me. I think my
certificate has run out, and of course I can't afford a
good lawyer right now. I'm one of the thousand that
are hanging in the air with nowhere to go.
I just keep plodding around and hoping one day maybe
he'll want to see his kids, who are in their teens right
now, and maybe pay a little bit.
Senator Mabel DeWare: You say you
represent about 300 members. Those are actually
members of your organization?
Ms. Renate Diorio: Yes.
• 1045
Senator Mabel DeWare: The deadbeat dad came up
quite a bit during the course of our hearings on Bill C-41.
Ms. Renate Diorio: Yes, I know. As I said, in our
group, the deadbeat is the lowlife. He's the
individual who refuses to take accountability and
responsibility for the children he created. He walks
away, doesn't want to see them, doesn't want to help
support them, doesn't want any part of their lives. To
us, that is a deadbeat. It's not someone who's a few
dollars in arrears. That's not the case at all.
Senator Mabel DeWare: It's unfortunate, because it
was put in place to help people like you.
You may be wondering why, or you may feel this
committee is dwelling a little bit on the access that
men have to their children. If you are, I want to just
tell you that it's because during the hearings on Bill
C-41, over and over again the people who came before
our committee were not talking about payments for child
support, even though that's what the bill was all
about: support for wives and children. They kept
talking about custody and access, and we would have to
apologize and tell them that wasn't what we were
dealing with on that particular day, that we were
dealing with child support.
Over and over again, though, unfortunately for you two
groups sitting here, this message was coming from
fathers or parents in every organization in this
country that you could think of that is father-related.
They were the ones who were very, very concerned. And
let's just be fair here: a lot of them were paying dads
who were being denied access for whatever reason. You
people have reasons, but there are other reasons as
well.
We have stacks of e-mail and regular mail with
documented information, and I'm sorry to say that the
majority—I would say 90% of the information—that we
got during the hearings on that bill was from male
spouses, from dads. We therefore said to the minister
that we had to deal with this. If you feel we're a
little bit biased, then, it's because this committee
was set up due to the pressure that was put on us by
dads in this country.
Because we've all worked with transition houses—we
all know that Senator Cohen is the sponsor of one—we
also know and understand where you come from. I'd like
to know if we can have some statistics from you about
the numbers of people we're talking about. I hate to
use the words “numbers of murders”, but can we also
have some stats on those? I'd really appreciate it.
Ms. Renate Diorio: Our brief will be coming in the
next week, and I can provide you with the stats that I
can get hold of in terms of intimate femicide. I'm
not clear on thing, though. Did you want statistics
on how many women are abused, or did you want
statistics on how many women with children are abused?
An hon. member: What definition?
Ms. Renate Diorio: Yes, because if you tell me, I
can make sure that—
Senator Mabel DeWare: We'd really appreciate those
papers, because I think those figures are very
important. We said yesterday that we have to hear from
the other side, and we're doing that today.
Ms. Eileen Morrow: If I could, I would just direct
your attention to the Statistics Canada surveys, both
the juristats on spousal homicide and the national
survey on violence against women, which was a telephone
survey of over 12,000 households. That was a situation
in which women cannot be accused of falsely making
allegations, because there was no benefit to be gained
by making up stories while talking anonymously to a
surveyor.
Twenty-nine percent of those phone callers disclosed
violence by their male marital partner. The marital
partner was defined as one in either a marriage or a
common-law relationship, so it didn't even include
dating violence. In 40% of those
situations, the children had witnessed the violence,
and some of it was extremely severe. And if you check
with Peter Jaffe at the London Family Court Clinic—he
is an acknowledged expert on the impact of
violence against women on children—you'll find that
his studies show that 80% of children are
aware of the violence, whereas 40%
of the parents may think they are aware.
So in fact, the children are actually exposed to much
more violence than the parents believe they are.
• 1050
I would direct your attention to the federal
government's own studies on that, and also to the
women-killing studies, volumes 1 and 2, in which
coroners' reports and reports of homicides were done in
Ontario on killings of women by men.
That study discovered that in Ontario an average of 40
women are killed by their male partners every year.
That the number has risen from the first study to the
second study, but the murders of men by women has
dropped. In fact, the homicide studies show that women
are nine times more likely to be killed by their male
partner as they are by a stranger.
I believe those studies actually are present at the
clearinghouse on family violence in Ottawa, and they're
easily accessible.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you, Senator DeWare.
Senator Cools.
Senator Anne C. Cools (Toronto Centre, Lib.): Thank
you very much,
Chairman.
I noticed that in your remarks you urge honourable
members to look at the people with whom you work. Yet I
noticed just now, when Senator DeWare asked for hard
data, you provided no data on the people with whom you
work.
Ms. Eileen Morrow: Oh.
Senator Anne Cools: Perhaps you could address
exactly the people you serve. In your client
bodies—and I'm speaking not so much to Renate's group,
because it's down here, but particularly the witnesses
in the middle—of the people you served, I would
like to know exactly how many women stayed at your
shelters in Ontario last year. I'd like a number.
Ms. Eileen Morrow: We didn't do a survey last
year because we lost our provincial funding. Our
provincial funding for that work was completely cut,
and we lost over one-third of our budget.
Senator Anne Cools: Okay, the previous year,
the last year.
Ms. Eileen Morrow: Yes, since 1995.
Senator Anne Cools: Okay, during the last year
on which you have data, how many women stayed at your
shelter?
Ms. Eileen Morrow: I don't have it with me, but I
could certainly give it to you when I get back to the
office.
Senator Anne Cools: But do you have an idea?
Ms. Ruth Hislop: I can answer that on an
individual shelter. Is that helpful for you?
Do you want it from an individual shelter, in terms of
the number of women and children who stayed at...?
Senator Anne Cools: I want the number of women,
with children.
Ms. Ruth Hislop: Okay.
Senator Anne Cools: You cannot tell us for the past
years the number of women who—
Ms. Ruth Hislop: I can tell you specifically in
terms of the people who stayed at my shelter.
Senator Anne Cools: Which is your shelter?
Ms. Ruth Hislop: North York Women's Shelter.
Senator Anne Cools: Well, if this the best
information you have, it's the best.
How many women
then stayed at your shelter?
Ms. Ruth Hislop: There were 256 in 1997; 122
were women and the rest were children.
Senator Anne Cools: So 122 women stayed,
in total.
Ms. Ruth Hislop: Yes.
Senator Anne Cools: Of that 122, how many
were battered women?
Ms. Ruth Hislop: Women who come to the shelter are
coming through the mandate of women who have sought
refuge from an abusive partner.
Senator Anne Cools: No, my understanding is that
those shelters have two streams.
Ms. Ruth Hislop: That's not my experience. My
shelter is specifically a safe refuge for abused women
and their children.
Senator Anne Cools: Very well.
Of those 122 women, all 122 were battered.
So you didn't have any refugees seeking temporary
residence anywhere.
Ms. Ruth Hislop: No.
Senator Anne Cools: You didn't have any women
with children—
Ms. Ruth Hislop: No, I didn't. I've answered the
question.
Senator Anne Cools: You didn't have any of
those. Very well, they're all battered.
Since we are talking about divorce here, how many of
those 122 women went through divorces? The issue here
before us is custody and access, plus divorce.
Ms. Ruth Hislop: It could be you're dealing with
two different situations.
Senator Anne Cools: No, we're not. I can put the
question to you another way—
Ms. Ruth Hislop: Okay.
Senator Anne Cools: —but we are dealing here with
women in your shelters who went through divorces,
because the issue before this committee is custody and
access in divorce.
Does anybody here have any data on
the number of women who stayed in your shelters who
have gone through divorces?
• 1055
Ms. Beth Bennet: I don't have specific numbers,
but I would be more than prepared to bring that back to
you.
Senator Anne Cools: I would submit to you that
usually the best time to present information is the
best opportunity one has. But can anybody here tell me,
in those shelters...? I want you to know this is subject
matter I know a lot about.
Ms. Beth Bennet: Absolutely.
Senator Anne Cools: Of those women, the
battered women who stay at your shelters, how many
actually go through divorces?
Ms. Beth Bennet: We're not a shelter; we're a
crisis telephone service, so we can't answer that
question for you. But I can tell you that 42% of the
abused women who call the Assaulted Women's Helpline—and
this is a 1996 statistic—either had children or
were pregnant at the time they placed a call.
Senator Anne Cools: I have not questioned that.
I am talking about women who you say are abused in
divorces.
Okay, I'm going to give you a larger question then,
outside of the people who you have—
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Senator
Cools, you have gone over your five minutes, but a quick
question.
Senator Anne Cools: Paul has just given me leave
to use his time.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): But he's
not on the list.
Senator Anne Cools: In terms of divorce in
general in this country, of divorces, how many cases
actually do involve wife abuse?
Ms. Eileen Morrow: I don't think we have that
statistic, but I think we can tell you that in the last
study that was done by the London Family Court Clinic
of custody disputes that came to the clinic, 78%
involved family violence. Over two-thirds of it was
women abuse and child abuse, and those were divorce
cases.
Senator Anne Cools: I'm not asking you that. My
question to you is abuse within divorce circumstances.
You make some extremely large and, I would submit to
you, insupportable statements. I'm going to continue.
Of the 122 women you serve, since this is the only
data we can get—it's the hardest thing in the world to
get hard data here; broad statements have been made
here about women and children threatened with knives
and guns—of the 122 battered women, how many were
threatened, or their children were threatened, with
knives and guns? I want an answer.
Ms. Ruth Hislop: I believe, Senator Cools, you're
asking questions for which the answers, in fairness to
myself, I'm not able to submit to you at this
particular time. But the concern we're addressing is
the issue of custody and
access—
Senator Anne Cools: That is what we're working
on.
Ms. Ruth Hislop: —and I can speak to you in terms
of the number of children in terms of wanting access
visits and in terms of the issues of safety that come
forward. Certainly, from your experience within
transition homes, you're aware of some of the
struggle that women and children address.
Senator Anne Cools: I know the issues. I'll
tell you why I'm asking—
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Senator
Cools, Mr. Forseth was not on the list and Senator
Cohen was the next one. So please finish off.
Senator Anne Cools: Can I borrow some of your
time, Senator Cohen?
Senator Erminie Cohen: No. I'm embarrassed. I
feel we're creating a divisive unit in this room when
we're supposed to be talking about the best interests
of the child. I feel we're pitting women against women.
I have become very sensitive to the situation that men
have in this room, those who have been here day after
day, who are really sincere about having access to
their children. I'm very emotional about this. But you
have to work with women and violence. These women
should not be attacked. They're doing their job and we
have no right to make this division.
Everybody here cares about children. Everybody here
cares that their relationship should work. And I believe
there are some men who abuse their children who still
love them. It's a sickness that has to be handled.
There are some cases. And I believe that you don't come
to concrete conclusions if you create a war zone here,
which we're trying to avoid in families.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): We have
three minutes left.
Dr. Bennett.
• 1100
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: I'm also worried about the
people who go home from your shelters because...I guess
I think that in a holistic way we should be able to do
a better job on the male batterers, because women are
going to end up with them, and we should be able to do
a better job for the sake of the kids, so that they see
that healing and transformation take place. Because I
think that we are now starting to understand a little
more about the perpetrators as victims of family
violence themselves; we are starting to understand the
cyclical nature of it.
My real question, however, is that we are hearing all
sorts of different views, as you know: the idea that
mediation will never work for these women because of
the power differential.... I guess Dr. Chisholm, who
was on the previous panel, thought she could do a
Kissinger kind of thing, where she goes to
this and goes to that and is able to maybe get some
sort of resolution that takes away that truly
adversarial and potentially deadly court battle.
If you
could turn down the volume on this and have somebody
extremely skilled deal with these people to find a
resolution, do you think that in the continuum from
conciliator to mediator to alternative dispute
resolution you would ever feel that something along the
lines of alternative dispute resolution would work for
those women in those power differential situations?
A voice: Or at least for some of them.
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: Or for some of them?
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): We have
practically no time left.
Ms. Eileen Morrow: I'm not sure what you mean by
some of them. In terms of mediation it's a very tricky
issue. The question is how you balance that power.
And how does the mediator know that the power has been
balanced and that the mediation is not simply being
used as another tool of manipulation and control? That
takes a very skilled mediator and it takes a lot of
work.
I think that if I were to make a decision in mediation
in cases of abuse at this point in time, I don't think
we have enough information or enough guarantees for the
safety of that woman and those children so that we
could actually go forward suggesting mediation in abuse
cases. In fact, most trained mediators will screen out
cases of domestic violence because they themselves feel
it's not appropriate to be mediating in that situation.
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: I guess my point is that in
times of diminished resources these women aren't doing
very well in court either, and in a 45-minute summary
run by a judge—
Ms. Eileen Morrow: I don't think it's actually
appropriate to replace a public and scrutinized system,
with a history of case law in a public forum, with a
private mediation situation when we are not able to
guarantee the safety of those people. I think
resources should be a secondary issue. We have a duty
to protect. That is our first duty. And then we can
talk about—
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: But if we had unlimited
resources—
Ms. Eileen Morrow: —mediation in certain
situations. But I wouldn't replace it. I don't think
it's well enough formed. I don't think it has enough
guarantees in it to be an alternative to a system. I
think we need to improve the family law, obviously; I'm
not necessarily saying that's working either, but it is
public, it is accountable, and it has a history of case
law that we can use to build on a future that will be
fairer to all families.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you very much. I hate to keep rushing, but it's just
that we have so many people coming in front of us and
we have to stay on time. Thank you for your very
powerful presentation.
We invite the next witnesses to come to the table,
please.
• 1104
• 1111
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson: I'd like
to welcome our next panel. Representing the Girl
Guides of Canada, we have Elaine Paterson, who's the
chief commissioner; and Margaret Treloar, president
elect. Also, representing the York Region Board of
Education, we have John Vander Kooij.
Between the two of you, you have 40 minutes, because
after that we have another witness separately
before lunch.
Would you please start?
Ms. Elaine Paterson (Chief Commissioner, Girl
Guides of Canada): Thank you. I would like to thank
the Special Joint Committee on Child Custody and Access
for the invitation to appear as part of this important
consultation process.
I'll just give a little background information about
Girl Guides of Canada. Girl Guides of Canada/Guides
du Canada is the largest organization for girls and
women in Canada, with 200,000 girl members and over
40,000 women volunteers. As a member of the World
Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts, we are
one of 136 countries in this worldwide movement, with
10 million members around the globe. Within Canada, we
have programs for girls from five to 18 years of age,
with units in every single province and territory.
We have a history of providing educational and
recreational programs for Canadian girls since 1910.
Our mission reads:
Girl Guides of Canada-Guides du Canada is a Movement
for girls, led by women. It challenges girls to reach
their potential and empowers them to give leadership
and service as responsible citizens of the world.
Shifts in demographics involving girls and women are
trends that we follow very carefully. In planning our
programs, we have taken into account this trend to more
single-parent families and children living with a
family break-up.
Ms. Margaret Treloar (President Elect, Girl Guides
of Canada): Girl Guides of Canada/Guides du Canada
strongly supports your initiative. We believe, as
stated in your language, there is a need for a more
child-centred approach to family law policies and
practices that would emphasize joint parental
responsibilities and child-focused parenting
arrangements based on children's needs and best
interests.
Along these lines, we believe children need to
feel loved, secure, and safe. They need to know
the divorce is not their fault. They need to know
both their parents and their extended family will
continue to be a part of their lives. They need to
know their viewpoints and their wishes have been
considered when developing a family plan for how to
move forward in their family life. They need to feel
empowered to ask for changes to the plan without being
made to feel disloyal to either of their parents or
other members of the family.
Children should have a say in their custody and
access. This does not necessarily mean they have the
determining say, but their wishes should be considered.
In all cases, confidentiality should be absolutely
guaranteed to protect the child emotionally and
physically. Children should have access on a
continuing basis to a neutral third party to negotiate
changes in schedules, discuss problems that arise,
and talk about pressures they may be under from a
parent.
We feel consideration should be given to the rights of
the extended family and the role they play in the
child's life. As well, there are many cultural norms
regarding the place and value of children within a
particular society. These may have impact on
the way decisions are made, and they need to be taken
into consideration. We must acknowledge that this
is a difficult time for all parties, parents and
children, and it will be challenging to make good
decisions that are fair to all. It is most important
that this be a winning situation for the children.
Ms. Elaine Paterson: This is one of the few times
that we, as an organization, have seized the
opportunity to advocate on behalf of any group. It is
our belief that this issue involves the health, safety,
and emotional well-being of large numbers of Canadian
children, and as such is a cause worthy of our
intervention.
• 1115
Girl Guides of Canada/Guides du Canada has a breadth
of experiences with issues involving girls and women
because of our large numbers and our long
organizational history. Our program is always centred
on the needs of the girl child. From the age of five,
guiding programs trains our girls to make reasoned
decisions and choices. We have a great deal of faith
in their ability to have input into these difficult
family decisions as well.
We would be happy to give you further examples of how
custody and access issues impact on guiding, if you
choose to ask questions about those. Thank you very
much.
The Joint Chair (Senator Langdon Pearson): Thank
you.
Mr. Vander Kooij.
Mr. John Vander Kooij (Coordinator for Co-op
Education, York Region Board of Education):
Honourable members, thank you very much for providing
me this opportunity. What I'm presenting to you is
probably more along the lines of what's happened to me
personally, and other people I know, and how some
of the changes I would recommend could make it better
for the children.
One of the points I've made here is that there should
be mandatory mediation by paralegal people who are
experts in family law, and which could be initiated by
either parent, forcing the reluctant parent to be
involved. The reason for this is that I feel the legal
system is primarily an adversarial system. The only
winners are usually the lawyers, financially. When the
case is over, most people are not able to communicate
rationally with each other, and the fight does not end
there.
Mediators who are assigned must remain with the case
at all times. People will lie if they think they can
get away with it. In many cases it will eventually
catch up to them, but often too late for the children.
When the same people are involved with an entire case
at any required time, they will be able to see a trend,
and will easily be able to catch them sometimes not
telling the truth.
When people feel they have been done wrong to they
will often try to get even. This is when children can
become easy victims. They may hear terrible stories
about their non-custodial parent and start to believe
they are true.
In my career I often hear a student say negative
things about one of their parents. When I question
them about this in private, the usual trend is that
this is what they hear.
When the children are young, they are very vulnerable
and easily influenced. When one parent leaves, it
causes a lot of trauma in their lives. This will
result in their trying to please the other so they will
not lose that one also.
The last summer I spent with my oldest son Karl,
this seemed to be the case. Our first two
weeks was a fantastic vacation. We planned the next
two weeks together, even picked out a campsite
together. When I came to pick him up, his mom said I
had to have him home in one week, even though we had
agreed on two. I told my ex-wife that I would not keep
him against his will. Before Karl left, she called
him out of the car, and whispered to him. He nodded
his head and walked back sullenly to the car. She gave
him a big hug and off we went.
That week, before the last day was over, he asked me
what day it was. I told what the day was going to be,
and he said “Daddy, I want to go home tomorrow”. I
asked him why, but he never told me. He did not know,
he said. During the ride home he was very quiet. It
was our last holiday together.
There's an article in Chatelaine of April 1998,
on page 30, called “Helping Kids Cope”. The seven- to
11-year-olds, some studies have shown, are the most
vulnerable to long-term effects of divorce. They are
also more likely to put themselves in the middle of the
conflict. “Reassure them that they can love both mom
and dad”, the author says. My sons were seven and nine
when they were effectively turned against me.
Government guidelines must be simplistic regarding
income and assets—I'm covering a lot of territory
here, I'm afraid. Simple formulas that are easy to
understand will likely be deemed fairer by all
people involved.
Assets should be frozen and evaluated by a group of
experts, and the ability and need to pay support by
whom and how much should also be evaluated. Forcing one
parent to maintain the same standard of living for the
other after divorce is not humanly possible with
limited money and only causes more difficulty.
Is one person entitled to have the same standard of
living and not the other? Is this fair to the
children? Again, this only shows a total disregard for
one of the parents.
Changes due to circumstances should be considered. If
a non-custodial parent loses their job through no fault
of their own, or gets a reduction in income due to
company restructuring, they should have their support
payments reduced. Also, if the custodial parent is
capable and/or starts working, and has rental or other
income, that all should make an effect on the payments.
Are both parents not responsible for raising of the
children financially, emotionally and academically?
• 1120
On custodial arrangements assisted by professional
groups, such as the official guardian's office, even
though what they did in my case did not help me very
much, I felt it was better than nothing.
Consideration should be given to one's ability to
parent. A parent who is a drug or alcohol abuser
should not be given custody if the other parent is a
better role model. The case of the mom and son who
died in a fire a few years ago in Mississauga is a
point there. It seems customary for the wife to keep the
matrimonial home and therefore have an unfair advantage
in getting custody of the children, providing there
is a matrimonial home.
On access arrangements, supervised access should be
allowed in difficult situations. It is important
that the entire picture be looked at in order to see
what is happening. If children's behaviour begins to
gradually change and they begin to draw away from one of
their parents, it is important to find out why. This
is especially important if the children had a very
positive relationship before the divorce and then, for
some reason or other, no longer want to have
anything to do with the non-custodial parent. In my
case, they were told many terrible things about me.
During the first summer, my youngest son Michael would
cry when I had to drop him off at his mom's boyfriend's
house. When I was able to get the official guardian
involved, everything seemed normal until the last visit
at my apartment. When the case worker went to leave,
Michael ran to the door and asked her to not make him
stay with his dad. “I want to live with my mom” he
said.
I was stunned at this. That night Michael cried at
bedtime and asked to go home. I was able to get hold
of his mom that night and she picked him up shortly
after midnight. It was the last night he attempted to
stay over. Michael was seven years old at that time.
That fall he came over twice with his older brother
Karl. He told me he wanted to stay over but was scared.
He asked me to move the beds around, which I did. He
said he was still scared and very sad because he wanted
to stay but didn't dare stay overnight. He asked if I
would I take him home and I did.
Karl stayed until the next evening. We had a good
time playing with the road race set we had set up
the day before. They both asked me not to take it down
because they wanted to play with it again. They have
never come back.
That was November 12, 1994. I went to their home
every two weeks for a year and a half before I wrote
them a letter saying I could no longer do it. I
found out in May 1997 from a student at my school, who
babysat the boys, that she quit looking after them
because of all the bad things their mom was saying
about me. She did not know how to tell me that
earlier.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Sorry,
but we're really interested in your
recommendations.
Mr. John Vander Kooij: Okay.
Access and support payments should be closely
connected. A parent who turns the children against the
other parent should lose custody and the right to
see the children, other than by supervised access. I
tried to get supervised access but was denied because
a court order said I did have access, although I
could not enforce it because my wife had effectively
turned the children against me. I offered to pay for
supervised access, but I still could not get it.
I don't believe any children should be denied the
right to love and be loved by either of their parents
and their extended families. My sons have lost 25
cousins and 16 uncles and aunts through this.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you very much. I think we thought this was going to be
primarily a session on how children could have their
own voice in some way, and that some of your
recommendations would be on that. That was how I hoped
the questions would come.
Senator DeWare.
Senator Mabel DeWare: First I would
like to mention to the group from the Girl Guides
that I'm a former leader of guides in New Brunswick and
I have a daughter and a daughter-in-law who are now
taking over leadership there on the provincial level, so
I'm quite aware of the work the volunteers put in.
It is a lot of time and it's very dedicated toward
the girls.
You mention here that you could
give us some information about how custody and access
have affected some of the girls you've dealt with. I
would like to hear your comments on that, please.
Ms. Eileen Paterson: Thank you. We don't have
anything except anecdotal data because we, to be
honest, didn't hear about this until a week ago. We
certainly took the opportunity at a training last
weekend to speak to some parents about their girls and
certainly about the girls they lead. Some of the
issues we run into are visitation issues with the
non-custodial parent and how that affects the girls and
their continuing with their Girl Guides affiliation.
We have heard stories of little girls who have to
attend two Brownie packs because mom wants them to go to
one and dad wants them to go to the other, and this
type of thing. They're very hard on the children.
We run into specific legal issues with regard to the
non-custodial parent picking up children from camps,
meetings and outings, such as whether they have permission to
access the child at that point, visitation at
parents'
days and things like that.
• 1125
With regard to our international
events, one of the examples I will give you is that the
country of Mexico will not allow an under-age person
into the country unless you have the form signed by
both parents. They don't really care whether it's the
custodial parent or not: if both parents are living,
then they have to sign. This is an issue we've dealt
with on some of our international trips as well—
Senator Mabel DeWare: Really?
Ms. Eileen Paterson: —to prevent parents from
taking children out of the jurisdiction.
Senator Mabel DeWare: Some of the things we don't
think about sometimes!
Ms. Eileen Paterson: Exactly. The children are so
challenged. If it's a parent-child night, who does the
child invite and then how does the other parent feel?
Then it becomes stressful, and really, you get
behavioural problems with the children because of this
type of thing. It really does affect the girls.
Senator Mabel DeWare: It's interesting you should
say that, because some of our documentation shows that.
I had a letter from a non-custodial dad who said that
the school would not even inform him, even though he
asked, when there were events going on that he could
attend or even to get access to his daughter's
marks.
I would also like to mention to our...I'll let
it go and I'll come back to you.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you, Senator DeWare. Mr. Mancini.
Mr. Peter Mancini (Sydney—Victoria, NDP): Thank
you, Madam Chair.
Thank you for being here today. I have some quick
questions, first to the Girl Guide leaders.
You indicated in your presentation that there was a
need for the children to have a neutral third party to
talk to about changes in access. Is that a role that
you can see organizations such as your own playing?
We've heard a tremendous amount about mediation. Is
there a role for volunteer organizations that work with
children to provide that mediation? Is that something
the Girl Guides are looking at? Is any other
organization you know about looking at it?
Ms. Margaret Treloar: I think it has come to our
attention that we do provide that role, whether we've
actually made a conscious decision to do so or not. At
the national level, where we're involved in development
of programs for the girls and leadership training for
the adults involved in the program, our women leaders
are increasingly faced with this type of mediation.
In fact, it's part of our training now to advise
leaders on how to handle these situations, and in
particular how to get professional help, because we are
certainly not qualified to provide an official
mediation role. But as we've heard, many of the
situations, like this example, aren't official
situations. These are day-to-day decisions in
situations that each of these children finds themselves
in, that the parents find themselves in.
So I think there's a role that is being played as well
as one that perhaps could be played.
We certainly have run into occasions where children
have been sent to camp for two weeks, which is a
wonderful, positive experience if you're a member of
Girl Guides, and when the time comes for the parents to
pick them up, a single parent will come to pick them up
and tell the child that “Daddy has moved out in your
absence”. It's a horrendous thing to do to a child.
So then we as leaders are faced with dealing with
aftermath of that type of situation. As I've already
said, our women certainly do the best job they can.
Some of them are trained social workers, but many of
them are not.
Mr. Peter Mancini: I just have two quick
questions. The first one is about training. Having
been a family lawyer for some time, one of the hard
things you have to do in those cases is sometimes bring
in the very people like the Girl Guide leaders as
witnesses in a custody dispute, which is never
pleasant, especially for the witness who comes in.
I have two questions here. First, are there programs
offered for the women who work with those children? I
guess I'm asking if there is witness training. Is
there some kind of preparation for them? You may have
answered a little of that already.
Secondly, I'm going outside your area of expertise
here, but do you know if the Boy Scouts or any of the
organizations that deal with young men have similar
programs and similar experiences that you've talked
over with them?
Ms. Eileen Paterson: I'm sure their experiences
are very similar to ours. Scouting, like guiding,
makes great efforts to train the leaders. One of the
training areas that we're focusing on now we have
entitled “Contemporary Issues”. These are issues
that affect the girls of the nineties, who are looking
to the new millennium. They include things such as
body image issues for girls, dealing with HIV/AIDS, and
obviously dealing with these family changes and that
type of situation.
Our leaders are trained in these issues. Our
leaders are all volunteers and give their time freely,
and we do an excellent job of training them with the
resources that we have. We certainly don't have any
specific training for leaders who have been called as
witnesses. But I do know of a case—actually, it's
current in B.C. at the moment—where two of our Guide
leaders are being called as witnesses in a child
custody case.
• 1130
Mr. Peter Mancini: I have one quick question for the
other witness, if I might.
I appreciate what you're
saying. There was an indication that the courts ought
not to force—I think I've written your comments
down correctly—one parent to maintain the same
standard of living at the expense of the other, since
this is not fair.
Would you agree with me that there's a certain practical
reality upon divorce such that in a family unit
where there was either one income supporting a family
unit or two incomes going into the same pot,
realistically, upon separation and divorce, there are
now two homes to maintain, two power bills to pay, two
sets of groceries, and more transportation? So in
reality, usually both parties become impoverished.
There's simply not as much money in the same pie to
divide, and that money's got to be divided more ways.
Mr. John Vander Kooij: I don't feel that the
monetary issue is a large issue in my case. It's just
one of the points that I felt should possibly be
addressed.
It has a great effect on both people. I certainly
wouldn't want my children to do without what they had
before.
Mr. Peter Mancini: That's where I was
going to leave it. At the end of the day, those
resources have to be focused on the children.
Mr. John Vander Kooij: That's correct.
If you find parents, non-custodial parents,
who are not denied access and have a good relationship
with their children, I think you would have a hard time
finding a parent who would not want the best for their
children and have everything they had before.
Mr. Peter Mancini: Thank you, Madam Chair.
The Acting Joint Chair (Senator Mabel DeWare):
Senator Jessiman.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: You say you
haven't had access for going on four years now?
Mr. John Vander Kooij: That's correct.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Have you continued to
pay custody?
Mr. John Vander Kooij: Yes, I have.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Has the court been
involved at all to give you access prior to the
four years?
Mr. John Vander Kooij: The official guardian
recommended that the children receive counselling after
what Michael did the day that she made her last
visit to my apartment. At that time, I was into boxes
and moving into a home.
The recommendation was that I get Karl as much as
I had before, plus one evening during the week, and
Michael would take counselling so that he wouldn't be
afraid to stay overnight for whatever reason that
might be.
That was never initiated. Fortunately, a
relative of mine offered to pay the legal fees for
me to take that issue to court, which was part of our
divorce agreement.
Unfortunately, the psychologist who was involved, Dr.
Telegdi in Bradford, indicated after about
nine months that it wasn't going to work. That was
because the children's mother continuously had to
change appointments on a regular basis, so she was
never seeing them more than.... I think she saw them
three or four times, and it was at about three-month
intervals.
She said it was a waste of time. The kids were very
much already changed, manipulated against me, and to
try to pull them out of the home legally and force them
into a foster home would do more damage than if I left
the issue alone.
After that point, I continued to visit, or at least
attempted to pick the kids up for about a year and a
half after that last visit I had with the children. It
went until it got to the point where I had to literally
watch their mom and them laugh at me when I came to the
door. The door locked through a screen door.
I just felt it was very foolish of me to continue to
do that, but I stay in contact through their birthdays
and special events,
when I still send them cards, letters, and
gift certificates.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Do you get any
replies?
Mr. John Vander Kooij: No, I don't.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: There's no question that
you could go back. If what you're telling us is true,
you probably could get an order from the court to allow
you access, could you not?
Mr. John Vander Kooij: I have spoken to a lawyer
about that. The lawyer indicated to me that I would be
fighting a losing battle. He said that he would be
happy to take my money, but he said the odds of getting
anything out of it would be between slim and none.
He suggested I leave it be. He said the kids will grow
out of it, realize that I am not a bad person, and
eventually will come back to me.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: A sad situation.
Thank you.
Now, to either of you ladies,
you had said that both parents and
extended families should be involved with the children
before, as well as after, divorce.
Are you giving us that information from
what you've read or from your experience?
Tell us how that came about.
I agree with the statement, but how did the
Girl Guides get to that? Give us that information.
• 1135
Ms. Margaret Treloar: Generally
speaking, I think it's an opinion that has arisen
through consultations with some adults in the
organization, particularly with some of the adults who
are social workers who work in this area and who have
advised us about this. It seems to fit with the
experience of leaders in the field.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Would the answer be the
same? You've brought up something that I, at least,
thought was quite novel: that children should have some
say. I'm assuming that would be before an order for
custody is made. Is that what you're suggesting?
Ms. Margaret Treloar: Definitely.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: You were also saying that
it should be in camera, separate and apart from the
parents. Are you suggesting that it should be with the
judge or mediator or whoever it is making the
determination?
Ms. Margaret Treloar: I would suggest that it be
with a mediator rather than with a judge, in order that
it would be a less formal situation.
We certainly find that our girls as young as five are
capable of making some pretty good decisions. If the
fear of appearing like they don't love one parent is
taken away, I think most children could probably have a
great deal of wise input into their own lives. This is
a huge thing in their lives.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Because you're a
worldwide organization, do you know whether that is in
effect in other jurisdictions, and how it's working in
them?
Ms Margaret Treloar: I don't know the answer to
that.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Thank you very much.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you.
As chair, I don't often get the chance to ask a
question myself, but I'd like to since there's no one
else on the list.
I'm particularly interested in the role of voluntary
organizations and youth-serving organizations—not just
yours but the Y, or any other one. Have you had
materials provided for you, such as the one of some
years ago called Put the Child First, on the
sexual abuse of children? Would something like that be
useful to you? Have you had materials related to
children in divorce situations in terms of custody and
access?
Ms. Margaret Treloar: I don't believe we have. To
my knowledge, we've never had that. The Girl Guides
were instrumental in part of the development of the Put
the Child First program, and it certainly has been a
program that we have used widely. To answer Mr.
Mancini, we have used it in the training of our Guide
leaders to help them to identify and deal with
situations of child abuse in any way. I think any
materials that could be provided to an organization
such as ours would be an addendum to our training,
though, and we would make sure they were widely
spread.
What we can offer to you as a committee is a
tremendous delivery system, because we reach all
corners of Canada. If materials such as this came up,
I think they would be very helpful.
The other very helpful piece that we've used—I know
Mr. Gray was instrumental in it—was the piece on the
screening of volunteers, on the education on that, and
we certainly have spread that widely across the
country. So we do carry out this kind of thing.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): It has
certainly given me an idea. If our recommendations
come forward and do result in a change particularly in
the language within the Divorce Act, I think it would
be helpful for the children you touch in a kind of
neutral way to have access to understanding what
parenting means, access to the fact that there's going
to be some prevention, which I feel strongly about.
Some of the young people you're dealing with are not
only themselves perhaps suffering the consequences of
what has happened, but need to be prepared for their
role in relationships as they get older. Would that
kind of material be useful to you?
Ms. Margaret Treloar: It would be extremely
useful. Certainly at the various levels of the
program, we do discuss social issues with our
Pathfinders and the girls of our senior branches—these
are girls who are from 12 to 18 years of age—as part
of the program. I agree with you that we should offer
them materials that would be somewhat neutral as part
of our education program but that could be useful to
them in their later lives. That's part of what we're
doing: training them to be responsible citizens of the
world.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you very much.
Ms Margaret Treloar: You're welcome.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Unless
someone else has another question, I'll thank you for
your appearance, but we still have a few minutes.
Mr. Forseth.
Mr. Paul Forseth (New
Westminster—Coquitlam—Burnaby, Ref.): I want to zero in
on something, if I could have some very quick, short
answers.
• 1140
I take it that in retrospect, when you first realized that
you were going to have a separation or a divorce, you
got involved in the superior court rather than the
provincial family court system.
Mr. John Vander Kooij: Actually, I was not the one
who initiated litigation. When we did separate, I
moved in with a family member and was served papers
probably three months after. Even at that time we
still had joint bank accounts and my paycheques still
were deposited into a joint account.
Mr. Paul Forseth: And during that period of time
did you have some informal arrangement for access?
Mr. John Vander Kooij: Initially the kids were
afraid of me because she told them that daddy was sick
and I had to go somewhere and get better. When I tried
to pick them up they wanted nothing to do with me. I
asked for counselling for the children, which she agreed
to take them to. After about 20 minutes with the
counsellor they were both sitting in my lap wanting to
come home with me.
Mr. Paul Forseth: So your analysis at this point
in time may be quite correct. The court system is a
very blunt instrument at this point to deal with those
deep psychological issues of alienation. I wanted to
perhaps use your case as an example of way back in the
beginning, about access to mediation services and
alternate dispute-settling mechanisms rather than, as a
surprise, being served with Supreme Court documents, and
all of a sudden then you're into the game of the
affidavits and having to get a lawyer and you're stuck
at the Supreme Court level.... Starting at the front
end of your story, I thought we might be able to learn
and apply that to some general recommendation.
Mr. John Vander Kooij: I thought the whole issue
became extremely adversarial, where it felt as if we
were in a very serious fight that I wanted no part of.
I didn't feel there was any point, that anyone could
win in that situation. The ultimate losers were my
children. Fortunately, because I'm in the educational
business, I am in contact with their teachers. As a
matter of fact, I'm visiting there on Thursday after the
kids leave the school again. I do get report cards, I
do get results on how they do. Both of them have
become, especially my younger son, extremely violent in
school. My younger son has been involved in
altercations with older kids—much older than he is—where
he's beating them up for his big brother because his
big brother isn't as big.
Mr. Paul Forseth: So in retrospect, looking at the
historical situation, do you have any advice to us
about how it could have been different at the very
front end if there had been other services or other
mechanisms available?
Mr. John Vander Kooij: If immediately upon seeing
that the kids were being turned against me, there was a
mechanism for me to go to where I could say, listen,
there a problem here. I did call the official
guardian's office and talked to the person who did the
counselling, who actually did the evaluation of my
ex-wife and myself with the children. She simply
apologized and told me who I could contact at the
Clarke Institute for help. I did follow that up. I
followed up with other areas and got nowhere. There
was nowhere I could go to try to get anything. Then,
after things really went bad, I tried to get supervised
access. Again I was denied. I offered to pay for it
and I was still denied.
Mr. Paul Forseth: Denied by whom?
Mr. John Vander Kooij: The system. I called the people
who were involved with the supervised access through
Simcoe and through York Region to see whether I could
get their program to have the kids taken there by
their mother. I would meet them there, I would visit
with them while I was there under supervision—
Mr. Paul Forseth: So this is a community
organization, and they weren't able to help you at that
point.
Mr. John Vander Kooij: Actually, if I remember right,
I was talking to some people in Vaughn. I never did
visit the office personally. I did this all by phone.
Mr. Paul Forseth: This wasn't a court order.
Mr. John Vander Kooij: No. The court order says I
do have access.
Mr. Paul Forseth: Those are all the questions
I have.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you very much for appearing. We were glad
to hear from both of you, although they were slightly
different perspectives.
Mrs. Elaine Paterson: I would like to leave you
copies of the Girl Guides of Canada vision mission
and principles. They're in English and French, and if
it will help to forward the committee's work, we would
be happy to help with any other questions.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you very much.
I'd now like to ask Saro Kumar-McKenna to come forward,
with her mother, to make a presentation in front of us.
• 1145
I admire your
courage for doing so, and I hope you won't find
this...it looks kind of formal but in fact most of us
are not all that formal, and we welcome what you have to
say. Could you speak for a few minutes, and then, if
you wouldn't mind, we'll ask you some questions.
Ms. Saro Kumar-McKenna (Individual Presentation):
Sure. If you wouldn't mind, I would like it if my mom
began, and then I will make my statement.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Okay,
fine. Your mother is Sheila Kumar-McKenna?
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna (Individual Presentation):
Right. Good morning. This is my only child, Saro.
As a little bit of background, I happen to be an
immigrant. Canada is the seventh country I've lived
in, and thank God, I finally got it right.
[Translation]
I'm sorry I can't speak French with you this morning, but I
have been living in Toronto for almost 16 years and I have almost
forgotten how.
[English]
I thought I'd just do that to be a real Canadian,
which, by the grace of God, I believe I am.
We're not terribly well prepared to speak to you, but
we're grateful to be here. Saro remembers Senator
Pearson addressing her school, and that made it much
more comfortable, much easier to come here today.
We are currently, and have been for some years, the
victims of legal abuse. We are struggling in a
dreadful situation of poverty. It's so difficult that
I can't even tell you instantly what our situation is.
It's kind of like walking across a tightrope, and if
you look down you get really scared.
If I look at our situation on paper, I just see it
doesn't work. Two people cannot live in downtown
Toronto on less than $10,000 a year. Our lives are not
viable, but we live them a day at a time. We keep
putting one foot in front of the other. We've been
doing it for a long time, and by the grace of God, with
amazingly good results.
In terms of my own life, I can't quote to you
achievements that are publicly recognized by which you
would be able to tell that I'm doing well as a human
being, but I think if I tell you that I feel I am, that
will have some value for you. But the more publicly
recognizable achievements of our family are provided by my
daughter, who is a two-time national science award
winner and private school debating champion in Toronto.
She beat out the boys of Upper Canada College. She has
attended various conferences. She is doing remarkably
well. She is giving the lie to the statistics about
children of divorce living in poverty.
I want to ask you from the bottom of my heart this
morning that when you are examining legislation around
issues of custody and access, you take great care
not to add to the burdens of those who are already
doing more than they are humanly able to do. I'm here
to ask you not to be theoretical, not to apply a
theoretical notion of balance. I'm asking you to
institute a law that finds the means to take account of the
situations that exist, and that empowers and supports those
who are forthcoming and eager in meeting their child's
needs.
• 1150
I've been separated for a great many years, since Saro
was all of three years old, and she's fifteen.
Speaking from my own experience, I realize that my
husband is very accomplished at sitting in the offices
of professional people, of lawyers, of whoever he comes
in contact with, and persuading them that he is very
eager to play a role in his daughter's life. This is
not what Saro and I experience when we try to deal with
him.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): May I
just ask—we have a very short time, and there will be
some questions. Maybe Saro has something to say before
we move to questions.
Ms. Saro Kumar-McKenna: Thank you. My name is
Saro Kumar-McKenna, and I'm fifteen years old. I'm
here today because my mom and I have endured, just
about for the length of my lifetime, difficulties with
my dad. And now the legal system is clearly being used
to abuse us.
The Dionne sisters, in their statement, said:
If we have a final message to pass along, it is one
directed at all children.
Never be afraid to speak out
against injustice. Never be afraid to fight for
what is right.
I think that sums up what we are trying to do, and what
we have been doing for as long as I can remember.
I and other Canadian children badly need you lawmakers
here to act wisely. Please, please do not institute
laws that make life harder for the parents to somehow
manage to meet the needs of their children, parents who
can translate crumminess into love and laughter and a
happy life.
We need you not to institute laws that assume that if
a person is a biological parent and perhaps professes
far and wide that they should have this or that role in
their child's life, that necessarily means they
are actually willing to be loving parents and play a
positive role in their child's life.
I can speak from the heart, from my own experience. As
a the child of a parent who has professed indignantly
that he is a good father, who if he were to come here
today to speak to you would paint a picture of my life
with him that would be absolutely unrecognizable to me,
who has always been in denial and who was always
interactive with me in a way that completely denies my
own experience and what I lived through—it's hard to
imagine if you haven't been in the situation what it's
like to try to be dealing with a person, and to try to
be solving problems with a person who completely
refuses to acknowledge the validity of what you're
saying from the outset, who denies and denies and
denies what you're saying and what you've lived
through.
When you've been doing that for so long....
After coming back from a weekend at my father's house, I
would be so depleted in every way. I would be
physically exhausted because any sleeping schedule I
had had been completely disrupted. I would be
hungry; my eating schedule was also completely
disrupted. Emotionally I would be extremely depleted.
I would need my mom to sit with me and talk with me and
hug me, and let me know that I was a good person and a
good daughter.
• 1155
I went through this for many
years, having Mondays after a weekend be just
terrible, where I wouldn't be able to learn to the best
of my potential and where I wouldn't be able to interact
to the best of my potential. After years
of this and trying to explain to my father what it
was like and yet have him completely say there was nothing
wrong, I decided I couldn't do it
any more. It was depleting my life too much to have to go
through it.
You come to a point where you decide
not to continue with that any longer, and then societal
messages start. People say to you, “Well, what's
wrong with you for not wanting to go to see your
father?” They assume there must be
something innately unloving or unforgiving about me
because I decided it was time to stop putting
up with what was going on. The legal
system time and time again called on me to
explain my feelings and the justification for my
feelings to professionals or lawyers, and yet
seemingly never called upon my father to account for his
behaviour toward me which would have made it perfectly
understandable that I would feel that way.
Children know very well that when a teacher asks the
same question repeatedly, it means the answer wasn't
right and they want a new one. My experience of being
asked time and time again why
I didn't want to see my
father was that there was something wrong with that;
somehow they thought it was bad.
I would ask that, from the
outset, any discussion of this and any action that is
taken on these issues should take into account how children
receive these messages, and recognize how very important
it is to
ensure that children not get messages that they are
somehow bad. Some people don't know about the
situation and have a very superficial, if any,
knowledge of the situation.
I wanted to share with you my own personal experience
and how I think that ties in with what you've been
talking about.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you very much. Do you mind answering a couple of questions
now?
Mr. Szabo.
Mr. Paul Szabo: Thank you very much to the two of
you.
Just to clarify your testimony here today
concerning your own personal cases, you're not
offering any other information with regard to
generalizations about situations.
I'd like to know
your views—either of you—on some of the
discussions we've had here about getting away from
custody and access and starting to talk about
child-centred approaches and the
best interests of the child. I sense one direction
here, but maybe you could tell me, in your words,
whether you have a recommendation for the committee
about what the process should be when two parents stop
loving each other but the child still loves them, or
each of the parents still loves that child. What are
you recommending to the committee about how
we in Canada should approach this very difficult question?
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: I was put under a lot of
pressure to agree to joint custody. I now look back on
that as something preposterous. I was slow to
recognize how unworkable the situation was. I was too
eager to try to extend myself further to accommodate
her dad.
• 1200
The system has failed to adequately enable our needs
to be met. It has asked us to deal with financial issues
separately from custody and access, but we're human
beings; we don't have two departments. I can't react
to somebody who is like a mugger, in my mind, like a
thief...I cannot view them as an ordinary good person
in my life.
Mr. Paul Szabo: Okay, could you help me a little
bit here? I'm sorry, but I don't quite understand what
the problem is with your ex-husband, what exactly
he is doing or not doing that is really the reason
you're here.
Is it that he's not paying you money? Is it that he
maybe has a different philosophy or attitude towards
your child when he's with her, if he's with her? What
is wrong? What wrong are we trying to deal with here?
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: I spent a lot of years
of my life trying to figure out what's wrong with my
husband, and I cannot put it easily in words to you.
He was recalcitrant, immature, obstructive. He
interpreted everything we asked him to do to make life
work as my trying to tell him what to do. It was like
having a teenager in your life—not like this
teenager—a difficult teenager who wants to be
difficult over everything, who would make me run after
his retreating back when I was trying to give him the
cough medicine my daughter was taking and explain to
him the regime under which she had been taking it.
He could not deal with me, and yet he sat in
professional people's offices and said that he wanted
to have joint custody. He wanted control, and he wanted
me to do all the parenting.
Mr. Paul Szabo: Thank you, Madam Chair.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Yes,
Saro, you had a comment.
Ms. Saro Kumar-McKenna: Yes. I'll just say that I
know I got to a point in my visits with him when I
realized that my mom and I were making it work, that we
were the ones holding up the situation. We were the
ones who would have to undo the damage that had been
caused by the visit, so that afterwards, as I explained,
I would have these terrible days where I would have to
sort of be filled up again with love and with sleep and
with food.
It came to a point where we realized that this was a
destructive and disruptive force in our lives, and yet
we were completely having to make it go on, that in the
interest of having access and in the interest of
thinking that it was always the very best thing to have
a relationship with both parents, what we were doing
was enabling a situation that wasn't working, and it was
harmful to me.
We came to the point where we realized that we
couldn't keep doing that, and what a relief it was
afterwards when the visits stopped, when I could lead a
continuous life, free of this emotional distraction and
disruption. It was a vastly different life that I led
afterwards and that I'm leading now.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you.
Senator Jessiman and Mr. Mancini, and I'm afraid that
will be about all we have time for. Also, Mr. Forseth
wants to ask a quick question.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: I have a couple
of questions for the mother.
As I understand it, you've been separated for 12
years.
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: Yes.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Are you divorced?
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: No.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: You're not divorced.
Does your husband pay you money to maintain yourself?
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: That is very hard to
answer.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Is there a separation
agreement or a separation order?
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: There is an order for
him to make payments, which are seriously in arrears.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Are there payments to
you? I'm talking about you, first. Are there
maintenance payments for your welfare, separate and
apart from your daughter?
• 1205
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: He was ordered to pay some
spousal support. He hasn't paid any money to my hand
since 1989.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: So what you're saying is
that there's an order outstanding now that says he was to
pay you x dollars a month—
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: Yes.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: —and he's in arrears for
nine years?
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: No, he's not completely in
arrears. He paid the mortgage on the house because he
wanted to preserve his investment in it.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Well, is he in arrears
or is he not?
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: Yes, because the
mortgage on the house is less than the amount he was
ordered to pay.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: All right. Now, he
also has to pay amounts for your daughter—
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: I also want to say that he
has since come under the Ontario guardian and trustee,
which is the office the Dionnes were under.
He had a serious illness; he's now under the
Ontario guardian and trustee.
They make some payments on his behalf,
but they are not what was ordered under
the original order, and they have not paid the arrears.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Because he's had a
serious illness, is that right?
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: Yes.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: So it's not his
fault that he has a serious illness.
No, okay.
What about the payments for the child?
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: What I just said
covers both categories of payment.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: I see. Has he been
physically abusive to your child?
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: No, not to
the extent that is ordinarily portrayed as physical
abuse, but there are instances in which he crossed the
line.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: How long is it since
these visits have stopped?
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: Access visits have not
taken place for three years. They have seen one
another, but not in what you would call access.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Is that governed in
any way by anything the court has done by way of order,
or has it just happened?
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: That was absolutely
spontaneous. The thought had never occurred to either
of us that we might just drop that bird. One day, it
was a completely spontaneous thing. We are incapable of
fighting that battle any more. We had lost it. We were
unable to deal with things. One day, it was just like
it was no more.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: One last question: are
you employed?
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: No, I'm not.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Have you ever been
employed?
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: Not since I've been
married. I've done a little work as a calligrapher. I
did very little work. It went to an insignificant
extent.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Have you tried to
work?
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: My life has been pretty
much taken over by the difficulties that came shortly
after we came to Canada. There was parenthood, sudden poverty,
separation, ill health, my daughter's ill health—she
had serious asthma during her childhood—not having
family support, and not having roots to turn to.
I've done my utmost to explore what I could do by way
of being employed, but I had married a nuclear physicist
and moved to Switzerland when I was 24, so—
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Is this the same
gentleman?
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: Yes. So my financial
contribution to the family didn't seem to be vital. My
contribution in other ways was what was appropriate at
that time.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Thanks very
much.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thanks,
Senator Jessiman.
Mr. Mancini.
Mr. Peter Mancini: Thank you. I have some questions
coming out of this.
Saro, you've come before us, and I thank you for doing
that and giving us your thoughts.
In custody and access cases in this country, there are
different rules as to when children can testify before
the courts. You indicated in your testimony that
you got tired of being asked repeatedly the same
questions.
I have some questions coming out of that. Did you
in fact testify in the courts?
Ms. Saro Kumar-McKenna: Not in a courtroom in
front of a judge—
Mr. Peter Mancini: Okay.
Ms. Saro Kumar-McKenna: —but to a
dispute resolution officer and a children's lawyer.
This was sort of within the system, but not directly.
• 1210
Mr. Peter Mancini: In this country, when I say we
have different rules in different provinces, I mean
that in some
provinces there are not advocates for the child or
there are not dispute resolution mediators. Do you
have any thoughts on whether a child should be allowed
to testify in a courtroom setting? In many
cases one of the parents will say to bring the child
in, to let her or him tell the judge. It's a murky area,
because we never know at what age that should happen or
if it should happen at all. What are your thoughts on that?
Ms. Saro Kumar-McKenna: I know that I have asked
repeatedly to be able to speak with the judge who has
been listening to our case, to tell him my thoughts and
feelings on access, partly in the hope of it being
resolved once and for all, and also so that my truth
can be heard in this process. The children's lawyer
has been appointed to me, just to represent me, but I
have found her involvement in this to be more
silencing to my voice than empowering of it.
She is only allowed to address issues of access, but that is
not the whole picture in my life. The other actions of
my father towards me certainly make up my response
to him. My response to him is in
reaction to his response to me. I have
asked that I be able to speak to the judge so that I
can explain to him the justification for my feeling
the way I do, because I have found in
the past some assumptions to be made about my feeling
this way that are completely incorrect. So I want to
be able to speak with my voice and
to really tell the judge.
Mr. Peter Mancini: Perhaps I can pursue that a little
bit. That's what you're saying to me now. You're
15 years old and a very bright, articulate
young woman. Do you think
that would have been true at 10, 11, or 12 years of age?
You've given some thought to this, but I have concerns about
children, and perhaps I'm biased. I am interested to
hear your thoughts on that, on children as young as
10, 11, or 12 years of age testifying in court. I don't
know. You've been through this experience. Could you
have been as articulate then as you are now?
Ms. Saro Kumar-McKenna: I know that my
understanding of the situation and my journey through
the situation has certainly changed in those years. It
has solidified; it has never changed course.
Since the time you're talking about, when I was
10 or 11, I have always felt the way that I do, but it has just
strengthened over the years as I find out more and
more about my father's actions.
I think that children should be
empowered in this process to the maximum degree possible.
Mr. Peter Mancini: Perhaps I'll address this to
your mother. One of the things that you said—
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Mr.
Mancini, you're just about going over your five minutes.
You can have one quick question.
Mr. Peter Mancini: You indicated that you've
asked us to find ways where the courts or someone can
determine those who best care for the children and not
put them through a strong questioning.
Would you agree with me that
what you're saying is that we have to give tremendous
discretion to the decision maker, and that the
laws to some extent have to be very general to allow
that discretion?
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: Yes, I think so. Also,
we have to devise tools that do establish what
is going on.
I would like to give you one example that was tremendously
frustrating to me. My husband constantly claimed that
effectively there was a joint custody situation and
that he was spending a great deal of time...he was just
as much a parent as I was. I was feeling like I was
passing her over to a 16-year-old babysitter. I was
feeling like I had to have everything pre-planned,
everything prepared and given and explained to an
unwilling partner. When I tried to convey this in the
courts, it was very difficult to get across.
One example is that Saro is asthmatic. She had
numerous emergency room visits; she had a lot of care for
her asthma.
She reached the age of 12—
• 1215
Mr. Peter Mancini: Okay, I—
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: Can I just say this? She'd
reached the age of 12 and her father had to call me
once and ask me for her OHIP number.
Mr. Peter Mancini: But—
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: You cannot have the care
of an asthmatic child up to the age of 12 and not know
her OHIP number.
Mr. Peter Mancini: My only point on that is to
say that there is no law that's going...we can't set up
a regime of laws that say we must look at the parent to
see if he knows this or if she knows that. What we
have to do, I think, is provide that discretion to the
judge, or the mediator, and then hopefully your
evidence is then weighed accordingly.
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: And maybe—
Mr. Peter Mancini: But I'm out of time.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): Thank
you very much.
I think we've come to the end of our
time. I very much appreciate your being here, Saro, to
appear in this room full of faces and I don't know what
else. It was helpful to hear those words, that phrase
that you said about empowering young people to the
greatest extent possible. That is one phrase that I'll
retain.
Ms. Sheila Kumar-McKenna: Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Senator Landon Pearson): The
committee will resume at one o'clock.
• 1216
• 1306
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): I
wonder if the people in the room
could take a seat, please, so we can get under way.
Welcome to our afternoon session.
We have with us this afternoon, from the Coalition of
Canadian Men's Organizations, Mr. J. Kirby Inwood.
From Equal Parents of
Canada, Mr. Eric D. Tarkington is here. From In Search of
Justice, we have Mr. Ross Virgin. And from
Stepfamilies of Canada, we have Ms. Nardina Grande.
I'll start with Mr. Inwood.
Mr. Inwood, five minutes, please.
Mr. J. Kirby Inwood (Coalition of Canadian Men's
Organizations): Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I am representing
and authorized to speak for approximately 200 fathers
across Canada in seven men's groups under the umbrella
of the Canadian Coalition of Men's Organizations. It
is really an umbrella group to provide assistance to
men and fathers in their struggle with the courts and
justice and fairness.
I would like to take a second and note for the
committee's benefit not so much a criticism but a
constructive comment on the matter of notice given to me
regarding my presentation today. It was totally inadequate.
In fact, I received no notice whatsoever that I'd been
invited to speak. I discovered it on the Internet at
2.45 a.m. on Monday. As yet, I still have not
received notice.
Given that, I don't have the presentation prepared that
I would have liked to give you. I will highlight
some of the matters and ask that perhaps your
administration department look into proper notice to
other people.
Ladies and gentlemen, I would also like to point out
to you that as a society we are dealing with an
inherent, almost genetic bias against men in our
culture today. I don't want you to quiver
in fear as if I'm waving garlic at a vampire.
You may
recognize this book. It's the red book that the
government put out in the last election. I went
through this before the election. I wanted to find
out what the government's stand was on men—or in this
case, properly speaking, the Liberal Party, now the
government.
This book refers 101 times to children and children's
rights, 60 times to families. It contains 25 references to
women and women's rights; it contains 10 references to
breast cancer. It contains zero references to men.
That suggests to me—not malevolent at all—a
lack of awareness that men and fathers in our culture
are being destroyed.
• 1310
Further, just for the record in case it isn't
anywhere, I'm going to refer you to Senator Cools' speech
of October 28, 1997, which raises an issue of concern
to this committee, which must make a recommendation to
a government that already displays a fairly
substantial anti-male bias.
Senator Cools, who I would
urge you to listen to, is an expert in the field and
she has a very good grasp of all of the issues. She points
out that the justice minister of this country, Anne
McLellan, is on the record as being against men having
custody of their children and she has written many articles
that are strongly anti-father, anti-male in the past.
When you submit your recommendations you are going to
be fighting, ladies and gentlemen, an uphill battle.
I only bring that to your attention so that you will
know what we are facing.
I also do a great deal of work with lawyers and lawyer
referrals across the country. I deal with lawyers
constantly. I have personally been in court. I've
spent more than 200 days in court on my own matters, and
I have observed at least a thousand cases while I've been
sitting in court throughout the system over the years.
I am convinced that a fundamental problem is the court
system itself. We all agree here that we have
a major problem in this country. The family is broken,
the court system is broken, and we have to find a way to
fix it. And that's what we are here for, to try to
develop that.
The starting point in dealing with things
like mediation, which I totally endorse but which frightens
me for practical reasons, is the issue that was raised
by Senator Cools yesterday. The question was how
does a parent lose custody? Actually, both
parents have custody of their children until somebody
goes to court and brings a motion. That's the law, but
the law is ignored. The law is ignored consistently in
family court. Judges ignore it; lawyers ignore it;
lawyers lie, cheat and steal; clients lie, cheat and
steal; and nothing, I'm afraid, seems to make sense
down there.
What in reality happens is that custody is like
possession. It has happened to me and it
has happened to hundreds of fathers. I speak
directly to fathers every single day counselling them,
helping them and hopefully trying to advise them.
Possession is nine-tenths of the law; custody is
ten-tenths of the
law. If a woman calls the police, raises an issue,
kicks the husband out of the home, moves out, takes the
kids to a shelter, that's when custody changes, not
three months down the road in court. Custody
changes the minute the women walks away with the kids or
evicts the man, whatever.
We have legally then the
issue of interim custody, but that in itself is a
judicial farce. Judges will not disturb the status
quo; judges will not award custody to men who have a
legitimate case, because
they don't want to take the chance.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway (Sarnia—Lambton,
Lib.)): Mr. Inwood,
you're a little past five minutes. Five minutes goes very
quickly. Can we have your recommendations, please?
Mr. Kirby Inwood: I'm sorry. I really wanted to
get to that much faster.
The issue is that if we're going to deal with the
courts, we need to deal with massive court reform. We
need to look at passing something like Senator Cools'
bill from the last session, Bill S-3, which was
aimed at jailing lawyers and people who present
material to the courts that is false. We need to take
judges and make them accountable to the system,
accountable to the law and accountable to Parliament.
[Editor's Note: Applause from the audience]
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): There seems
to be some agreement.
• 1315
Mr. Kirby Inwood: Right now judges are like royalty.
They're untrained.
They have no backing. The Chief Justice of Ontario is
a man with no experience as a judge whatsoever. We
have just appointed justices to the Supreme Court who have
never been judges.
In France, judges start off as baby
judges, in the smallest of courts, dealing with the
smallest of matters, and they are trained and
apprentice and work their way up through the system.
Maybe it's time we looked at doing something like
that.
We need to bring in mandatory transcription of all
court proceedings. Most family law matters are held in
motions court today, and there is no record and judges
simply ignore, with impunity, everything that is in the
book. Judges will sit there and tell you straight
to your face, do what you like, appeal if you want to,
because the judges know that most of us can't afford to
appeal. We can't take the two years or three years.
I haven't seen my son in 10 years, ladies and
gentlemen. He's 11 years old. I've had court orders
coming out my ears. It's a farce. My case is typical.
So all I am saying to you is that it's a huge area. We
have to clean house in court.
Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): I would
just say to those attending—and this is no disrespect
at all—in committees we have certain rules, and
one of them is that there not be any clapping.
I understand that you are signalling your approval
of what it is being said, but at the same time you're
also subtracting from the time of the committee. But
more importantly, a committee is a court of
Parliament, and we would
ask that you not clap.
The second witness is from Equal Parents of Canada, Mr.
Tarkington. You have five minutes, please.
Mr. Eric D. Tarkington (Equal Parents of
Canada): Good afternoon. I want to start by thanking
the committee for this opportunity. I assume that
others have thanked you before, but I would like to add
my thanks.
Although men's and father-friendly groups in Canada
have some doubts about the beneficial outcomes of this
process, given the past history, the fact remains that
this is a unique opportunity for men's and fathers'
voices to be heard, and it indicates the maturity on
the part of the government that we have long been
hoping for. We continue to hope for further
improvements in that maturity.
My name is Eric Tarkington. I'm a software engineer.
I'm not any kind of special advocate, but I do serve
as a communicator for EPOC.
EPOC is Equal Parents of
Canada. It is an organization in the process of
formation, and its goal is to have a thoroughgoing
national representation with representatives in every
province of Canada. To this point, we do have directors
from four of the provinces and we are continuing to
pursue additional representation.
Thanks to the fact that I'm sure you've heard a great
deal from previous speakers about the problems with the
existing system, I find that there's no necessity for
me to rehash those problems. Men have a great insight,
fathers have a great insight, and I'm sure that you
have already heard enough so that you begin to
understand the direction that we would take in
assessing the problems before us.
What I would like to do is focus on solutions, and in
focusing on those solutions, I want to talk about
initiatives to replace the adversary system.
The first initiative that you're going to hear
virtually every men's group in Canada advocating is
shared parenting. We advocate shared parenting in the
belief that fathers and mothers are both equally
valuable to children and that it is incorrect at a
very fundamental level, when the matter of custody and
divorce arises, to split the child down the middle in
order to make a winner or a loser where, from the
child's perspective, the family unit continues to go
on. A child continues to have a father, continues to
have a mother, continues to have reasonable expectation
for financial and psychological and developmental
support from both parents.
In order to achieve shared parenting, we believe the
primary modality is going to be mediation.
But we witness a mediation milieu presently that is
based on mediators who have gone through a process of
training that I would characterize as excessively
gender feminist as opposed to egalitarian feminist.
This creates a situation in which men, although they
are calling for mediation, are calling for it with
great fear and trepidation, and much will have to be
done in order in improve the discipline of mediation
itself before mediation can become an effective tool to
establish good circumstances of shared parenting for
children in Canada.
• 1320
We should also have a presumption that there will be
long-term support and flexibility for families using
shared parenting to achieve the maximum benefit for
their children. There may be times when families will
have to go back to mediators. This should not be a
traumatic experience. It should be normal, it should
be expected.
Within the courts as they currently stand, we do
urgently need changes. We have to stop the presumption
of mother custody that currently operates in the
courts. Mothers have no reason to cooperate in good
faith with mediation if they know that at the end of
the mediation process, should they refuse to accept the
results, they can go to a court system that has a strong
favourable bias for them. We cannot leave this
situation in place.
You will hear people who say you must not build
presumptions into the law. I must point out that the
law currently acts with a presumption that clearly
indicates mothers are ten times as good as fathers as
parents for children. And there is not a shred of
evidence to justify that position.
We therefore say that there must be a presumption of
shared parenting and it is the duty of the courts and
it is the duty of legislators to find the ways that are
necessary to implement shared parenting in practical
ways. We have to call for the elimination of bias.
I know the judges, assessors and lawyers want to
preserve their independence, but that independence is
not the only valuable aspect to the system. We have to
have openness. We have to have processes that review,
that will permit us to ensure that judges, assessors
and lawyers bring an understanding of the value of
fatherhood to the process of establishing reasonable
family arrangements after separation and divorce.
We have to restore the primacy of the child's best
interest. Often laws seem to state that the child is
the primary consideration, the most important party in
all of these matters. In practice that isn't so. In
practice, the child's interests are subsumed into the
interests of the mother. The child is treated as an
appendage of the mother with no separable individual
rights. This must stop.
There are some voices in the courts that clearly
recognize this. The Gordon v. Goertz decision was a
good one, but in fact the courts in practice continue to
exercise the bias against fathers that undermines this
fundamental principle. I am going to also suggest
something that is radical in terms of the people in the
court system.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Your time's
almost up.
Mr. Eric Tarkington: I will finish soon. We need
cameras in court and we need corresponding measures to
ensure the openness of the courts so that they can be
reviewed in terms of their processes and in terms of
their freedom from bias. There are many other things
we need to discuss, even headings that I haven't
been able to get to in these five minutes, but I am very
encouraged by the existence of this committee and I am
very encouraged by the opportunity I see before
me to continue to submit our ideas in forums after this
one.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you, Mr.
Tarkington.
Ms. Grande.
Ms. Nardina Grande (President, Stepfamilies of
Canada): Hi, I'd like to start by showing everybody
something that I think is very important so we don't
forget why we're here.
• 1325
That's my son—my natural son—and my stepdaughter.
We haven't seen her in two years. Are you going to
bring her back, or do I have to do it myself?
I've been called stepmonster, home wrecker, tramp,
whore, garbage, it, thing, wicked stepmother,
adulteress, the other woman, the younger woman.
These are just some of the stereotypical names applied
to me and members of my group, which is a
non-federally funded, non-profit, completely volunteer,
hard-working women's group called Stepfamilies of
Canada. We get hundreds of calls every month.
The irony of these names and this name-calling is that
it's being done by people who never have met us and,
ironically enough, probably never will.
I want to thank the Special Joint Committee on Child
Custody and Access for allowing us to make a
presentation today and for letting all women's voices
be heard, not just a selected few women's voices who do
not represent the majority of women in Canada.
Non-custodial stepmoms—I will define this for you in
both official languages later on in this
presentation—their children
and stepchildren are represented in this
group. They bear the tremendous strain of judicial,
legal and political decisions made almost always in
favour of custodial mothers. I started this group in
the fall of 1993. I'm its president and founder,
Nardina Grande.
A non-custodial stepmother is a woman who is married
to or is in a common-law relationship with a separated
or divorced father, who, in 98% of matrimonial cases,
does not have his children residing with him.
[Translation]
A non custodial stepmother is a woman who doesn't have custody
of her stepsons and stepdaughters and who is married or living with
a father separated or divorced from his first wife. In 98% of
cases, the children are not staying with their father.
[English]
I want to make sure everyone's clear on this
definition, because non-custodial stepmothers outnumber
custodial stepmothers by a factor of 17. That's a U.S.
statistic, but since divorce statistics in the U.S. and
Canada are similar, I believe this extends to Canada as
well. So there are 17 times as many non-custodial
stepmothers as custodial stepmothers.
Since women initiate approximately 80% of all
divorces, and win custody with residency in
approximately 98% of all cases, and that divorces are
occurring sooner these days so that it's very likely
the children of the marriage are just infants or
toddlers, the disenfranchised father is often young
enough to remarry and have more children of his own.
Remarriage of divorced fathers is considered taboo in
today's society in the eyes of the media, the
government, and custodial mothers. But I explain how
hard these fathers fight for their children to see
them, and when that fails, they want to have children
they can see. That's just a normal human response. I
would maintain that when we go into the next
millennium, non-custodial stepfamilies will be the
extended families of the next century.
Recommendations: First of all, I'm going to make a
comment. Legislated access does not work. I didn't
say access does not work; I said “legislated”—legislated
anything doesn't work. People don't respond when it
comes to emotional...especially custodial mothers.
There's an emotional response; the children are there.
Let me explain why custodial mothers will not follow
legislated access.
First, the biological father has applied for custody of
the children. This is absolutely absurd. We all know
that mothers get the children. I just told you that in
98% of cases, the children reside with the mother.
Wonderful lawyers, for the female, feed
this unjustified paranoia in saying “You know, there
might be a possibility you're going to lose your
child”. That causes their client to spend money—the
child's money.
Even if the mother is assured that the biological
father will not achieve custody of the children, she
may perceive the children's access to the father as
disloyalty to her. I call this the fixed love pie
mentality—that there's only so much love to go around.
Children can only benefit from more and more love. But
there's this fixed pie mentality that “Oh, if the child
sees Daddy, there'll be less love for me”. That's
pretty immature, but it happens. It's an emotional
response to divorce.
It's also the “kids parent mom”
or “mom using kids as shields” mentality. They hide
behind the child when they decide to not follow court
orders.
• 1330
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Your time is
up.
Ms. Nardina Grande: The other reason why a mother
holds onto the children is that she's afraid of losing
child support or that it will be reduced. I want to go
into ten common strategies that non-custodial stepmoms
face.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Can you do
it in about two minutes?
Ms. Nardina Grande: Yes. There are common
strategies a non-custodial mother will use—and
the lawyers encourage this—to completely cut off
access or make it miserable.
There's the ex parte motion, which is a motion
made in absence of the father where they can get
complete custody and everything. That's where the
mother has the advantage, because she initiates divorce
in 80% of matrimonial cases.
There is constructive abandonment, where we have
unsubstantiated allegations of spousal abuse to have
the father driven out of the home. Fathers don't just
walk out on their children, they're driven out.
Third is perjured statements and affidavits.
Fourth is outright
contempt of the court order for visitation.
Five is
attempts to sabotage the visitation while in progress.
Sixth is the supposed visitation depression fall-out period.
Seventh is unsubstantiated allegations of abuse, namely
sexual abuse. Because the stepmothers act as
witnesses, they're implicated as well.
There's the parental alienation syndrome.
I'm sorry, I have to
stop on this point because I know there are a lot of
frustrated children of divorce and I want to explain
something. If you read Richard A. Gardener's book,
Parental Alienation Syndrome, don't misinterpret
what it means. It's not just brainwashing of the
children.
This disorder refers to a situation in which
the parental programming is combined with the child's
own scenarios of denigration of the allegedly hated
parent. The children are at a point where they have to remain
loyal to the custodial parent because they're
survivors. They have to be. They'll go to the point
of inventing stories to please the custodial mother.
Ninth is delay tactics. This is where the court helps
out in assessments, costs, deliberate postponement
and attrition of dollars.
Tenth, when all else is done,
there's mobility. Just take off with the child.
Change the child's name. Let the child die and not
tell the father.
On the long-term effects on the child, in the long term
this bankrupts the fathers and bankrupts the custodial
mothers. The lawyer's children will go on to
post-secondary education, but not their own children.
This also attributes to millions of dollars in
mental health and social welfare systems.
StatsCan did a study in 1997 of growing up in
Canada. It was an analysis of 22,000 children. They
noted that the drop-out rate at school and
behaviour problems increased with the children of
single mothers, as opposed to children in intact
families. I can go on.
The teenage pregnancy rate skyrockets for children of
single mothers. There is a 75% delinquency rate
in children of single mothers in the United States. I
want to apply that to Canada because we're very similar
countries.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): I'll have to
stop you there and thank you. We have to move on.
I wonder if the group standing here would like to
stay behind the
members' table, please.
Mr. Ross Virgin (In Search of Justice): Can I just
interject? They're part of my presentation. They're
just getting ready for the presentation.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): I wasn't
aware of that. Mr. Virgin, please proceed for five
minutes.
Mr. Ross Virgin: Thank you very much. I
appreciate the opportunity to be here. We will be
looking at, in trying to solve all of those problems in
five minutes or less, the three items of custody,
access and mediation, which are the three items in your
mandate.
The first item we will look at specifically is
custody. I'm not going to try to reinvent the whole
wheel, reinvent eternity. I really enjoyed one of the
comments from Paul Forseth in his newsletter in which
he said: “We've been hearing lots of problems, but we'd like some
concrete recommendations.”
That's your job, to change the Divorce Act. I hope I
can help you with that.
• 1335
Our first item, joint physical custody, is definitely
what we're recommending.
Maybe your committee can wrap up and go on
vacation, but I am going to suggest to you that the work has
already been done for you.
If you can read it from that distance,
what you see is that
it says Jay Hill. He's one of your
colleagues. He introduced a private member's bill, and
it was superb.
For all of you, and for Mr. Forseth—I loved your comments
in your newsletter—the problem with the Divorce Act
is that it says the court “may” order joint custody or
sole custody.
Jay Hill's bill, which unfortunately was
defeated—it did not pass because it was a private member's
bill—says the complete opposite. It says that where a
court makes an order with respect to the custody of a child,
the order will grant custody of the child to
both spouses jointly.
That's why I say that from my
perspective your work is done. Jay Hill did a super
job in his legislation, and I think you've heard
plenty of presentations here on the value of joint
custody. I suggest to you that Jay Hill has really helped
you a great deal.
You see, we're not here to help, as much as to look at the
legal implications. As so many of the
presentations have indicated today, we're here
because there are
children out there who aren't seeing both parents;
they're losing one of their parents.
I just want you to look at these four photographs.
These are four children belonging to my colleague Gus
here. Up to two years ago they saw both mother and
father every day
of the year. Two years ago that came to an end.
Ladies and gentlemen, I suggest to you that you can
change that. During that two-year period these four
children have seen very little of one of their parents,
the non-custodial parent. This is to the extent that
the three-year-old young girl cries and even yells, “Daddy,
Daddy, Daddy, don't leave
me”, on the few occasions when she does see him.
We have to stop that. That's tormenting the kids.
Ladies and gentlemen, may I suggest to you that you can
stop that. That's your mandate. And Jay Hill has done
a great deal to help you. It's already written for
you.
The next item under joint custody has to do with Jim
Henderson. Jim Henderson was an MPP in the province of
Ontario several years ago. He tried to do the same
thing, unfortunately again through a private member's
bill.
But he was dynamite. He saw the problem. He
wrote the solution for you. Just copy the wording.
Yes, I agree that you have to change a few comments here
and there, because it was for the Children's Law Reform Act.
The principles are the same.
Let me read just a couple of his comments to you:
The purpose of the Bill is to create a legal presumption
that custody of a child should be granted jointly
to both the child's parents, when both parents are
seeking custody. The presumption is rebutted if the
court determines that joint custody is not in the best
interests of the child.
He goes on to say:
A parenting agreement to guide the
parents in the decision-making process shall be a part
of this joint custody process.
Where a parent does not
act in accordance with the requirements of the parenting
agreement, the court may rescind the order for joint
custody and may grant sole custody to the other parent.
Let me suggest to you that this is a very powerful
deterrent to any parent who wants to sabotage joint
physical custody. It works.
Dr. Henderson did humongous amounts of research before
he drafted that bill. And, ladies and gentlemen, let me
suggest to you again, as Paul Forseth has asked.... He
wants recommendations to change the Divorce Act. It's
right there. You don't even have to draft or redraft
it. Just copy it: joint physical custody.
The last point related to joint physical custody is
the United States of America. I'm sure you people
already know that there are states all over the United
States that have already implemented joint custody.
Why reinvent the wheel?
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway):
Your five minutes is up. If you could wrap up,
please, I'd appreciate it.
Mr. Ross Virgin: I will wrap up.
My colleague Eugene
is with his one three-year-old daughter in these
pictures. That daughter is 15 now. She does not
even know where her father lives. She has not seen her
father in 12 years. It's disgusting and unacceptable.
This man has spent $30,000 in legal fees trying to
find and see his daughter.
• 1340
So my suggestion to you is that...while at the outset I
wanted to touch base, of course, on joint custody, I
want to touch base on access enforcement. I also want
to touch base on mandatory mediation, but obviously our
time will not permit that.
I hope that for you people
this picture may show some light at the end of
tunnel. I've
given you two disasters, and several more gentleman in
the background are in disastrous
situations.
This young lady, Crystal, has yet to go through
this. This separation is just starting. You people
have the authority, you have the mandate, to change the
Divorce Act, and that's what you're here for. I trust
that you will not put this young lady, Crystal, through
what so many other children have been through in losing
one of their parents.
In summary, as a few more of our fellows come
forward with the pictures of their children, whom they
are having problems seeing, the only recommendations I would
leave with you people....
My summary is this, and obviously I'm
only going to be touching on joint physical
custody. Please take seriously Jay Hill's
legislation. It's already there for you.
Take seriously Dr. Jim Henderson's legislation.
He's done the research, two years of research. He did
what you people are doing right now. It's all done
for you.
And please take seriously what the many states
in the United States have already learned, and can teach
you.
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for your time. I
trust you will care very much about the children of
this country.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you,
Mr. Virgin.
[Editor's Note: Applause from the audience]
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Please, no
applause.
I wonder if you could leave a copy of the
Henderson work with us.
Mr. Ross Virgin: That's not a problem at all. Yes,
I will get it. Whom should I leave it with?
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): The clerk.
Mr. Ross Virgin: The clerk, that's fine. That's not a
problem.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you.
We'll now proceed to questions. We're going to begin
with Ms. Bennett.
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: Thank you very much. I guess
maybe I should start with the last presentation.
A lot of what the committee has been saying is that even
the word “custody” sets up a climate in such a way
that custody access means a winner and a loser. There
is then a climate in which people have to maintain this
power, and maintain the status of winner and loser.
So I guess I would be
concerned with bills that maintain that, because even
Mr. Inwood's word about shared parenting....
Even the word “shared” presumes that special...to people
who aren't really in the mood to be sharing very much.
So I guess, to step right back to what we're hearing,
the only person who really has rights is the kid, and
that's to see both parents.
Mr. Ross Virgin: Absolutely, I agree with your
concern about the word “custody.”
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: And the parents have
responsibilities that start at birth and continue
forever.
Mr. Ross Virgin: Right.
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: I would like some
feedback from the panel. If the words “custody” and
“access” were removed, and we immediately went to
some....whether
it's mediation, or what Dr. Chisholm talked about this
morning, about a special master judge with serious
expertise and interest in this area. You just
talked about a parenting plan that presumed all of what
you're talking about, but actually this was a change in the
atmosphere and the climate that would presume that both
parents keep having responsibility. How are we
going to work that out logistically and with time?
Mr. Ross Virgin: I don't care what the word—
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): She's asking
for a response from all the panel. So you go ahead.
Mr. Ross Virgin: I think she actually said that we'll
start with the last presenter first—
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: Yes.
Mr. Ross Virgin: —so that's the only reason I was
responding.
I don't care about the word “custody,” I don't care
about the words “shared parenting;” all I care about
is that the kids have both parents.
So whatever words you ladies and gentlemen would like
to put in there, I and, I guarantee you, all these
people here are behind you.
As for the ones who haven't
seen their children for 12 years or 10 years, they
don't care whether you use the word “custody” or
whatever. Please, let's get children to see both
parents, that's all.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Ms. Grande.
• 1345
Ms. Nardina Grande: After my five years of hell,
trying to see my stepdaughter, I'm more pessimistic
that mothers will cooperate with shared custody.
So my recommendations are a little different. It
doesn't matter what word you give it—there is already
wonderful wording in the Divorce Act—but
there is a presumption that the child should have
maximum contact with both parents. It's not being
followed; it's a joke.
It's being overtaken by federally funded women's
groups, and policy and social programs. Until that
changes, until we stop federal funding to women's groups
that represent a minority of Canadian women, not the
majority of Canadian women....
A lot of women are afraid to come out and say it.
I'm not afraid any more, because I lost my
stepdaughter. You're not going to get her back for me,
so I'm going to tell you like it is.
You get rid of
the federally funded women's special interest groups,
and you give us charitable status.
Voices: Hear, hear!
Ms. Nardina Grande: If they
represent the majority of women in Canada, they can
survive with private donations. Give them a charitable
number, give me a charitable number, and let's see who
raises more money.
I'll guarantee you, I'll have a panel
of 5,000 people here next year telling you what
stepmothers think of the whole situation, and
grandmothers, aunts, sisters, and a lot of women
who support the fathers' rights movement.
We do so, not because
we think father is better, or mother is better, but
because if you play one parent against the other the
children suffer. We need a level playing field.
So getting back to semantics, custody—we always give
custody to the mother. If you're going to do that,
give custody to the mother. But it should be true
custody. That means a complete financial obligation
for the child, as well as taking care of the child's
daily needs.
And I'll tell you why. It's better—
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: Well, I think my question
was do we get rid of the word “custody”, not where
do we give it.
Ms. Nardina Grande: No, keep the word
“custody”, and I'm going to explain why. It's better
to get something with sugar than with vinegar. If
women want the kids, give them kids. They'll have to
be truly feminist and accept both financial....
That's what custody means in a traditional definition.
It means financial and emotional responsibility for
the children. If that's what they want, give it to
them.
I assure you that within a couple of months
the father will be seeing those children all the time
to help financially and emotionally support the child
with her, along with the extended families.
That's my proposal, because I'm very pessimistic that
shared parenting, just like the words “maximum contact
with both parents”, which is already in the Divorce
Act, is going to work.
You're just changing words, so
if you're going to keep to the same way, give custody to
the mother, so that she's fully responsible financially
to the child, and you'll see how quickly she will be
willing to share.
It's true that money is the root of all
evil. It's true, and I hate to say it, that there are a lot
of greedy mothers out there. So if you want the kids
to see the father, the mother is solely responsible for
the child, and if she wants help, she lets the father
see the child. She'll do that willingly, because
the father financially supports the child when they see
the children.
I also maintain that if you want to enforce access, which I
don't—
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: So I guess—
Ms. Nardina Grande: Under the current system—
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: —the issue is—
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Excuse me,
our time is really up, and Mr. Tarkington wishes to
respond.
Mr. Eric Tarkington: What I would say is, yes,
the words do matter. Taking the word “custody” out
of our legal instrument and out of our policy
instruments would tend to improve the atmosphere.
But it is important to recognize that we have already
seen similar changes go to no good purpose. Joint
custody is an outstanding example of this. Thousands
of joint custody orders have been issued, and when you
read the details of the joint custody order, it turns
out to be an order for sole custody to the mother.
This kind of shell game with the wording is not going
to solve the problem. I do believe that
what has to solve the problem in
the long term is the entire removal of
90% or more of the cases from the adversary system.
Although I strongly approve of the word changes,
because they would indicate a change of mindset
favourable to the eventual shrinkage of the adversary
system, I think too much focus on simply changing the
words would not really persuade anyone out in the
heartland.
Ms. Nardina Grande: Can I make a comment to
respond to the gentleman?
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): No, Mr. Inwood
wants an opportunity.
• 1350
Mr. Kirby Inwood: Thank you. Let me say just
briefly that I also am not concerned with the terminology
or the vernacular; I'm concerned with enforcement.
I am concerned that no matter what you call it,
historically, daily in this country, the
orders aren't enforced anyway. That is my focus, and
that is my concern.
In Ontario right now the family support plan has
135,800 support-paying fathers, who have either joint
custody or access, shared custody, whatever it is that
they have. They don't have their kids; their kids
don't have them.
So call it what you will. Just put
the kids and the parents together, please.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you.
Mr. Mancini.
Mr. Peter Mancini: Thank
you. I have so many questions and so little time, I
don't know where to start.
Perhaps I'll start with
Stepfamilies of Canada. I'll start there, and hope I get
further.
You said that there seems to be a misconception that
there's only so much love to go around, and in fact
that's wrong.
But in reality there is only so much time to go
around. I mean, there's a finite amount of time. As I
look at these pictures of these children...they need to
be fed, they need to have naps, they need to.... They
have their lives.
The question I ask you is, if we accept your
premise, where do we stop? For the stepmother who has
parents who may be able to make a contribution to their
stepgrandchildren....
Let's just take a quick
scenario. There's the mother and the father who split
up; they each have a new partner. Each of those
partners has their parents, so the children now have
four sets of grandparents.
At what point do we say the
child's time is finite? And we have to make sure
that finite time is spent in the best interests of the
child. At some point don't we have to start excluding?
Ms. Nardina Grande: I don't know what you mean by
that. We have no problems sticking kids in day care,
changing day care a million times. We have no
problems, as long as it suits the convenience of the
custodial mother.
All I'm saying is make it the kind of
system that will influence cooperation between the
biological mother and the biological father.
Mr. Peter Mancini: Okay.
Ms. Nardina Grande: Children are interested in the
biological mother and the biological father.
Mr. Peter Mancini: Okay, I may have misconstrued.
I was under the impression—
Ms. Nardina Grande: I think my way will work,
because if you get rid of the money element, the root
of evil, you get rid of it, and that will enforce.... Sorry,
it is not the word “enforce.” That will encourage
cooperation between the parents without government
intervention.
But the government has to see that
legislated child support, just like legislated access,
is a detriment to the children's welfare.
Mr. Peter Mancini: Okay. Just for my
clarification, when you talk about shared custody or
joint custody, could I have a definition of that? Do you
mean the child spending half the year with one parent,
half with the other, or a week with one and a week with the
other? What is the definition of that?
Mr. Ross Virgin: Yes, that's exactly what I am
referring to. As a matter of fact, in Dr. Jim
Henderson's bill he makes reference to shared equal
time.
And, of course, this requires that
both parents live in close proximity.
I love to draw on an example right near my office
where the kids.... Let me suggest to you
that if the alternative for a
parent who wants to move to Australia is to lose their
child, you would be amazed at how quickly a parent will
say, I don't want to go to Australia. One of our
members is a high-ranking executive officer with IBM
who was given that opportunity.
Mr. Peter Mancini: Okay, that's fine. I only have
a little time. What's the answer to the question?
Mr. Ross Virgin: Sure, absolutely equal time.
Mr. Peter Mancini: I'm trying to keep everybody
straight here. The next question is to Mr. Tarkington
from Equal Parents of Canada.
When you talk about
cameras in the courtroom, I have a concern with that.
Do you mean that cameras are there to be viewed upon
application by someone who's interested, or do you mean
the way they have it in the United States? This is
where, in some criminal trials, anybody can tune into a
family court or divorce court hearing.
Say you'd like to see cameras in the court.
Can you clarify that for me?
Mr. Eric Tarkington: Yes, I guess I would
like to say that this is really too big an issue for me
to answer the question within the limited time you
have allocated to you.
Mr. Peter Mancini: Okay.
Mr. Eric Tarkington: But I will begin by saying
that the intention of cameras in the courtroom is not
litigation. It is not to hammer the court system. In
fact, I would suggest cameras in the mediation rooms as
well.
• 1355
The reason for a suggestion of this kind is
that this measure, and numerous other kinds
of openness in the approach to creating these family
arrangements, would be beneficial to
our learning how to do them better.
They would also be
beneficial in the individual cases, in a wide variety of
ways that I really don't have time to explain.
Mr. Peter Mancini: Okay, but they're not for
public consumption. I wouldn't be able to turn on my
local community channel and see what's happening in
family court.
Mr. Eric Tarkington: I would suggest that those
records should be as available as court transcripts
currently are.
Mr. Peter Mancini: To anybody?
Mr. Eric Tarkington: Court transcripts are
currently matters of public record.
Mr. Peter Mancini: Okay.
Mr. Eric Tarkington: Aside from the
difficulties and expense of tracking them down, any
records of your experiences in court or my experiences
in court are matters of public record, and accessible
to the public.
Senator Anne Cools: Could I have a supplementary
to that, please, sir? I'm just making sure—
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Go ahead
for a supplementary.
Senator Anne Cools: I'm not concerned with
whether you meant cameras or not, but what I heard you
just say is that the proceedings should be recorded.
We've had witnesses who have told us that there
are numerous instances—motions and whatever else—in
court where there is no record, no transcript,
of what has transpired.
I understood you to mean that
all proceedings should be recorded. Was that what you
meant, or maybe...? He's hearing something
slightly different. Could you clarify that?
Mr. Eric Tarkington: Yes, that is what I am
suggesting.
Senator Anne Cools: Okay, that's what I heard.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Senator
Jessiman.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Ms. Grande, when you
said take the money part out of it—I think those were
your words—are you saying that the custodial parent
should have full custody, but also full responsibility
to pay for looking after the child totally? Is that
what you...?
Ms. Nardina Grande: That's lip service. The
reality is that—
Senator Duncan Jessiman: But that—
Ms. Nardina Grande: —there will be increased
cooperation between mother and father, so that the
father will share in the financial and emotional
support of the child.
All I'm saying is, don't
legislate it. If you legislate it, then the mother is
going to hang on to those kids like they're
possessions: I'm not going to let go, I'm going to
lose my money.
They're not meal tickets; they're human beings.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Yes, but the law before
the present law came into effect provided that both
parents had their responsibility to look after the
welfare of the child. They still had that
responsibility when they were separated. The old law
also said that they would contribute proportionately to
that.
Unfortunately, under the new law they were going
to take that completely out of the act. We have a
great deal of difficulty retaining part of what was
there before.
Subsection 26.1(2) of the Divorce Act, which was the
only part we were able to retain, says—and I can tell
you this for a fact—that they're both still
responsible for paying, but not proportionately to what
they have.
The new guidelines were supposed to be, and are, built
around both parents having responsibility to contribute
to the welfare of the child, but not on a proportionate
basis. That part has been taken out.
So the law in Canada, the guidelines, are built so
that you only look at the income of the non-custodial
parent. It doesn't matter if the custodial parent wins
the lottery, or inherits $1 billion—
Ms. Nardina Grande: Or marries a millionaire.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: —or marries a
millionaire, except in special circumstances.
But the custodial parent does have the responsibility
for...according to the guidelines. They're built on the
basis that the custodial parent is paying something.
You were suggesting that they pay everything, and—
• 1400
Ms. Nardina Grande: That's what I'm suggesting;
that's not what is going to happen. What will happen
is that naturally the custodial parent
will voluntarily facilitate visitation for the
non-custodial parent so that they can financially and
emotionally support the child as well.
It's just a means to an end. It really means nothing,
but it will encourage the custodial mother to
facilitate visitation.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: All right. Senator
Cools, I and others worked on this. We go into
the guidelines, which were not there when the government
presented it to us.
What the government really wanted was that before a
non-custodial parent would be given credit for anything
he did, the child would have to have spent more than
50% overnight—183 days a year—with the non-custodial
parent. That would happen before they recognized any
money that he paid on behalf of the children.
Ms. Nardina Grande: Well, that's just encouraging the
custodial mother to make sure that the father does not
see the child for that percentage of time. It's
ridiculous.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Yes, well—
Ms. Nardina Grande: It is an impetus
for the custodial mother to
withhold the child—
Senator Duncan Jessiman: I'm on your side. Wait—
Ms. Nardina Grande: —so that he doesn't have
that certain percentage of time.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Ms. Grande,
please allow Senator Jessiman to put his query to you.
Ms. Nardina Grande: Sorry.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: I'm on your side. I'm
just trying to tell you what the situation
is. Okay?
Ms. Nardina Grande: I'm sorry. It's a bit
emotional for me.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: All right.
We got that reduced.
The government finally agreed that a non-custodial
parent did not have to have the child for 183 days
overnight.
So they reduced that and said they would agree that
the non-custodial parent could get credit
financially—that means looking at both incomes,
because you're not looking at both incomes now—if he
had 40% of the right of access, or had physical custody
of a child for not less than 40% of the time over the
term of a year.
Now, we were trying to get that down to 30%. If you
actually had 30% of the child's time, and spent 30% of
the money to pay for his shoes and take him to the
movies—whatever he does 30% of the time—that costs
money.
We've had the Canadian Bar come before us, and they
think that 40% is causing more problems than it's
worth. Others have said otherwise, but the Canadian
Bar thinks that before a non-custodial parent should be
given any credit, the non-custodial parent should spend
substantially equal time with the child. It's almost
as bad as what the government wants.
In North Carolina they have 35%. That's quite
a bit different from substantially equal. It's 35%
overnight, and they're considered shared parenting.
This shared parenting is a real problem for this
committee. I want all of you, or any one or more of
you, to tell us what you think is fair.
In one of the states—I think it's North Carolina, and
maybe Maryland—they say that when it comes to the
obligations, at least, you go 1.5 times the amount
because you now have two households.
Then, when you go 1.5 times the amount, they share it
in proportion to what they each have. If one has
$100,000 and the other has $50,000, this one pays
two-thirds, the other pays one-third, but the cost
would be 1.5 times the amount.
My question to all of you is to ask you to tell us
what you think is fair from the point of view.... You get
the dollars, because it does cost dollars to look after
children. It costs dollars when they're together; now
they're apart.
I think we can all assume it's going to
cost more, because you now have two households, and the
children are going to be there, at both places.
What's fair? What is fair to the non-custodial
parent and what's fair to the custodial parent when
they're sharing? Should it be 50-50 before he gives
any contributions? Should it be less? What should it
be? What's your idea?
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): It's a
little after 2 p.m., so please be very brief.
Mr. Ross Virgin: I'm very much in support of the
example you gave from the United States. It was
looking at income, but I think the proportion of the
time spent with the children should be the major
factor.
However, I didn't think this committee was dealing
with child support. It is dealing with custody and
access.
A voice: Right.
Mr. Ross Virgin: Therefore, we must make
sure that if we're going to change child support on the
basis of access time, as my colleague beside me said,
that just encourages access violations. So we must
enforce access, and then follow your suggestion.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you,
Mr. Virgin.
Very quickly, please, Ms. Grande.
• 1405
Ms. Nardina Grande: Shared parenting will not
work without the full cooperation of those biological
parents. My suggestion is mandatory, non-gender-biased
counselling for the children and then the entire
family, and a mandatory divorce court for the parents,
as in the law in the state of Georgia, before any
division or liquidation of family assets, which would
make the mediation process a little speedier.
If you freeze the assets until they come to an
agreement and come up with a proper parenting plan that
a judge can endorse, it'll be very fast, I assure you.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you.
Mr. Tarkington.
Mr. Eric Tarkington: I shall try to be brief.
The conclusion on which I think most fathers' groups would
finally align with is that if you create fairness in
custody and access you will automatically lead to a
social discussion that will tend to produce equitable
rules about support. This, I think, reveals the defect
of the government's strategy of separating these issues
in legislation, and it is going to complicate the process.
But I think ultimately fair custody and access,
targeted toward shared parenting, will result in fair
support.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Mr.
Inwood, the last word to you.
Mr. Kirby Inwood: I'm going to pass. I am not
qualified to comment.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Okay. I want
to thank you for coming today. This has been a most
productive session.
We will adjourn for three minutes.
• 1407
• 1411
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): We will
begin our second session of the afternoon. With us we
have Balance Beam, represented by Tony Vorsteveld;
Second Spouses of Canada, represented by Dory
Gospodaric; Wayne Allen, for Kids Need Both
Parents; and Rick Morrison, for Fathers for
Justice.
I think the last shall be first. So
being the last, Mr. Morrison, you begin. Five minutes,
please, and I'm going to have to really enforce this.
Mr. Rick Morrison (President, Fathers for Justice):
Good afternoon. I appreciate the opportunity to
be here. I have worked with a voluntary organization
for a number of years now. Fathers for Justice has been
around for about ten years. When I took this on, I had
no idea I would be in a spot like this. So bear with
me. I'll just run through my thoughts.
It's unfortunate that child custody and access has
been put into the present legal system. This system
creates a winner-loser concept. Two parents who are
divorcing or separating, already stressed with many
emotions like sorrow, depression and fear, are rushed
into a courtroom battlefield, a place where the rules
are unknown and the language is foreign. What does
filing a motion or interim motion really mean to
these people?
With all this, these two people are expected to make
healthy decisions about their children. The problem
with deciding custody in the present system is that it
takes too long. By the time it's over, the children
have already lived in one home for months so no one
wants to move them. Usually this means they stay with
the mother.
The other problem is that under the present system all
is not equal. Court orders dealing with access are
basically worthless. Knowing that custody is a lost
issue, a father hopes for some access time. He's told
that every other weekend and a day through the week is
the norm. But somehow six or eight days a month to hug
your child is not right.
But even if he gets this, he soon realizes that the
battle may not be over if the custodial parent decides
not to agree. This means back to the lawyer, back to
court, more money and more lost time from your child.
It may get worse. The child may be moved away, making
access more difficult. Imagine, how would you feel
learning that your child's name has been changed or
that you, as a parent, have been accused of abuse?
Maybe custody and access could be decided outside the
courtroom. The child's home and relationship with the
parents should not be held in limbo while waiting for
the outcome of a divorce. Possibly counsellors or
mediators could work with both parents and children to
decide these issues immediately.
A mediation-type of environment could defuse the
emotions and keep the focus on the children. Options
can be brought out, such as the non-custodial parent or
other family member acting as a caregiver instead of a
neighbour or a child care centre.
Allow both parents to take pride in attending school
plays. A child who knows that both mom and dad will
see them on their birthday or other special occasions
is going to be a lot happier. As new problems arise, a
mediator could offer more immediate solutions.
But what is agreed to has to be enforced. A child
must be able to continue his relationship with both
parents and not have it put on hold for weeks and
months until all disputes and accusations are dealt
with.
The onus has to change so that children are
automatically allowed to see both parents. Access is
not something that should be argued and fought for.
Access should be a child's right.
• 1415
It is in the immediate aftermath of divorce that
parents need some help and guidance. As time passes,
the bad emotions do fade, and parents will be better
able to decide what's best for their children.
Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you,
Mr. Morrison.
Mr. Allen.
Mr. Wayne Allen (Kids Need Both Parents): Thank
you for having me come to speak. I'm with an
organization called Kids Need Both Parents and I deal
directly with non-custodial parents on a daily basis.
Unfortunately, I have a very good insight into what
has been going on in the courts in this country.
Suffice it to say that it has very little to do with
law and even less to do with justice.
In the last year, because of my own situation, I
studied social policy and a lot of case files and who's
been doing what, and some of the stuff I found is very
disturbing.
Judge Norris Weisman, who sits on
co-custody and access disputes here in Toronto, says:
...it is not unusual to find that the custodial parent
is using the child as a weapon in the matrimonial
warfare and is sabotaging the access visits.
Justice Steinberg, the head judge of Ontario Unified
Family Court—he sits in Hamilton, the court that I'm
in—says:
In the case of continued or major access
violations, some sanction must be imposed if the legal
system is to retain its integrity. ... It may be that only
by repeatedly bringing the offending spouse before the
court can the access parent `wear down' the custodial
parent and obtain access.”
That's the senior family law judge in this province.
When I go in front of this man to seek access and he
already has the attitude that the only way I'm going to
get the access is to repeatedly bring the offending
spouse back to court, there is a problem. There's also
a legal term for that, and it's called breach of public
trust. It's called fraud. When the courts know that
I have to keep coming back to court to enforce an order
that they made, that is fraud.
James McLeod, a senior law professor in London, I
believe, states:
If the custodial parent is in favour,
access occurs. If the custodial parent is opposed, it
does not. That may be the reality of access rights in
any event. But should the court promote this
position?
We have courts that are saying they don't have the
ability to do anything. They do have the ability but
they lack the will. The court has extreme powers. They
can incarcerate people. They can fine them. They can
do any number of remedies. They choose not to because
it's easier. The parents should work it out. Access
will happen when these two parents figure it out. But
if one parent doesn't want you in their life, forget it.
You're not getting it. I know that first-hand. My ex,
the mother of my daughter, was on the front page of the
Toronto Sun for being the first woman in years to be
put in jail for access denial.
Recently there was another one in Mississauga. I may
be wrong, but the man who did that represented himself.
I represented myself. Why is that? Why is there no
lawyer around capable of taking an access denial into a
court in this land and seeking justice? Because they
know what is going on. They know that what is going on
has nothing to do with justice and nothing to do with
law.
My daughter is about three years old right now, and
she's coming into some real problems. I don't know
exactly what I can do to help her. I work full-time at
this now because there is nothing else I can do.
I used to pay $15,000 a year in income tax but now I
pay zero, and I'm not proud of that. I used to pay
$650 a month in child support but now I pay zero. I'm
not proud of that either. But you give me a choice.
When I go to work in this country again, I will go to
work when I know that if I get married again and have
children, those children won't be taken away from me
because mom wants something bigger, better, faster,
stronger or richer.
I want to know what I can
do as a parent to be actively involved in my children's
lives, because the courts certainly aren't telling us.
• 1420
My ex kidnapped the child from the Children's Aid
Society. On April 23 the judge put my daughter...the
first time I was falsely accused of sexually abusing my
daughter, I was absolutely devastated. I was off work
on stress leave. The amount of money I have lost
fighting this battle to see my child would pay her
child support for six years, so when she's eight, come
and see me for child support.
You guys have known about this for a long time,
because I've read your papers. I've read what has been
discussed in custody and access. Are you afraid that
somebody won't elect you? As a senator, I suppose not.
What could possess somebody to allow this to go on?
There has to be a reason. I don't necessarily know
what that reason is, but I have a pretty good
idea—it's easier.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Your five
minutes are up.
Mr. Wayne Allen: Okay, I have a couple of
solutions.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Make them
very quickly, please.
Mr. Wayne Allen: One solution was
from Judge Karen Johnston, who states “the solution is to
disrupt the children's lives as little as possible”. I
believe the key is in the conclusion Judge Johnston
made on July 15, 1993, where she states:
The court should start with the assumption that,
absent issues regarding the child's physical, mental or
emotional safety, the continued involvement of both
parents in the child's life is the desired goal; this
involvement ideally will be of the same quality
post-separation as pre-separation. Joint custody,
post-separation, most nearly approximates the relationship
that existed while the parents resided together and
therefore is the most desirable custody arrangement,
post-separation.
The first thing that happens when you go into court is
that you get every second weekend and three hours on
Wednesday. Right away you are disrupting that child's
life. The child is used to having two parents. When
you go to court, the first thing the court does is
destroy that child's life by ripping half of their
family away from them.
Both parents need accommodation
for these children when they get out of court. When
you go into court and the judge says you give your paycheque
to her, the house, the kids and the car.... You
don't have accommodations, so how can you keep the
kid? You just gave everything to her. It's ridiculous,
and they're setting it up for a fall. It's been set up for
exactly that to happen. That must stop.
There must be a facilitator in place when access
denial is going on—not an assessor or a mediator, a
facilitator. At 7 p.m. on Wednesday when you're
supposed to see your kids and can't, you call somebody
up and your access is going to happen, because that
person is going to find out what the issues are right
then and there, not six weeks down the road when you
get a new judge who's going to adjourn it for another
six weeks and another $3,000 bill. I don't need that;
I need to see my kids at 7 p.m. on Wednesday.
Allegations must be dealt with swiftly and false
allegations must be punished. If you know going into a
court of law that you can lie through your teeth and
walk out of there with everything you want, you're
going to do it. It must be stopped.
All reports from any source—the police station, the
Children's Aid Society or schools—anything to do with
the children or the two parents and their dispute, must
be available upon request to the parents at any time.
I've got a document that cost me $100. Three pages for
a $100 document to go to court. I had to go to court
to get this. The only thing it says is that mom's
unreasonable in telling the cops to fuck off.
The division of property must happen immediately. When
you get a lawyer sitting on a $100,000 trust fund,
you're going to have a battle until there's $5,000 left
there. Get that money separated immediately. Then
there will be no fight over the money. If you have to
sell the house, then you have to sell the house. Split
the money right away.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Mr. Allen,
you're extremely over time.
Mr. Wayne Allen: Thank you very much.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): I'm assuming
that if you've given us a written brief, these
suggestions are in there.
• 1425
Ms. Gospodaric.
Ms. Dory Gospodaric (Co-President, Second Spouses
of Canada): Thank you.
My name is Dory Gospodaric and I'm co-president
of a focus group called Second Spouses of Canada.
I'm here to represent the thousands of women who are
in fact second spouses in Canada.
Second Spouses of Canada is not a federally funded
group. It's made up of women who have found themselves
in a situation that has horrified them. These women
have been shocked and disgusted at what they have come
to see as an epidemic—an epidemic of abuse.
I personally have seen the divorce issue from two
sides. I've been a single parent and I am a second
spouse. Let me correct that. Along with these second
spouses, I am not billed as a single mother. We may
be remarried, we may love our husbands dearly, but I
can assure you that our husbands do not bring any money to
the table. We are hardworking women and we support our
husbands. We support them emotionally and financially
while we witness their pain and devastation as we
watch them being denied their very own children.
We hear constantly about power and balance and abuse
and control. I am here to tell you that these are
alive and well, and I'll tell you why. It's an
interesting conundrum. Remember, as second spouses we
are not only women but mothers too. But look at what we
have. We have mothers fighting mothers, women against
women, and the cancer is spreading rapidly.
At second spouses, we enter into a process called
guilt by association. Now enter false allegations
made by one woman against another woman. Did you know
that second spouses, women, are regularly falsely
accused of being bad parents, of being drug addicts or
alcoholics, of having a major character flaw, of not
treating children properly, and of hiding money that
the other mother wants? Second spouses are subjected
to threats and harassment.
Remember, we as second spouses are also the same
mothers the courts have sanctified and sanctioned and
considered sacrosanct. Do you know how many of us are
hauled into court by other women? They want disclosure
of financial statements. They want proof of character.
They want proof of anything they feel they want proof
of. What's occurring with my members is common but
never discussed, yet we have three national,
federally funded female organizations that claim to
represent women. Do they? I've never heard them
address the issue of women being abused by other women.
I'm deeply disappointed with these federally funded
women's groups.
If it were men who were the abusers, you would know
exactly what to do, but how do we deal with this? We
have no model in the law to take care of this. We have
women's shelters, we have laws to protect women
against men, yet women and mothers have been silenced.
Did the three federally funded women's groups come
here to talk about this? Did the National Action
Committee on the Status of Women or the Women's Legal
Education and Action Fund or the National Association of
Women and the Law bring this to the table? Did they
tell you about the abuses perpetrated by women? Are
some women more equal than others? Yet these are
federally funded organizations, and you're supporting
the abusers.
These three federally funded women's organizations
claim to represent women. Which women? I guess only
certain women. I'm a woman and a mother and I don't
care what the gender is of my abuser. I want it to
stop, and I want to know what you're going to do about
this. Again, you're funding these women who abuse me.
Why are we not hearing about this? The system doesn't
protect mothers. The system protects only certain
mothers. Why is it that these three women's groups,
federally funded, are silent when there is a crisis?
This information, I find, has been suspiciously absent
by these three federally funded women's groups.
I wouldn't be here if they didn't represented women
like me, but there are tens of thousands of women like
me being abused. I am here to demand that our voices
be heard so that we can protect ourselves against other
women.
Just last week the Toronto Star carried an
article in the Ann Landers section called “Kids
Pawns After Divorce”. It was subtitled “Ex-Wife
Limits Girl's Contact with Her Father”. It was
written by a second spouse who herself had experienced
the pain of divorcing parents, and she was deeply
worried. It was another typical story where the
children hear from the mother just how awful their
father and the second spouse are. Of course, she just
brought the father back to court for more support money
or to cut his visitation privileges. But what I found
really frightening is that the children did not
“think that their beloved mother was doing anything
wrong.”
This ultimately led to everyone being in
counselling.
• 1430
The ex-spouses actually took parenting classes. The
second wife and her husband are seeing a marriage
counsellor, and the children are in family counselling.
Now two families are involved in this insanity. And do
you know what happened? The writer states that
co-parenting classes were a colossal waste of time for
the parents. Nothing changed. In fact, things got
worse.
So many mothers really don't care. Their ire is more
important. And Ann Landers' response was that it is
clear that the mother's refusal to cooperate is rooted
in her anger at the new wife for being happy with her
ex-husband. What a crime. She also hoped that the
father owned some oil wells to pay for all of this,
which is true.
As I said, I'm Dory Gospodaric. I represent the
unofficial second wives club. We're mad, we want to be
heard, and we want some funding, too. Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Next, from
Balance Beam, is Mr. Vorsteveld.
Mr. Tony Vorsteveld (Facilitator, Balance Beam):
Thank you for requesting me to appear. My name is Tony
Vorsteveld. I'm a custodial father, founder and
spokesperson for Balance Beam, a support group for
families experiencing divorce, and a member of Equal
Parenting of Canada.
My two sons are with me, and a member of Balance Beam,
Walter McCarthy. I've asked my sons to come along
because part of what I have to present they have had to
live through.
Last winter my sons' grandfather, Grandpa Sam, died
of cancer. I had met the man once. They had never met
him. When we learned of his death, he was already
cremated. The alienation happened over 40 years ago
during a custody dispute over my children's mother. It
was extremely successful. What we're beginning to
understand of parental alienation syndrome is only the
tip of the iceberg. Not only was the death of
Grandpa Sam a destruction of a relationship, so was
the relationship between my children and their
grandmother.
My children are angry and want accountability from the
grandmother. I, and we of Balance Beam, are angry and
want accountability from a system that allows this sort
of thing to go on. We must have rigorous
accountability of false allegations. This could be
legislated through Senator Anne Cools' Bill S-3. The
beauty of this bill is that I believe lawyers will hold
their clients accountable for what they bring to the
table. It's perfect. Please pass the bill.
Children are entitled to four things in life: food,
clothing, shelter, and the love of both parents.
Because of these four human entitlements, we must have
a presumption of joint guardianship, or shared
parenting, if you will. It takes a mother and a father
to properly raise a child. The feminist notion that
you don't need a man does not apply here.
Traditional psychology of late is beginning to learn
that emotional abuse is far more damaging than physical
abuse, and therefore deprivation of either is child abuse.
We must have identical enforcement of access and child
financial support.
My second issue is that of family violence. By that I
mean a child's physical abuse and spousal physical
abuse.
First, I'd like to quote from a book entitled Child
Abuse and Neglect: The Family and the Community by
Drs. Ray Helfer and Henry Kempe. Chapter 1
is authored by Dr. Brandt Steele. Some of you
many know him.
On page 8, Dr. Steele says:
Our own studies have indicated that both abusive men
and women have very similar attitudes towards children,
sharing the same patterns of child rearing and the same
concepts of how parents should behave. There is thus a
kind of collaboration between the parents, regardless
of which may be doing the actual abusing.
On page 14:
Those who have been maltreated in childhood have an
uncanny ability to find and to marry someone with a
similar background and similar ideas about child
rearing. Thus the abuse or neglect of offspring can be
an unconscious collusion or cooperation between the
parents, even though only one of them is the active agent.
Many fathers are alienated from their children because
they are alleged child abusers. Our custody dispute
cases verify that. What we don't see here, and I think
we've all heard it, is wait until your father gets
home.
I know a gentlemen who, upon returning home from work,
was instructed by his wife to beat one of his children,
the reason being that she couldn't do it hard enough.
During a custody dispute, this man was charged and
convicted of being a child abuser.
If our laws are to remain gender neutral, the fairer
thing to do would be to charge this mother with an
indictable offence. She did use her husband as a
weapon.
There's a twist in this story. That particular time
the father didn't discipline the child, and he was in
turn abused by his wife.
• 1435
Because research has determined that both mothers and
fathers abuse their children in relatively similar
amounts, what's in the best interests of the children is
for the abuse to stop, and not to be alienated with one of
the abusers, whether it's by the active agent or not.
If legislation is going to intervene in the lives of
Canadian women when they're separating, then we need to
legislate counselling and mediation for those
experiencing violence.
It has been said earlier here
that some will not go, and I say that is okay.
Resistance to counselling and mediation are cause to
have parental responsibilities restricted on a sliding
scale.
It is also the duality of child abuse that produces
spousal abusers in relatively similar amounts,
which is not to say that all those who
abuse their children go on to be spousal abusers.
However, it is fair to conclude that where there
is spousal abuse or child abuse, there is a history.
It has been brought to this committee's attention that
anger management programs for male spousal abusers is
not very successful.
This is true, and some focus needs
to be brought to the issue. A program widely
used in Canada originated in Duluth, Minnesota.
It is called the domestic assault intervention program.
For every five men that enrol, only one
successfully completes the program without any
lasting effects.
On the west coast we have similar programs, one of
which is spearheaded by Dr. Donald G. Dutton, a
renowned psychologist. He's worked with men in a
clinical setting for at least 15 years.
In his book The Batterer, he concludes that,
if anything, he has found a decrease in the number of
assaults, not in the number of assaulters. Dutton
made two discoveries, both of which are significant for
me and as keys to the solution.
On page 74, he says:
The clue to an earlier origin was that cyclical
assaultive men experienced the symptoms of post-traumatic
stress disorder (PTSD), the normal reaction anyone would have
to a highly disturbing situation such as an attack or a
natural disaster.
Curious.
On page 75, he said:
The batterers whom I researched scored
high on tests used to measure trauma symptoms such as
those Mike described. In fact, their psychological
profiles were surprisingly similar to other groups of
men, such as
Vietnam veterans, who had been diagnosed as PTSD.
At first, this was confusing to me. Common sense
dictates only victims suffer trauma symptoms—not
perpetrators. Were batterers also victims?
I say yes. It's documented that we have identical
roots by Steele. Dutton has diagnosed PTSD
in men.
And all academic two-sex research shows no statistical
difference when focusing on spousal abuse.
The limited data we have on self-defence does not
support the implementation of police policy either.
Dutton gives us one more clue on page 179:
Despite the male trappings of power, they experience
profound powerlessness.
Everything in Dutton—
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Mr.
Vorsteveld, your time is up. I wonder if you have
very specific recommendations.
Mr. Tony Vorsteveld: I'm just about finished.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Proceed,
please.
Mr. Tony Vorsteveld: We believe that if custody
and access are tied to abuse in the family, then the family
must be helped collectively, and for one more reason
other than those mentioned above at this point.
Dr. Don Keillor, past director of the Perth Huron
Centre for Youth and Children in Huron County, attended a
conference here in Toronto. The subject was why some
children in abusive households grow up to not act out
abusively.
The key was that a close family member such as a
grandmother, grandfather, aunt, or uncle intervened in
this person's life. This intervention is absolute.
They looked at these children who were not abusive.
They weren't looking to try to fix anything. That's
what they found.
Because of strong positive involvement,
family-mediated counselling must be family-oriented to
preserve the extended family.
They seem to have the greatest impact.
Continued physical violence, a lack of cooperation,
and a disregard for shared parenting would either mean
a total loss of parenting time or a decrease in
parenting time. The priority must always be the family,
as the family is the fabric of society.
If this committee will recommend child-centred or
family-oriented legislation, I can promise you that
when I go home I will do my part to decrease the
divorce rate.
Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you
very much.
We'll start with Senator Jessiman.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Was I correct in hearing
you that you are a custodial parent?
Mr. Tony Vorsteveld: Although I dislike the term,
yes.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Although you dislike
the term, you're the one who has the custody or has
access. You look after the children.
Mr. Tony Vorsteveld: I happened to win the battle.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Okay. Does the
non-custodial parent work?
Mr. Tony Vorsteveld: Yes.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Does she contribute in
accordance with the guidelines?
Mr. Tony Vorsteveld: Financially?
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Yes.
Mr. Tony Vorsteveld: No.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Have you asked her to?
Mr. Tony Vorsteveld: No.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Okay. But you know
that you have the right to.
• 1440
Mr. Tony Vorsteveld: Yes. I'm not concerned with
my rights.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: I'm sorry?
Mr. Tony Vorsteveld: I'm not concerned with my
rights to monetary funding.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: I see. That's the
difficulty, I guess, with men. When they take custody,
they assume the responsibility in every way,
which was the—
Mr. Tony Vorsteveld: It seems to be more difficult
for a custodial father to gain financial support
as compared to a mother,
so it just wasn't an issue for me.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Does the non-custodial
parent get access to the children?
Mr. Tony Vorsteveld: As much as either the
children or the mom want. There are no restrictions
there.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: I see. Is there an
order at all from the court?
Mr. Tony Vorsteveld: You're testing my memory
here. I have an order for my oldest son; for my youngest
son, no.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: I see. That's all.
Thank you.
Mr. Tony Vorsteveld: Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you.
Ms. Bennett.
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: Forgive me, I probably should
know the answer to this question, but at the moment, if
there's a false allegation of abuse, either child or
domestic, if that is disproven in terms of the
litigation or whatever, what happens now?
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: The problem is that it's never
disproven. It's very difficult. That's the catch-22.
It's not provable, but it really stays on the record as
something that happened. It's like where there's
smoke, there's fire,
so something must be happening.
That's the really bad part of that defamation of
character. It's really hard for it to ever go away.
It kind of stays there forever. There's just something a
little bit funny.
I think that's what we're talking about in
terms of abuse.
I could just as easily sit here today and say that I
really just kind of don't like one of you, and you kind
of looked at me wrong. I'm going to put it down in
an affidavit because I have a right to, right? I
figure that if the court is going to let me get away
with it, you try to justify and explain that you really
did not mean me any harm or that nothing bad happened.
That's what we're left with.
I'd really like to say that there have to be some
criteria. There have to be some very firm guidelines
for what enters the courtroom. I think that has to
be encoded.
I don't understand that, even in this democracy,
anything you ever want can go.
We're wasting valuable court time.
They're overloaded as it is.
Before anything comes to court, there has to be an
analysis of absolute proof that there's something
worth while. It should not just be like saying here it
is, we'll all spit it out. I can't believe courts have
not done that.
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: We're trying to figure out if
there is a way we can stay out of the court.
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: That's right. Don't let the
stuff enter without absolute proof.
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: But if we went to alternative
dispute resolution, maybe these sorts of allegations
would be less likely.
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: That's not so.
We've been through that, and I can speak on the part
of myself.
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: So once it's out there, it's
sort of a bad smell. There's nothing anybody can do to
get it back.
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: No.
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: I used to do a little bit of
work as a family doctor for the official guardian's
office in these sorts of allegations. Sometimes it
would just be that they would try to tell me there was a
rash. It was actually that they didn't like the new
wife's perfume, I think, or that the child smells
differently on return. You realize that it's a
very honest emotion, but it wasn't actually based
on fact.
I guess it's obvious that they used
to try to use family doctors like me to try to
sort out these things, but now, with decreased
resources, there just isn't a way of sorting these
allegations through.
Is that what you're saying?
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: You're right. So don't
let them come up.
We shouldn't be able to write
anything we want on a piece of paper at any time
because we feel like it today or because I don't like
my neighbour or I don't like the colour of your suit,
or you may really have not been nice to my child by
saying hello.
I can't put this down just because I feel like it.
There has to be more to it.
We've gone way overboard with what we think is right.
It's to the point that we've actually created
incentives, almost, condoning this. So incentives have
actually become part of the norm for this kind of
fraud.
You can put it down, and what a great high that is.
It's the ultimate high. If you can get away with it,
absolutely.
But it does do irreparable damage. You know that even
in a workplace, as soon as someone thinks you may
have done something wrong, it kind of stays there with
you. You never get away from it.
• 1445
Ms. Carolyn Bennett:
Obviously the children are very involved in
hearing these things.
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: Yes.
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: If the children actually know
it's not true, do they deny
it? Is there a place for the children to have a voice in this
and is it an effective voice in this situation?
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: No.
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: Could it be?
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: No, they don't have a voice
and I don't believe there is an effective place for
that voice. It's the very thing I heard the other lady
talk about—the parental alienation syndrome. I have
actually been witness to it in my home where these things
have come forward in my stepchildren, and they do
create their own scenarios. They actually have come up
with scenarios that absolutely never in their lifetimes
happened but they began to believe them.
Their mother in fact wanted over and over, through the dispute
process, to hire lawyers for these
children and has dragged them to court as well to
speak. We have declined to do that because we know they
will just say whatever they feel they have to say to
survive with their mother. So I don't think you
will get the truth from children. I think it's almost
impossible.
[Editor's Note: Applause from the audience]
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Please, no
applause. Mr. Mancini.
Mr. Peter Mancini: I have just a few questions for
Second Spouses of Canada. This may be a very stupid
question, but when I taught I used to say to my students
“If you don't ask something stupid, I can.”
We've
heard from you today and we've heard from Stepfamilies of
Canada, Ms. Grande. You made an interesting statement.
You said we're at the point now where there are
women fighting with women. You represent a number of women
and so does she.
Has there been any type of communication between your
groups and the groups you've been critical of
today? Is there no room for any kind of dialogue
there? I find it curious that I see two groups
representing women—and I'm not going to say who speaks
for the majority of women and who doesn't—at such
loggerheads, talking about children. I'm not excluding
men from this in saying we should all look at
the child as the centre of this, in the best interests of that
child. Is there no room for dialogue?
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: I'm going to be very blunt
because I think there are two types of women and maybe
more, but I'll talk about the two I know about.
Senator Anne Cools: There are more than two, I
think.
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: There are many more than two.
There are greedy women and there are women who are not
greedy. I'll just leave it at that as a very simple
statement and you can have offshoots from that. I'm
not really sure it's care from the one
group as much as the women seeing how much they
can get. That's what really divides us.
Mr. Peter Mancini: Okay. But I guess in terms of
these formal organizations there's no dialogue.
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: No, because, you see, it's very
difficult. When we come to them we look
very strange. I have had them actually say to
me, “Are you an idiot? You could get so much more,
Dory, if you went after your ex-husband so we
could continue to perpetuate the insanity in this
abuse.” Lawyers have also said to me “You're not
getting enough girl. Go for it.” I hear this all the
time.
I wondered if I was the only one who was absolutely
not greedy, but this is what's happening. There's an
awful lot of power out there and it has become
self-centred. It's become selfish. It's like
opening a bank, and if you're given any service for free
or money, there will never be enough. I'm talking about
self-responsibility here.
Mr. Peter Mancini: Okay. Let me just ask this one
other question, if I have time. If there is in fact
a possibility of dialogue between your organizations and
the National Action Committee on the Status of Women
and what have you, what's the answer here? How
do you deal with the problematic
situation you've presented us with?
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: I wanted to point out that
situation, because we keep talking about men who are
abusive to women. I just want to point out to you
that in fact it's become so ridiculous that we have
women against women and mothers against mothers.
That's what happens when you give a group that
much control. The abuse of control starts to happen.
We've seen that historically, we've seen that
politically, we've seen that everywhere. That's what's
happening and it's really getting crazy.
So we are being charged with the very same stuff
you're hearing, that men are being.... So you have
to start imagining that something is very strange here;
something is smelling very badly.
• 1450
Again, I don't understand. I want to make it simple. I
don't understand at the very first instance why we have
such an issue about these children. When people are
married they have children and they both are in
charge of the children. Our Divorce Act deals with the
two adults who are separating and ultimately divorcing. I
have not seen anywhere in there where there is a
statute to the fact that either parent has to divorce
the child, and that the child therefore becomes the
property of one person. I just don't get it. If we go
right back to the very beginning and ask ourselves why
indeed we are doing this, then perhaps we can easily
arrive at it any way you talk about it.
Mr. Peter Mancini: I would agree with you that
at the time of
divorce there is no divorce from the
children; that's a good way to put it. In some cases
parents can work that out. Surely the only time that
the state should intervene is when the parents
themselves cannot come to that agreement.
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: That's right. And when you
don't have an even playing field, when you have
one party who's going to get all of this and you have the other
party who is likely not to get very much, if any, of
that, why is anybody going to mediate it? You only
mediate when both have something to gain and something
to lose. If somebody's going to get everything, why the
heck would I mediate something away that I know I can
have? Am I going to be an idiot?
Mr. Peter Mancini: Okay, thank you.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Senator
Cohen.
Senator Erminie Cohen: My
colleague Mr. Mancini has covered most of it.
I just wanted to say to Dory that in view of all the
divorces that are taking place epidemically across the
country, I do feel that you have a very strong case
for government and its surplus dollars. We've
neglected the second spouse, and they're growing in
numbers. In order to be fair to the child,
this committee should take a very hard look at that
whole aspect of the second spouse and the support
vis-à-vis when they are starting to grant other
women's groups.... So I thank you for that.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Senator
DeWare.
Senator Mabel DeWare: Thank you very much.
I just want to summarize a little bit of what we've
heard today and then see where a few people can fill in
the spaces that perhaps we're missing.
First, it looks as if they would like the government to
provide legal aid fairly for everybody who needs it.
I hear there's some discrepancies there. Also,
custody would be very nice if we decided to use
the word “parenting” instead of “custody”,
and that would go a long
way in all of our thinking, I'm sure.
There should be mandatory information sessions, to
begin with. Now, this is if you have children and you're
on your way to a divorce. If you're going to divorce
you should have a parenting plan. What that parenting
plan will do is force couples to think seriously
about their responsibilities as parents even though it
may be a volatile situation. It will
make them think about what they have to do to
facilitate this divorce.
Then they have been telling us that judges
need to have special training. That point was very
well received in this room today. After divorce there
should probably be some ongoing mediation and a
facilitator who is available at all times.
Can I ask you to fill in the blanks for
me? What am I missing here? It's not that simple, I
realize that, but would it make life easier if these
things fell into place properly.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Mr.
Morrison, you go first.
Mr. Rick Morrison: I think you summed it up very
well. The hatred that fills the
room when you hear people talk tells you that the
system certainly isn't working.
In my case, I'll just
briefly say that my ex-wife and I did not end up in the
courtroom battlefield. We talked it over on the phone,
and although it was heated at times we never did hire
lawyers to get into the courtroom. We separated on our
own, we had it written up, and it actually has worked
out rather well. It doesn't have to be the way it is, but
you need some help to get it started on the right foot.
Once you get those emotions of hatred and greed and
everything else going, it's fairly hard to diffuse them. I
was very fortunate; my ex-wife was a good person. We're
on the right track, and you summed it up very well.
Senator Mabel DeWare: Thank you.
Mr. Wayne Allen: One of the things
you have to do is get on it immediately.
Six months down the road or a year down the road the
damage has already been done. It has to happen
right away.
• 1455
I've found that people are being alienated in six
months. If they don't see their kids right away, the
alienation process has already started.
As soon as there is a
denial of access it has to be curtailed right away.
As soon as you have the two parents
knowing that this access has to happen, it's going to
take away a lot of the problems.
Senator Mabel DeWare: How do we do that? How do
you enforce that quick meeting?
Mr. Wayne Allen: You have to be able to get back
in front of a judge right away. And the judge can make the
determination of whether somebody is being silly or
not, or if they are being vindictive. They can find out.
If your access starts at
7 p.m. Wednesday and you're not getting it, you
can phone somebody. If mom phones up and says
that dad's drunk, okay, it's not a problem.
Senator Mabel DeWare: So early intervention....
Mr. Wayne Allen: If there is an unreasonable
denial of access, you should be in court the next day,
because that next access is going to be
denied and denied. By the time you get to court six or
eight weeks later, the problem has just snowballed.
Senator Mabel DeWare: Does anyone else want to
speak to this?
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: I had a question.
What are judges going to be sensitively trained
to do?
Senator Mabel DeWare: It was suggested that they
be able to deal with family situations, with family
divorce, with custody and access and all the things
that go with it, and that they be very sensitive about the
issues. Some of them are not trained in that field
or they are not interested in that field, but they should be
specially trained in just exactly what to say. If
we don't come before the judges in time to have early
intervention, what's going to happen? They have to be
sensitive to those issues
and not say “Sorry, my court is filled; I can't see you
for four months.”
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: I'm not really
interested in hearing a judge say sensitively or
kindly, “I'm sorry, we know there is contempt, but you still
can't see your child. I'll apologize for it now
because I understand that's hard on you.” We have to
have actual enforcement. Why is that not happening?
Why are we protecting this custodial mother and
letting her get away with it? I don't understand that.
[Editor's Note: Applause from the audience]
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Before we go
on, I have something to ask. This not a town hall
meeting; it's not a popularity contest; we cannot
have applause in here.
Senator Mabel DeWare: I feel the suggestion also
was that the judge would have the
responsibility to definitely make a decision and a
court order at that time, quickly and efficiently.
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: Because it is the law.
Contempt of court is contempt of court. A court order
is the law. Is that correct?
Senator Mabel DeWare: That's right.
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: And why is it not enforced?
Senator Mabel DeWare: We don't know.
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: You see, that's the problem.
A voice: I could probably answer that.
Senator Mabel DeWare: That's what he's testifying.
It's the same as the grid we put together last
year on child support. Child support is supposed
to be there.
I said yesterday, and received quite an alarming
response, that if the father's or mother's situation,
whoever the non-custodial parent, is changed,
therefore the amount of support they pay should be
changed as well. If he loses his job, there's a
situation. I said, “You go before the judge and he's
going to make those...”, but they just laughed at me.
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: It doesn't happen
like that.
Senator Mabel DeWare: It's
supposed to happen, as I say, according to the law.
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: It happens for the money,
but when it comes to what really matters, the
children...I've never seen a child on a psychiatrist's
couch because he didn't have an extra rollerblade when
he was young. There will be a problem with
being denied...it's the death of a parent, and
it's a slow, long, lingering, cruel death. It's an
atrocity, and I don't understand.
So why do we have this in the law? Why don't we get
on it?
I'm telling my son this. He's really
confused, as are all other male children. He says. “Mom,
what's going to happen?” I say I'd
like to get the answer, because I'd like to know for
sure. If we have decided as a society and the law that
men absolutely don't count—you're the
sperm donor, you have to have that to make the baby,
but you don't count any more—then let's know this, let's
stop pussyfooting around. If we are coming back to
believe that we would like that father back because
it's important, and I believe that it is, then either
we're going to do something about it or we're not.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): I
know that others want to respond, but Senator Cools has
a question.
• 1500
Senator Anne Cools: The witnesses have raised, I
think, very, very important philosophical and moral
questions. I would especially like to thank Mrs.
Gospodaric for that.
The issues that especially you have raised have been
bedevilling a lot of us for quite some time now, which
is the silence or the fear of being silenced around
raising any issue that has to do with the possibility
that women may be just as violent as men, or that women
may be just as deceitful or evil any man.
What is this fear, this grip, this reluctance that
seems to hold so many people from coming to terms with
the fact that a woman can be just as treacherous, just
as evil, just as greedy, just as whatever as any?
As human beings, we are afflicted with human
imperfection and human altruism, just as human vices
are roughly shared between the genders. I know it is a
massive philosophical debate that is making its way
felt, and it has enormous moral overtones and
underpinnings.
I wonder, Mrs. Gospodaric, if you have wrapped your
mind around what this fear is that grips, because I
tell you, it is a dangerous business. I raise it
because the attempt to silence people is very profound.
Donna Laframboise, who writes about these very
issues, said a few weeks ago in my very presence that
raising these issues or talking about these issues is a
dangerous business. I wonder if you've wrapped your
mind around it.
Ms. Dory Gospodaric: I have, a great deal. There
is a fear. I guess it goes back to what women
considered—and this is the process going on—equality.
Briefly, I think that feminism was wrapped around
equality. Yet there's a real irony here, because in
order to have equality, you also have to take
responsibility.
So in order to take responsibility...and I've been
through this process. For instance, when I had my
child, when I was married, I never thought it
would be up to my husband to have to be responsible
financially or otherwise. It was great. We had the
child together.
If, at the end of the day, something were to happen,
assuming that there's a 50% divorce rate, I knew I was
going to have to be self-sufficient and raise this
child, however—with or without. That was my
responsibility.
But women today want this equality. They want to
whine and they want to complain and they want someone
still to take care of them. Ironically, at the same
time, they state that they want equality and freedom
from men. That's a complete contradiction of terms.
I think that politically it's been very incorrect to
slam women because they've been out there parading, and
it's not a nice thing to say, because we want everybody
to be happy. They've had a very, very loud voice, and
I think there's a tremendous fear of upsetting women.
I can't speak for every politician. I'm not sure that
all the votes should be wrapped around women, but that
seems to have become the case.
I have never felt for a moment that because I, as a
woman, have biologically been born with a uterus, that
somehow makes me superior. Unfortunately, it's the
only way we can reproduce children, but that doesn't
make me in any way better or superior.
I don't understand why it is that we are so frightened
of women and their voices, while at the same time
they're still looking to that man—be it the boss, be
it the neighbour, be it somebody else that they have to
blame—and we're buying it hook, line and sinker.
We're promoting it and condoning it and emphasizing it
by saying, “But okay, poor woman, you have those
children.” If it's not enough, she will say, “My
husband was terrible. He did nothing. He's providing
nothing”, and then we, as the government and society,
will say, “If you don't have enough, come to me, and
we'll give you more.”
Well, as long as you can keep getting away with it,
I'd holler and scream pretty darn loud too, because I'd
want it. It's a freebie. It will never stop, and you
will never satisfy them. I can promise you.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you.
Thank you all for coming. It's been most interesting
and I think very productive.
We'll adjourn for three minutes for our next group to
join us at the table. Thank you.
• 1505
• 1512
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): We will now come to
order, please.
We'll begin our third hour of this afternoon. We have
a panel of individuals; I see six. With us this
afternoon are Wendy Dennis, Cynthia
Marchildon, Mr. Lynch, and Mr. Ellis.
It's getting late in the day. I don't want to
limit what you say, but please be very brief.
We'll allow up to five minutes. I'll have to cut you
at five.
Mr. Patrick Ellis (Individual Presentation): Thank
you very much for having me here.
I'd like to start
by saying that when you're dealing with law, there's no
better approach to your legal problem than to deal
within the structure of supreme law of Canada, which is
the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
It is not uncommon to systematically go through the
yellow pages, call up 100 lawyers, and have 101 of them
tell you they don't know anything about the Charter of
Rights and Freedoms. In the back of “Martin's
Criminal Code you have the Charter of Rights and
Freedoms. Minus the annotations, there are 256 lines and
one line would be “citation”. There is absolutely
nothing in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms that
allow us, the province or the state, to have a women's
directorate, to have wife assault courts, to have
battered women's shelters.
• 1515
We have a problem with our
charter. It appears to me that Mr. Trudeau and Mr. Chrétien
architected a faulted law.
How do I come about this? The 1960 Canadian Bill of
Rights had a reference to the family that isn't in the
Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Other parts of
the Canadian Bill of Rights were taken apart and
put into sections 2 and 7 through 15 of the Charter of
Rights and Freedoms, 1982.
Under subsection 15(1) of the
charter everybody's equal before and
under the law and has equal benefit of the law. Subsection
15(2) allows the state to implement programs aimed
at the amelioration of conditions of disadvantaged
members of society. They included sex in there. You
can't have sex in there by virtue of the English
language, because the notwithstanding clause, section
28, says “Notwithstanding anything in this Charter”. The
rights referred to in it are guaranteed equally to male
and female persons, notwithstanding subsection 15(2), equal rights.
This is notwithstanding section 96 of the British North America
Act, 1867, that says when you appoint a judge to the bench, for
every male person appointed a female person has to be.
We don't have that, do we?
I would assume it's somewhere around 80-20. The test for
it would be section 1, the reasonable limitation clause.
That's not a reasonable limitation—55-45 maybe, either
way.
You have $60 million from the Ontario taxpayers
to fund women's groups. Forget about men, they're not
important.
Mr. Chrétien and Mr. Trudeau took out the family in
1982; however, there is a saving under the international
law. Fact sheet 15, International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights, article 23, section 1,
says:
1. The family is the natural and fundamental group unit
of society and is entitled to protection by society and
the State.
Section 4 states:
States Parties to the
present Covenant shall take appropriate steps to ensure
equality of rights and responsibility of spouses as to
marriage, during marriage and at its dissolution. In the
case of dissolution, provision shall be made for the
necessary protection of any children.
We don't
have family here any more. We've got division of the
sexes and we have polarization. It doesn't look
good.
In domestic violence situations the Police Services
Act of Ontario supersedes the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms. That's in writing, it's in this
document before divisional court, file 123/96. There's
a written statement from internal affairs, which is part
of the Attorney General's office, saying that, and I have
a wire tap. The second investigator on my case has
done the same thing.
I serve the Attorney General and the federal
Minister of Justice with
my notice of constitutional questions,
form 4F. The justice minister can't be bothered to
respond.
The Attorney General is opposing my constitutional
rights, and in domestic situations it's always the man's
fault. In this document, the police have
to charge the man; otherwise, the police officer will be
charged under the Police Services Act. When you're
dealing with domestic violence, maybe somebody should
be looking at section 233 of the Criminal Code,
infanticide, whereas a woman can be—don't get me wrong
here. It's a miracle, the miracle of birth, absolutely.
I don't think anybody in this room
would turn around and say it's an easy feat, blasé,
whatever. There's got to be cause and effect.
You see a woman who can bear a child and be absolutely
normal...to a woman who bears a child and commits murder.
That's not right. Let's take it out of criminal
courts. Let's put it into the psychiatric and the
psychological field.
We have 27,500 lawyers in the province of Ontario at
this time. We have more lawyers
than police officers. This is a system
built by and for the lawyers; it's been plunked there.
Wayne Allen he goes to court. If he wants something
done, he has to do it himself.
He goes to the lawyers, and he's asked,
“What's the bottom line on your financial statement?”
This is how it's going to go.
• 1520
I lost $42,000. My wife tried to murder me.
She ran me down with her truck.
I reported it to the police.
Not only did they throw me in jail, when I
had injuries...and
aside from the Zurich Insurance investigation, the
report I got back was wrought with fabricated evidence
and obstruction in justice. Can I get anywhere in
Canada? No way.
The Statutory Instruments Act—the duties imposed on
the Senate—
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Mr. Ellis,
your time is up. Could you summarize any
recommendations you might have?
Mr. Patrick Ellis: Yes. We have a Charter of
Rights and Freedoms. Use it or lose it.
Section 26: the question becomes, does a biological
parent have a constitutional right to the biological
child? Yes or no?
If it's yes, okay. If it's no,
you're raising children for the state.
If a biological parent has a constitutional right to
the biological child under section 26, the blanket
clause, under section 28 you have
equal rights. You take care of the
welfare moms, you take care of the gold diggers. Then
you get into the true meaning of the
family—commitment.
Things happen, I get married. Things happen, we split
up. Okay, fine. She can't stand me, I can't stand
her,
but there are two little people. Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you.
Mr. Lynch.
Mr. Trevor Lynch (Individual Presentation):
I really don't know what to say.
Let me start with an article I read, which was written by
Barbara Amiel. She talks about status law back in
feudal times: if you were born a prince, you did
well;
if you were born a peasant, you didn't do well.
Law was based on status, and from there we
moved toward contract law.
She talks about how now we're back in status law. In
today's model one is either a member of the preferred
gender of group A, the females, or group B, the males.
One is either a member of a formerly dispossessed group
benefiting from affirmative action and pay equity or a
group penalized by both.
One should look at the paradigm we're
operating under. I met a woman who had a baby, and I
found out under the law that men are fathers of
conception and women are mothers if they decide to have
a baby. If a mother decides she wants to abort the
baby because she doesn't want to support it, that's
done, and it's paid for by the government of Canada.
I had a child and I had no rights. My
daughter is five years old. I still have no rights. I
never went the legal route. I've been arrested twice
for harassment and domestic abuse, and the most
embarrassing and humiliating experience I've had was
reading the disclosure. Actually, I didn't know
harassment existed. We were arguing on the phone, by
the way.
I was treated like I was living in a third world
country. When I read the disclosure and saw the
ridiculous lies that were written, it really
hurt that I would be arrested for something like this.
Then I found out I would have to go to court and defend
myself and that I was
guilty until proven innocent. I was told
by men's groups, who hardly exist because they get no
support in this country.... That is the most bizarre
imbalance, and that people would ignore such a bizarre
imbalance is quite irrational.
I was arrested, and I went through the rubber stamp
process of signing a peace bond. I resisted it the
first time. The second time I signed. I asked for a
copy. The lawyers don't care. You might as well have
bureaucrats doing it. It would save me a lot of money.
I signed a peace bond. At the last minute, in what
was a
criminal harassment charge, a matrimonial issue was
thrown in without my consent. While I was standing
in front of the court, the peace bond was
changed at the last minute to include that it was
against the law for me to talk to my daughter.
A voice: That's typical. It happens all the time.
Mr. Trevor Lynch: I'll tell you something.
I spent four years doing
nothing but working and going
to this woman's place. I was
never allowed to go anywhere with my daughter unless I
was with the woman or I went to the
woman's place. All I
did for four years was work and go there. My daughter
knew she had a father.
We started arguing because I was never allowed to do
anything with my daughter. I watched the woman become
socialized by the Canadian legal system and your
institution to believe that sole custody was what
life's all about. I can't blame any woman or man for
becoming irrational and selfish and greedy if they're
taught that sole custody is the way the rules are,
because sole custody is a zero-sum game.
I can understand how any woman would be threatened.
It's a shock to be told the Government of
Canada owns your children and they can be
allocated according to some arbitrary decision by a
Indeed, if you're a man, that's a
system not on your side.
• 1525
I've seen this woman become more and more criminal
in her
behaviour. I can understand her motivation. I've
never gone to the lawyers.
The lawyers have always
told me...I go to lawyers. I know women's rights right
away. I've gone to lots of lawyers. I don't know
men's rights. They don't have any.
I've gone to
lawyers who tell me I have to take
the power away from her. What is the power? The power
is sole custody. The woman becomes socialized to think
that power is everything, and if you threaten that
power, they become defensive. After a while the
children are not important. The sole custody issue is
all that counts.
I've been cut off from my child's day care by a
day care worker, when there is no agreement saying anyone
has custody, because we've never gone to court. I
haven't been there for a year and half.
I was arrested and
signed a peace bond.
I have a friend who was
called every day by his daughter, who
was asking him to come
over, and this friend has gone over there every day when
it's against the law for him to talk to his daughter or
be around that woman. Now, that's risk.
This woman has learned that she can say
anything and I'll be arrested, and I've learned that
too. I know she can say anything at any time and
I'll be arrested.
My friend
goes there under those circumstances. My friend goes
there and talks to his daughter any time she snaps her
finger. My friend talks to his daughter about her
day care, but he can't tell his daughter why he can't go
there when he used to go there all the time.
The one
child who used to run and hug her father or mother all
the time was mine.
This woman is being taught this by your institutions.
I didn't want to pursue the legal route. I
didn't want her to
be socialized more in your institutions, because
they're
really corrupt.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Sir, your
time—
Mr. Trevor Lynch: How much time do I have left?
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): None.
Mr. Fox, please.
Mr. Walter Fox (Individual Presentation): Hi.
I'm a criminal lawyer. I've been in practice in
criminal law just over 30 years. I want to share with
you some observation from a criminal lawyer on the
family law process.
Family law, as I guess you all know, has a serious
and profound impact on the people who become involved
in it. The family law process decides who will own the
house, who will pay, who will receive money, and how
the children will be raised, including how they will be
educated and what religious training, if any, they will
receive.
The family law process also has a profound effect on
Canadians as a whole. There is no family in Canada
that is untouched by the family law process and the
attendant divorce industry.
As a criminal lawyer I deal with accused people who,
when they come before the court, have the protection of
the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the whole common
law. It is stunning to me that in the family law
process, the future relationship between parents
and children and grandparents is decided without even
minimal attention being paid to due process and
propriety.
In Toronto, which is what I know about,
family law matters had for years been decided on
interim motions, very often in a back room. The
parties are not even present. There is no transcript to
record the various positions taken by the parties and
the judicial officer or officers. We learn in history,
from the Star Chamber, that this kind of process
inevitably leads to abuses.
I speak as a lawyer, and given the way the family law
process functions today, our courts are the last place
to decide issues of custody and access.
Civil courts
generally have an internal regulation called costs. If
you come to court and lose an adjournment, you lose a
motion, or you lose a trial, in Canada you have to pay
costs. In a custody matter, where the issue is supposed
to be how much the custodial parent will get in order
to properly raise the offspring, how can we make that
parent, usually the mother, pay costs? In the absence
of costs, the anticipated custodial parent faces no
sanctions with respect to their conduct toward the
court or toward anybody.
• 1530
Perjury is
common, but how can we put the custodial parent in jail
for lying? As a result, the family law process
ricochets behind closed doors or even in open court
without a transcript and without any of the basic
sanctions our courts have traditionally used to control
the process.
A single court order ordinarily deals with both
maintenance and access, but maintenance is enforced with
jail and access is not enforced. Doesn't this send
different messages to both boys and girls about
equality and the law?
If I am correct in my view that the defective family
law process combines with a societal view that favours
mothers over fathers, our courts are not serving
us well in these matters.
I understand that the
committee is looking for assistance in
helping to solve
the custody and access problems that
appear to exist.
I'm not able to recommend any legislative changes to
the Divorce Act as that act already deals with: (1)
the duty of lawyers to consider reconciliation and to
recommend mediation; (2) the duty of
the court to consider any
possibility of reconciliation; (3) the duty of the
court on custody
to consider the best interests of the child;
and (4) the duty of the court on
access to consider maximum
contact with the non-custodial spouse. It's in there,
it's in the Divorce Act. The court has to consider
those things.
The Divorce Act as it stands is fine. However, it's a
little bit like the constitution of the former Soviet
Union: there's a vast difference in how it reads and
how it's applied.
I urge the committee to consider
ways of enforcing mothers and fathers and the family law
process to obey the ordinary rules of court as they
apply in all courts: not to lie and not to waste the
time of the court.
It must be apparent to this committee that the family law
process is seriously flawed. I urge the committee to
write a report that will not be ignored. You have to
say loud and clear what is really going on. We need
to have some hope of changing the family law
process so it helps our kids more than it helps
the divorce industry.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you,
Mr. Morrison.
Ms. Marchildon.
Ms. Cynthia Marchildon (Individual Presentation):
Let me begin by thanking the committee for
allowing me a chance to present my concerns in person.
Although I am not a public speaker, I requested this
opportunity to speak because of my first-hand
experiences with the existing laws of child custody and
child support.
I would like you to keep in mind that I am a mother of
two minor-age children and a stepmother of two adult
children, and because of these two roles I have seen
both sides of the issues I am addressing.
I would like to take this chance to expand a little on
the points I made in the written brief I submitted
to this committee several weeks ago.
First in the
area of child support for adult children, and more
specifically in the special extensive section that
applies to post-secondary education, I would like to
point out the double standards that exist and are
regularly enforced in the courts.
Divorced parents are not entitled to the same choices
in their parenting that non-divorced parents take for
granted. Divorced parents can be forced to pay the
post-secondary education costs of their adult children.
Unlike their non-divorced counterparts, the financial
obligations of the divorced parents to their children
do not end when their children reach the age of
majority.
The obligation that exists for a non-divorced parent
is a moral obligation, just as it is with a divorced
parent. However, I feel the assumption made in the law
is that divorced parents will not honour their moral
obligation unless forced to do so. This double
standard is clearly an unequal application of treatment
toward divorced and non-custodial parents in the
existing child support laws.
Second, adult children and custodial parents are
being encouraged to obtain a court order for support and
custody because of the unreasonable and extreme amounts
that are being awarded by judges. The existing laws
are accompanied by many suggested guidelines, and there
is a great deal of direction given to each judge
hearing these cases. These judges are free to make
whatever decisions they choose to. In theory they may
be accountable for their rulings, but in practice they
rarely answer for their actions.
Among other things, the guidelines direct these judges
to consider all pertinent facts and to accept all
current and applicable information. However, the
guidelines do not insist that judges do this. The
guidelines also suggest that if a judge varies from any
of the guidelines in his or her decisions or orders,
reasons should be listed as to why this was done.
Again they are free to account for their actions, and
they are free to say nothing.
The guidelines allow for
each case to be heard on its own merit.
• 1535
Though it is easy to see the reasoning behind the
discretion in legislation such as this, it is also
just as easy to see the problems. By allowing judges
to apply whatever guidelines they see fit in each
individual case, it must be recognized and, therefore,
addressed that these same judges can and may apply
their own agendas and prejudices also.
Although financial security for children is an
important goal in child support laws, it should not be
the only goal. Laws that encourage even one divorced
parent to take matters to court and either
intentionally or unintentionally pit a child against
the parent certainly do not have the best interest of
any child in mind. This is true whether the child is
2, 12 or 22.
Though I am certain it was never the intention of
these laws to put the needs of adult children above the
needs of minor-aged children, this is exactly what can
happen in the courts today. I receive child support
for my two minor-aged children. The payment from their
father is fair and was agreed upon without the use of
the court.
Last year, two weeks before my husband was to appear
in court on the issue of supporting his then-adult
daughter, I lost my job. The judge hearing my
husband's case refused to accept my sworn statement
that reveals our change in circumstance. The judge
hearing my husband's case refused to hear so many of
the pertinent facts in this case that the child support
I receive for my 14-year-old daughter and my 12-year-old
son indirectly goes to pay the support of my 21-year-old
adult stepdaughter.
The judge hearing this case also ruled that the mother
of that child has no financial obligation or
responsibility toward her daughter. He also ruled that
no part of the cost of post-secondary education was the
responsibility of the daughter. The judge did this
because he could do this, and his decision was upheld
in the appellate court.
There is absolutely no justification or explanation
that anyone can give to me that will make such a
perverted twisting of the laws right or fair.
The child support laws that exist now have the ability
to protect and secure the financial lifestyle of
children of divorce, and that is a wonderful thing, but
it must be recognized that they also have the ability,
when applied without care, to harm and destroy as many
families as they help.
Indirectly my children are victims of these laws.
Indirectly I'm a victim of these laws. My husband, who
was the custodial parent of this daughter from the time
she was 12 until she reached the age of majority, is a
victim of these laws.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you.
Now, Mrs. Dennis.
Ms. Wendy Dennis (Individual Presentation): I
testify before you today not as an expert or a member
of a special interest group but rather as a citizen,
divorced parent and second spouse, who has lived this
issue from both sides of the coin, and as a journalist
who was so disturbed by what I witnessed that I felt I
had a duty to write about it.
There are three areas I'd like to address today: my
concern with the feminist position on these issues,
parental alienation syndrome and my recommendations for
change.
Mr. Gallaway, you were quoted in the Globe and
Mail this morning as saying we need to have some
fairness put back in the system. With respect, sir, I
beg to differ. Suffering Canadians are looking for
life-saving cures here, not placebos.
What we desperately need is not to have some fairness
put back into the system but a new system altogether,
one that clearly declares a shared parenting
presumption. Then we need a brave new vision for how
to deal with divorce in this country. Finally, we need
our legislators to retool the Divorce Act to reflect
that vision.
First, I think it's vital to separate the gender
politics clouding this issue from the real issue of
what is truly best for our children. There have been
some groups who argue that what is best for women and
children is to maintain the status quo, that children
should continue to be parented by the parent who has
always done the most, that child support and access
should not be linked, that there cannot be a
presumption of joint custody because of domestic
violence.
• 1540
These groups profess to speak for women. I want to go
on the record today and make it very clear that these
groups do not in any way speak for me, nor do they, I
believe, speak for the majority of women in this
country.
I believe the majority of women in this
country, whether they are married, whether they are
divorced or whether they have acrimonious relationships
with their ex-spouses, recognize in their heart of
hearts how important it is for their children to
maintain an ongoing relationship with their fathers.
In “The Divorce from Hell”, the article I wrote for
Toronto Life magazine, I wrote about a man who in
every way was the new man feminists went to the
barricades for in the 1960s. He was a hands-on dad who
diapered, car-pooled, consoled and inspired his
children. He put them first and didn't just show up
for the fun stuff. And yet I cannot tell you how many
so-called feminists vilified him and called him
obstructive because he would not step aside and accept
the prescribed role for fathers in divorce, to send
money and get lost.
The same man they would have celebrated as an
ideal father to his children in marriage they attacked
for not walking away from them, except in a financial
sense, in divorce. That in my opinion is the central
bankruptcy of the feminist position on this issue.
Feminism, as I understand it, is about sexual
equality, not replacing one double standard with
another. That is why the feminist position offends me
as a woman, as a citizen, as a mother and as a human
being.
I would like to turn now to parental alienation
syndrome. From my research for the book I'm
writing on these issues, also called The Divorce
from Hell, which is to be published this September,
I can tell you this syndrome is a widespread but hugely
under-reported social problem.
First you have to recognize what it is, and then you
have to give it its proper name. The proper name for
parental alienation syndrome is child abuse, and we
have to deal with it in the same way we deal with other
forms of child abuse; we have to criminalize it.
The leading authority on this subject is Richard
Gardener, who explains in his book The Parental
Alienation Syndrome how the alienating parent
forces children to collude in demonizing the other
parent. Overwhelmingly, the perpetrators of this
particular form of child abuse are mothers, because
overwhelmingly mothers have custody. Even when PAS can
be proven, judges will almost never remove the child
from the alienating parent's care, because judges on
the whole still think children are better off with
their mothers, no matter what.
I saw how deeply entrenched this prejudice is when I
wrote The Divorce From Hell. The story was about
a father who wanted joint custody and a mother who
wanted full custody. The evidence showed that the
father was devoted and his wife perjured herself
in court, brought malicious assault allegations against
him on the advice of her divorce lawyer, falsely
accused him of stalking her, put call-screening on the
telephone so he and his parents could not contact
the children. She returned presents the children's
grandmother had sent them and had them write her poison
pen letters. She wantonly violated a court order and,
without warning, moved to another community without
leaving any forwarding address.
Despite his court order that said he had joint custody
and the children were supposed to be living with
him every other week, the father could not even find
out where his daughters were living. He has not seen
his daughters in five years and still cannot find
out where they are living.
Nevertheless, many readers perceived the mother to be
the victim and attacked the father. One woman wrote a
letter to Toronto Life condemning the magazine
for publishing this story because, “Having not
seen their father for two years, they have
most likely started to settle into a comfortable life.
Printing this article will no doubt set them back to
square one!”
To me, that letter was just like saying “How dare you
publish pictures of missing children on milk cartons,
on posters, or on the sides of buses? After all,
they've probably settled into a comfortable new life
with their abductors”.
• 1545
We need legislation with teeth to act as a deterrent
for parents who violate court orders and commit the
crimes of parental alienation and abduction. If you
revoke passports and drivers' licences from those who
default on their support obligations, you must also
revoke them from those who violate custody orders and
deny their children contact with the other parent. If
you introduce zero tolerance laws for domestic assault
and child abuse, you must do the same for parents
guilty of the crime of parental alienation. Parents
who violate court orders and move away should be
apprehended and charged.
Finally, here is my recommendation. Canada is
indisputably
lagging behind other jurisdictions in our custody
practices. You cannot simply take the Divorce Act,
tweak a word here and there and call it a day.
Whatever your vision, there are several elements I think
it should include.
First, I think you need to remove these issues from the
judicial system altogether. The adversarial system is
the worst possible place to put a family in turmoil.
Lawyers, by virtue of their background and training, are
the worst possible people to deal with family issues.
Even the lawyers who are ethical, who care passionately
about their clients and their children and are
sincerely dedicated to solving their problems in the
most expeditious manner, are powerless to help within a
system that consistently rewards the unscrupulous.
I envision some variation of the approaches used in
Washington state, Florida and Maine, which are based on
the presumption of shared parenting and require parents
to work out a parenting plan before they divorce. You
already know about these alternatives. They're
outlined in the custody and access public discussion
paper of March 1993.
I cannot stress enough how important it is that the
law be rewritten to incorporate a presumption of shared
parenting. If you make no other recommendation, I urge
you to ensure that both parents will be expected to
have an involved role in their children's lives, period,
full stop. We have to get rid of this terrible idea,
once and for all, that when people divorce we must pick
one parent over the other.
We also have to think of the idea of child
support in a much broader way. Is it only financial
support, or does it involve supporting children
emotionally?
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): You're a
little over time.
Ms. Wendy Dennis: Okay. I guess I would just say,
to finish up that point, children can cope far more
easily with a lower standard of living than with losing
a parent, and I think we need to punish parents who
deny them that kind of support as well.
In the end, you
cannot legislate people to be good parents but you can
protect those who want to be. You can tell those who
don't want that, if they fail to live up to the
standards we, as a society, wish to set for the
parenting of our children, they will suffer
consequences. We look to you for leadership and a new
vision.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you.
We'll begin with Senator Jessiman.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: I'd like to start
with you because you were last and you talked of
something I know is very popular, certainly in
California, which was the first state to create a legal
presumption in favour of joint custody. It's kind
of gotten away from that, do you know that?
Ms. Wendy Dennis: I'm not necessarily suggesting a
legal presumption of joint custody. I am suggesting a
presumption of shared parenting, which is the notion
that both parents will have an active and involved
role. It will start from that basis, and whatever
parenting plan is worked out within the context of that
is the way to go.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Perhaps you could
expand on that a little and apply it to
the guidelines we're all bound by
now. If we do have shared parenting, how do you see it
working?
Ms. Wendy Dennis: Okay.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: As I said earlier,
some think it should be substantially equal time. What
do you say is shared parenting? At some state I said
one-third of the time could be shared if you worked out
overnight.
Ms. Wendy Dennis: I'm a parent who
has a joint custody arrangement with my ex-husband,
notwithstanding the fact that I have had an ongoing
acrimonious relationship with him for about 14 years,
including litigation, which is still ongoing.
Nevertheless, our daughter, who is now 18—and we
separated when she was 4—went back and forth between
our two households on a weekly basis for a number of
years quite happily. She flourished, and we changed that
arrangement only when she became 13 or 14 and decided
herself she wanted to alter it.
• 1550
So I've heard many arguments. The court right now
takes the view that you cannot have joint custody in an
acrimonious situation because it can't possibly work. I
don't necessarily agree with that, because I think it
can.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: So you're saying
acrimonious only as between yourself and your husband,
but not as far as the custody of the child is
concerned. The acrimony wasn't about custody?
Ms. Wendy Dennis: No, it was never about custody.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Okay, go ahead.
Ms. Wendy Dennis: In terms of whether it should be
half-time, third-time or three days a week, I think
that's something that has to be worked out in the
context of this process you set in place as soon
as people divorce. You have both parents there and
the parent coordinator, and you get them to work out
a parenting plan.
I don't think you can legislate that it has to be
this or it has to be that. I think parents need to
have some autonomy in deciding what is best for
their children, so I can't give you a perfect
answer there.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: But under the law
now, if you worked out a parenting arrangement and the
man—80% or 90% of the time the man is the
non-custodial parent—has 39% of the parenting, and the
custodial mother has the 61%, they would not take into
account both incomes under those circumstances. But if
it went to 40%, they would. Some say it should go
to 50%. What's fair? We thought 30% and we were
arguing—
Ms. Wendy Dennis: What's fair is 50%.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: At 50% pay and 50%
custody—50% or what, though?
Ms. Wendy Dennis: If children are living an equal
amount of time in each household their household
expenses will be the same, and then you only have to
deal with their extraordinary expenses—their
activities and so forth—which again can be paid on a
proportionate basis according to their respective
incomes.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: But you don't take
into account respective incomes.
Ms. Wendy Dennis: I know that we have the
guidelines and that they only look at the payer—
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Yes, it makes it
very complicated and difficult.
One other thing about access, and it nothing to do
with dollars—
Ms. Wendy Dennis: I hope, by the way, that you
will get rid of that word. It's an ugly word. All
those words are ugly.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: All right.
You know that for non-payment of maintenance, the
non-custodial parent's passport and driver's licence
can be taken away. We had a witness here this morning
who said there was a contempt of court, I don't know
how many times, before his wife was actually put in
contempt of court and put in jail. Before you did that,
wouldn't it be reasonable that the same penalty be
applied to a custodial parent who refuses to give
access? Take her driver's licence and passport away
before they put her in jail. Would you agree with
that?
Ms. Wendy Dennis: As I mentioned, if you're going
to do it on one side, you absolutely have to do it on
the other. I don't think anyone thinks jail is a good
alternative.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: I'm not suggesting
that, but at the moment there's no penalty for not
giving up access.
Ms. Wendy Dennis: Right, there's no penalty.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: So you'd agree that
it should be equal.
Ms. Wendy Dennis: I would. And I would add that
what we know from the social science research is that
when you allow fathers—it's almost overwhelmingly
fathers who have no contact with their kids, or who are
the non-custodial parents—to have contact with their
children, you don't have the same kinds of problems
with non-payment of support.
That only stands to reason, when they're allowed to be
actively involved in their children's lives. We do not
have a problem in this country of fathers refusing to
support their children within marriage. What happens?
Do they suddenly become swinish deadbeats? I don't
think so. I think there's another reason for this, and
we have to get to the crux of that reason.
The social science research is telling us that fathers
are longing for that contact with their children. When
you turn them into uncle dads who only gets to see
their kids on alternate weekends, and they come back
into their lives—they sort of parachute back in very
occasionally—the pain of losing that daily involvement
with them is so great, and their children suddenly start to
become strangers to them, and they cannot bear it, so they
start to drift away and move into second families and
try to make a new beginning for themselves. So it's
understandable in that context.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you, Senator.
Mr. Mancini.
• 1555
Mr. Peter Mancini: I have a couple of questions.
I'll address this to Mr. Fox, but I would invite
comment otherwise.
I think we're kind of narrowing this discussion to the
enforcement issue. There are some other good ideas
here about joint custody or shared parenting, but the
complicating factor in this is the child. I appreciate
what you're saying as a criminal lawyer—I've practised
criminal law and civil law—and there are costs. You
used that as a good illustration to say that if one
party consistently comes to court or refuses to be
cooperative or to abide by the rules, in civil
situations we have costs. We have contempt of court,
where somebody can be fined or put in jail.
But at the end of the day the complicating factor is
the third party, who is the child. If we order costs
against the mother, for example, or we put the mother
in jail.... I don't think anybody is going to deny
that children bond. Even with the worst parents, there
are bonds there. So even a mother who practised
parental alienation, for example—if we put the mother
in jail or the father in jail, if we apply costs to the
father or mother, at the end of the day we're taking
money out of the mouth of the child, we're depriving
the child of access to a parent that they care for.
So on the issue of enforcement, isn't that the
complicating factor? I don't have the answer, and
that's why I'm asking. Is there anything that you can
think of? Maybe we could put the money in a trust fund
for the child. I don't know, but—
Mr. Walter Fox: One thing we can do is bring
this out of the back room and put everything on a
transcript.
Senator Anne Cools: That's right.
Mr. Walter Fox: You can imagine what these
committee hearings or the House of Commons would turn
into if there weren't Hansard. So we have these
problems and they're difficult and intractable. You
know what happens then. The judge brings everybody,
including the lawyers, into the back room. The judge
starts to make outrageous and bizarre threats to one
side or the other—usually to the father. Then the
lawyer says that if you don't agree with what the
mother is offering, the judge says you'll be beheaded.
We can't figure out what is really going on as
long as this happens in a back room, or even in open
court, when the positions aren't transcribed. I don't
know if that is going to solve the problem—there are
all kinds of layers to this that must be apparent to
this committee—but that's certainly a beginning.
As criminal lawyers, we do plea bargaining, right?
We go into the judge's chambers, we meet and some
determination is made. But then we come back into
court and the defence says, “This is my position, which I
put to Your Honour in the back room”, and the prosecutor
says, “This is my position.” Then the judge says, “I heard
both of you back there and this is what I'm deciding.”
Sometimes it is what both have offered, sometimes what
the prosecution asked for. and sometimes what the
defence asked for, but it's on the record, open and
clear.
The clearest example is the Karla Homolka case in
Ontario, where she got what some people are calling a
sweetheart deal or a deal with the devil. I don't want
to go into that issue, but whatever was determined was
determined in open court. Even though it was sealed,
sometime later we could see the whole story.
We don't get that in family law, and personally, after
going through the process, as a criminal lawyer I was
astounded. My lawyer comes out and says, “The judge says
you're going to have to support that child until she's
30. You have it, so you'd better settle.” You can
imagine what I told my lawyer to tell the judge.
Mr. Peter Mancini: I can imagine.
Some hon. members: Oh, oh.
Mr. Peter Mancini: My second question is really an
observation. It kind of came to me when another
witness, Mrs. Grande, was here, but I'm going to ask
you to comment on it. You've talked a little bit about
the issue of money, and we keep getting into that at
some point.
Sadly, there is no less acrimony in situations where
there is no money. I've practised poverty law as well,
and in situations where the father has no income except
for minimal, and the mother has no income except for
minimal, there is still acrimony. It's not tied to
tables or to support, because there's just no money to
go around. I don't know if that offers us an
illustration.
I've heard some people say that part of this is tied
to the fact that the mother may be looking for money
and so is seeking custody or denying access, or the
father is not paying or what have you.
But even in
situations where there isn't money—and I wonder if the
panellists have any observations on this—is
there a difference between people who find themselves
in poverty and those who do not? Are there different
problems? Am I clear on that?
• 1600
Ms. Wendy Dennis: I think you're clear on that.
There are two separate things in what you're saying.
The acrimony surrounding a divorce can take many forms
and can be there for many reasons, but in the judicial
system that we have now, it's very easy to use the
children to trade for dollars—
Mr. Peter Mancini: My point is that happens even
when there's not money. We're not trading the children
for dollars. We're putting the children in a power
situation.
Ms. Wendy Dennis: Yes.
Mr. Peter Mancini: Access in and of itself
becomes almost a power.
Ms. Wendy Dennis: That gets back to something I
was saying about the way in which we have to look at
support. If we look at support not just in a financial
sense but as emotional support as well as financial
support—you were asking earlier whether we really want
to take money out of the mouths of babes and put moms
in jail or whatever. But do we also want to give
children the message that you can get away with murder,
there's no accountability and the system is rigged?
So I definitely see it as a two-sided issue.
Mr. Peter Mancini: Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you.
Senator Cools.
Senator Anne Cools: Thank you, Chairman.
Once again, I'd like to thank the witnesses for being
thoughtful.
I have a technical question and then I want to put a
question to Ms. Dennis and Mr. Fox. The first witness
made a reference to section 233 of the Criminal Code.
I believe the section covers infanticide. Perhaps the
witness could tell the committee what that section of
the Criminal Code says.
Mr. Patrick Ellis: It says:
A female person commits “infanticide” when by a wilful
act or omission she causes
Senator Anne Cools: Only “she”?
Mr. Patrick Ellis: That's right.
Senator Anne Cools: It cannot be a “he”?
Mr. Patrick Ellis: Section 28 applies. That's for
a newly born child. It reads:
if at the time of the act or omission she is not
fully recovered from the effects of giving birth to the
child and by reason thereof or of the effect of
lactation consequent to the birth of the child her
mind is then disturbed.
The corollary of that is the defence.
Senator Anne Cools: Of course. And we know about
the role that plays, so we have diminishing
responsibility. Thank you for that.
My second question is to you, Ms. Dennis, and I thank
you for what I thought was very eloquent statement
about so-called radical feminism, biological
pre-eminence. I would like to thank you for describing the
moral and intellectual bankruptcy of so-called radical
feminist ideology.
I also thank you for bringing forward what I
understood you to say, which is that any ideological
assertion that women can do no wrong is an invitation
to certain women doing wrong. I was very struck.
Obviously you've given this a lot of thought and
you've been doing a lot of research. I was struck by
the attentive way that some of you writers have of
articulating these issues. So I thank you for that.
The whole phenomenon of the reward of unscrupulous
behaviour....
My question to you is that somewhere and at some point
in time this ideology found a resting place and a
breathing place in family law, in family court and in
the related judicial proceedings. I know that you're
writing and researching this extensively, but do you
have any idea or thoughts around how and why this
ideology was able to take such firm hold on this
particular area of the law?
Whoever wants to, go ahead.
• 1605
Mr. Walter Fox: I have something to say about that.
Senator Anne Cools: I'm interested in what I
would have to call the corruption of legal concepts.
Mr. Walter Fox: My concern is that feminism,
as it has been presented to us and the way it's playing
itself out—I'm not so concerned with the content of
the feminism as I am with the structure.
The first thing that happens is that thought and free
speech go out the window. The second thing is that it
gets into the court in the area of law that is most
significant to it, which is family law, as we now know.
That's feminism.
What if it were fascism? What if it were communism?
What if it were any “ism” that would ultimately
dehumanize and demonize any portion of our population?
To me, feminism unfortunately has come to take on the
same kind of structure and shape that McCarthyism took.
The print media has an influence in the courts, and it
will seek some area in the courts to establish itself.
The current form of feminism is really a replay or a
repetition of the side that lost the Second World War.
We're sort of refighting that ideology in a different
form.
I don't want to equate feminism with Nazism—obviously
it's more palatable—but when feminism goes, that
structure, that way of approaching things, those ideas,
that kind of ideological construct, God knows what it
will be filled with. It's that approach to things that we
have to attack, not the content itself.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Ms. Dennis,
did you want to say something?
Ms. Wendy Dennis: I'm old enough to remember when
I was a volunteer for a rape crisis centre in Toronto.
I went out on Sunday mornings and gave talks to the
police, and they would poke each other in the ribs and
make rape jokes. So I know how far we've had to travel
in terms of changing attitudes, and I'm astounded at
the distance we have travelled. In fact, I think we've
travelled way too far. In part that's what I'm here to
talk about today—that the pendulum has swung so far
the other way.
I think it's pervasive in the media. In terms of my
own personal experience, my spouse was falsely charged
with domestic assault. At this moment in our culture,
when a woman says “That man hit me”, that notion is sold.
You don't need evidence. That's just wrong, and that
poor attitude is what's permeating our family law
system at the moment.
In principle, we're supposed to have equality. I went
into that system thinking that our family laws had been
reformed to reflect notions of equity and fairness, but
when I got in there I said, what is going on here? This
isn't about equity or fairness, it is about tactics and
establishing a status quo and lionizing the mother in
terms of custody.
It's not about equity, it's about what the
mother needs to mother the children. That's the thrust
of the process, not what do these two parents or
what do these children need? It's what does the mother
need? Does she need money? Let's throw some money at
her.
When you get into that system, the assumption isn't
to look at the evidence and decide; it's that the guy is
probably lying, so we'll freeze the status quo and we
won't disturb the mother and children's standard of
living until we know how much more money the father has
to pay. That's basically they way it operates.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you.
Senator DeWare.
Senator Mabel DeWare: I just want to make an
observation.
I think the time has come to be very cautious of not
recommending or putting laws in place that create undue
hardships in this country, because that's what I'm
hearing today from Cynthia and all of you and from many
other witnesses this week. We have to find some
fairness in the system.
The other thing is we have to definitely
build a level playing field so that the law is fair somehow to
everyone. When people are going bankrupt, that's
not a level playing field. If you're bankrupt
and you have no money and you're on
welfare, what can you do for your children or yourself
under those conditions?
• 1610
That's where we have
to really seriously come from, a level playing field
and fairness for everyone. Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Dr. Bennett,
you can have the final question, and I must
say we're running late.
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: I'm just hoping that after
these proceedings feminism isn't seen as a swear
word. In Wendy's excellent
description of an intolerable situation, we have to
make sure that it is the radical feminists who are
being described. The feminists I
know want equity, they want an equal playing field,
inclusivity, and they don't like hierarchical
structures. They are much happier in horizontal
structures where power is balanced.
I would hope that all the feminists whom
I see...and I would say that most of us in this room
wouldn't tolerate the past. We would want what's best
for the kids, and what's best for the kids is
getting to see those two parents who have
the responsibility and love for them.
Again, what we keep hearing at the committee is
that the only person with rights is the kid, who has rights
to see both parents. Everybody else has the responsibility
in this argument. I would hate to
leave the afternoon thinking that all feminists have
horns and a tail.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank
you for dispelling that myth.
I'm sorry, but we're
really out of time. It seems that this committee
becomes more invigorated as the day goes on, and that's
because of you. I want to thank you for coming. We'll
adjourn for about three minutes. Thank you.
• 1615
• 1619
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): We have
with us, at our final panel of the day,
Michael Cochrane. Welcome, Mr.
Cochrane. We also have Greg Kershaw,
Mr. Gal, and Mr. Meier. You see I'm going to the
official list here now.
A voice: A napkin.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): I'm
missing two names.
Mr. Frank Heutehaus (Individual Presentation): I'm
Mr. Heutehaus.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway):
We'll start with Mr.
Cochrane.
• 1620
Mr. Michael Cochrane (Individual
Presentation): Thank you very
much. It was quite an honour to be invited to make a
presentation, although I have to admit my blood started
to boil listening to the last few presenters. If you
want a different view of things, you're going to get
it in my five minutes.
My background has been handed out on a biographical
sheet. I just want to underscore for you that in my 18
years as a lawyer a lot of it was spent representing
people in divorce cases. I acted as policy adviser to
Ian Scott when Ontario passed its Family Law Act,
when we did the Support and Custody Orders
Enforcement Act, when
we did the amendments to the Children's Law Reform Act
on access enforcement.
I was the chair of the Attorney General's Advisory
Committee on Mediation in Family Law. I was Ontario's
representative to the Uniform Law Conference on family
law. I'm a member of the Federal-Provincial-Territorial
Family Law Comittee.
I've seen and heard everything there is to say about
family law in the last 18 years. It seems to get worse
every time there's a committee hearing like this,
because some of these presentations really bring out
the worst in people. Having to listen to that
frankly lunatic discussion about feminism is
tough, because really what we should be sitting here
talking about, and what I would urge you to zero in on,
is the fact that there are problems in our
family law system.
The good news is that they can be fixed. It does not
involve any kind of political revolution. It's not
about ideology. It's about a family law system
that is tired, that was designed several decades ago to
deal with a certain kind of family problem. It needs
to be updated and pulled into the 21st century to
quote, I think, the senator from her appearance on
Jane Hawtin Live. What we're really trying to
do is modernize the family law system.
The rhetoric that gets thrown around is always a bit
of a jolt for me, because particular passions seem to be
disturbed. Great passion is thrown in supposedly for
the defence of the children who are caught up in this
divorce exercise in Canada. For some reason, once
the discussion begins, the children's emphasis tends to
fall off the table and we go into these political
discussions such as we had to suffer a few minutes ago
around feminism.
The focus should be left on the kids and on the adults
who get their hearts broken. They get pulled through a
wringer unnecessarily because of the system we
have designed.
As a lawyer representing clients, I've
had virtually every kind of client you can name. I've
acted for husbands, wives, and grandparents getting custody
of their grandchildren. I've acted against Children's
Aid Societies; I've acted for them. I was an official
guardian lawyer in Ontario representing children in
divorce processes. I've fought everybody in the family
law system, and the last fight I feel I want
to engage in is fighting the design of the system that we're
stuck with right now.
So my comments don't come carrying any brief for the
women's movement, the fathers' movement, the
grandparents' movement, the feminists' movement.
I'm just going to tell you what I know, based
on 18 years of having seen this from virtually every
possible angle, including teaching it at law school.
That focus brings you to only one place, really, and
that is to people who are dragged into this system, often
unwillingly. These are the men and the women and the
kids. These people are probably the worst possible
consumers of legal services in the country. These are
people who, if you ask them if they want their house
painted, get five quotes, challenge the
painter on the quality of the paint, ask them to
come back, and then they think about it for a week.
They go into a lawyer's office, though, when they're in
a custody access dispute or a divorce situation, they
hand over a blank cheque to someone they've never met
before, and off they go on this merry ride through a
justice system that drains their bank account. That
moment for Canadians, as consumers in our justice
system, is a real disgrace. We send people into that
justice system ill-equipped to deal with what they're
going to face.
• 1625
I have great respect for the work you as committee
members are trying to do here. You've certainly bitten
off a big challenge, because I've sat on that side as an
adviser to the Attorney General when we did the Family
Law Act, and we were vilified for years after,
personally and as professionals, for even opening this
discussion. It's a Pandora's box. You've listened
to it. That's what you're inviting yourselves to be
subjected to when you go into this particular field.
What I did for my clients and the people I gave advice
to was I sat down a few years ago and I wrote the
inside story—the secrets, everything you need to know
about family law—so they would not be “hosed”,
taken advantage of, exploited in the system.
There's a pile of books over there for committee
members. I understand I can't simply hand them to you
because I don't have French versions of them available.
There's an English version of a book called
Surviving Your Divorce. There are over 15,000
copies in circulation in Canada. It's a best-seller.
I'm not here to plug the book, but afterwards I did one
for kids entitled, Surviving Your Parents'
Divorce, so
that kids would know what they were in for and what
their parents were going through.
The reason I did that was to tell people who were in
the system, and I would now like to tell you, to smarten
up as consumers. Family law is not rocket science; it
is very common sense. We all live it. We don't all
live securities transactions and commercial law deals.
We all live this stuff. We all bring our inherent
common sense to the problems.
Unfortunately, in a family law situation
when many people come into the system their common
sense departs them because they're so heartbroken,
they're so embarrassed, humiliated, in shock. It's a
phenomenon in family law cases that usually one spouse
is way ahead of the other one. One of them is ready to
move out and the other one doesn't even recognize that
there's a problem in the marriage. So you're dealing
with people who are wounded when they are
confronted with this decision, and it's akin to
asking them to go out and plan a funeral.
They are weakened consumers. The best thing we
can do is to put in their hands a lot of information,
and you can do this by way of legal
amendments and you can do it by way of some other
things. It would say to them that when they sit down in the
lawyer's office, and they inevitably will have to, they
would make
sure they understand the big six. These include
their entitlement
to the divorce, the custody issues, the access issues,
the support issues, and the property division issues.
The sixth one is what I always tell people is the other
issue, because every family has some other issue that
they have to deal with.
It might be the grandparents. It might be a special
aspect of their break-up; perhaps a move is involved.
Perhaps it's domestic violence, which is certainly a
huge factor in a lot of cases.
Those are the big six
things. As they sit down in
front of a lawyer there isn't any reason why they
wouldn't know what the choices are that they face in
the legal system. They direct that lawyer to do what
is best for them and their children, rather than sitting
and listening to a lawyer tell them what is best for them.
The point of the book and the point of my
presentation today is that we have to give people, the
consumers of these legal services, a lot more credit.
These people are a lot smarter than we give them
credit for. If we put the information in their hands
and give them the right set of choices, they will
perform and exceed our expectations.
I know I'm probably going to run out of
time, so thank you.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): You're out of
time. Thank you.
Mr. Kershaw.
Mr. Greg Kershaw (Individual Presentation): I'd like
to thank the committee for having me here
today. I'm a
former feminist. I am a former leader in the
fathers' rights movement. I'm a non-custodial father
and I'm a stay-at-home dad.
So I'm seen the issues from custody and access on all sides.
• 1630
I'm here to tell you that the current system of
custody and access is unfair to women. I'm going to
read a quote here. I might get the committee members
to think where this quote may have come from. It says:
WE REJECT the current assumptions that a man must carry
the sole burden of supporting himself, his wife, and
family, and that a woman is automatically entitled to
lifelong support by a man upon her marriage, or that
marriage, home and family are primarily woman's world
and responsibility—hers, to dominate—his to support.
We believe a true partnership between the sexes demands a
different concept of marriage, an equitable sharing of
the responsibilities of home and children and of the
economic burdens of their support. We believe that
proper recognition should be given to the economic and social
value of homemaking and child-care. To these ends, we
will seek to open a reexamination of laws and mores
governing marriage and divorce, for we believe that the
current state of “half-equity” between the sexes
discriminates against both men and women, and is the
cause of much unnecessary hostility between the sexes.
Any idea where this statement came from? This
statement was written 32 years ago by a newly formed
group called the National Organization for Women. This
document they put together talks about all these
issues, and I can leave a copy for the committee for
translation. What's interesting about the document is
that none of the issues has changed in 32 years.
The women's position, the radical feminist groups
position has changed.
When there was a discussion with the
Federal-Provincial-Territorial
Family Law Committee on child custody, access and support, they
put together some documentation for
Status of Women Canada. This is the only document
currently on file from that committee. Here's the new
position. It says:
Divorce laws modelled on an idealized notion of shared
parenting, based on an atypical, socio-economic,
ethnocentric vision of the family, will only exacerbate
existing systemic
biases against women, to their detriment and their
children's.
Things have changed a little bit.
As I was preparing for this presentation I wanted to
look at things a little differently from most
people. I have been reading the newspaper quite a lot
recently and I found something quite interesting. They
are just starting to get the data
out on the latest census. Apparently, when you
include women's unpaid work,
women now only now 52¢ on the dollar for every
dollar a man earns. Why is that? Because women get
stuck with the kids. That's what we do.
I was reading another article. Apparently
there's a big problem right now in the Canadian
Forces; we have a shortage of women. The Canadian
Forces is an old volunteer organization so they're
starting a special affirmative action program.
They're going to spend at least $1.5 million just on
advertising to get the women to come out. It hasn't
been working. Why? Because women get stuck with
the children.
In Ontario, apparently, we have a shortage of female
judges. We have an affirmative action program.
They're trying to make it more palatable for women to
become judges. The problem they're having is women are
not applying. Why are women not applying7 Because
women get stuck with the children.
It's a real problem. Apparently, 55% of
university students
are women. Why bother giving them the
education, because when they're done we say, “You've
come a long way, baby; here's your degree, and you go
home and do the diapers.” You're going to have a lot
of very angry women who graduate and get stuck with
the children.
I have a story. I do a lot of counselling in the
divorce area. I was counselling one lady, and
she's a winner. She decided she wanted to divorce. She
talked to her lawyer. Her lawyer said here's
how we can do it. You're going to check yourself into a battered
women's shelter and you're going to accuse your husband
of abusing you and the children. She did that. She
went through this. Basically, there was a restraining
order to remove him from the house; he was apparently
psychologically abusing her. Children's Aid
parachuted in. They interviewed the father. Of
course, there was no substance to the allegation so there
were no charges laid.
She goes to court. The judge looks at her and
says, “I can't decide if you're making this up or
not. Perhaps you're making this up to hurt the
father. So do you know what I'm going to do? I'm going to
punish you by awarding joint custody.” Then he turns
to the dad and he says, “I can't say you didn't do
it, and I'm concerned that perhaps you did, so I'm going to give
you one hour per child of access a week.”
That's it, that was joint custody. So both sides left feeling
very angry, and there's going to be further litigation.
Now there's another problem. She was told by her
lawyer that we have this wonderful new law on child
support that guarantees you can stay at the same
standard of living after the divorce as before. Guess
what? It doesn't work. In this situation,
if you look at how much child
support he is paying, plus his federal and provincial
tax, it's 75% of his paycheque, which is the maximum by
law.
That's still not enough; she has to be topped up
by social assistance. So we worked out a plan with
her.
Do you know what? In order for her to survive she needs 110%
of his paycheque. Well, that's not going to happen, so
she's faced with the real possibility now that she is
going to have to go out and get a job. But she can't
get the job because she's stuck with the kids.
• 1635
So what she did is she went to her parents. Her
parents said, “We love the grandchildren, but we're
not raising them for you.” Babysitting she now finds
out, with four children, is very expensive. So what
she's doing now is she's giving dad the kids every
second weekend. Her lawyer cautioned her against doing
that, “Because if you do that”, she said, “he'll have
a good claim on custody. Find someone else. If you
can't, and if it's the last resort, send the kids to
dad.”
Now she has decided she'd like to send the kids to dad
more often, but with what he is paying in support and
what he has left in his paycheque, he can't afford to
feed them. She can't afford to accept reduced child
support because she's barely making it. If she did
reduce her child support, because she's on social
assistance, they would take it away from her.
She's got a dilemma now. They have no money left,
dad's been accused of sexual abuse, the kids are having
some problems, she'd love to send the kids to dad—lawyer
says no. This woman is a winner. She won. She got
everything she asked for. She followed her lawyer's
advice right down the road, and what does she do now?
What we need right now, I believe, and we've been
talking about shared parenting—
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Sir, can you
please make your recommendations?
Mr. Greg Kershaw: My recommendation is we're going
to have to have an affirmative action program for
fathers—mandatory father custody for the next five
years until we get some balance. This is going to free
these women up to participate in the workforce the way
they should be. Okay? So they're going to able to get
get jobs. And you know what? It's going to raise
their self-esteem, which I keep hearing is low, and
I'll tell you, this woman's self-esteem is low. The
only way we're going to do this is affirmative action
for fathers.
Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you.
[Editor's Note: Protest from the audience]
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Excuse me.
Please, sir. You are not allowed to speak unless you
are recognized. Would you mind leaving?
I apologize for that outburst.
Mr. Gal.
Mr. Stan E. Gal (Individual Presentation): Thank
you very much, Mr. Chairman.
My name is Stan Gal. I'm not here to talk to you
about the decade of exposure to the legal maze of
family law. I'm not here to tell you about the decade
of emotional devastation and financial bankruptcy. Nor
am I here to talk to you about my two sons. That is
another story.
What I am here to talk to you is about a necklace—a
pearl necklace. To the honourable members of this
committee this is just a necklace. To me it represents
a decade-old commitment I made to my daughter.
Let me tell you the story of this necklace. Ten years
ago I made a commitment to my daughter that on her
twenty-first birthday I would give her a pearl
necklace. About a month ago I went shopping for this
necklace. The sales assistant inquired who it was for,
and what she liked to wear. I told it was for my
daughter's twenty-first birthday, but I couldn't tell
her what she generally wore or how she liked to dress.
After selecting this necklace, the sales assistant
stated that it was very beautiful, and that my daughter
was very lucky, and that she was sure my daughter would
like it very much. I just said, “I probably will
never know. I haven't had any communication with her
in over seven years.” She looked at me with confusion
and disbelief. I left.
In 1991 I petitioned for divorce and equalization of
assets. This, as we all know, is how every case
starts. What the courts don't know and I certainly
didn't know about is the backroom and behind-the-scenes
manoeuvring and custodial parent lobbying.
Obstacles that are introduced into the process are
arguments over who gets what, children's fear of
abandonment by their father, children's fear of where
they are going to live, children's fear that their
fathers no longer care about them. The children's
emotions are used to a breaking point, and they are
pulled in all direction. This results in the children's
gradual but inevitable withdrawal from the father.
I used to think my situation was unique. I'm sorry to
say that I am not alone. I found, much to my disgust,
that my situation was typical.
• 1640
As many stories go, this type of undue hardship causes
great emotional strain on everyone, and has
long-lasting effects on fathers and their children. I
can feel the emotional collapse. I'm reminded of this
every time I look at this necklace.
While this process repeats itself over and over again,
regardless of the number of court orders and consent
agreements, our relationship with the children has been
forever lost. We cannot bring back the lost time and
the lost love that results from the continuous shuffle
of false claims and allegations.
It has been stated over and over again that you cannot
legislate good behaviour. Nor can you legislate
cooperation. The custodial mother fully controls
contact and is capable of withdrawing this from the
father at her whim.
The committee has been mandated to examine and analyse
issues relating to custody and access arrangements
after separation and divorce, to assess the needs for a
more child-centred approach to family law policies and
practices. These policies emphasise joint parental
rights and responsibilities and child-focused parenting
arrangements based on children's needs and best
interests.
In order for this committee to fulfil this mandate,
the family law industry must be harnessed. This
industry preys on the vulnerable and emotional state of
the family that has grown apart. This industry builds
up expectations of stability from a situation that is
in turmoil.
The committee may view my suggestion as being radical,
but this is not breaking new ground. I am advising
that this committee endorse the following.
Separating couples must set up and file with the court
a parenting plan. Until this is completed and approved
by the court, no funds will be transferred. Parents
who chronically break away from this parenting plan
will be held accountable, and their custody will be in
jeopardy.
Parents who have custody are legal guardians. Legal
guardians are in a position of trust and
accountability. If the legal guardian fails to fulfil
their responsibility, they are removed from their
position of trust. This is the way it works in every
other area.
As I have stated, fathers love their children and
always will. It does appear, however,
that by their father's absence, these
children will be scarred for life, and that will be the
recurring problem our society will have to deal with.
There is one question that is asked of many thousands
of fathers every night at 11 p.m. “Do you know
where your children are?” No, I don't.
My daughter's twenty-first birthday was March 20. I
still have this pearl necklace. Thank you very much,
Mr. Chairman.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you,
Mr. Gal.
Mr. Meier.
Mr. Peter Meier (Executive Member, Non-Custodial
Parents of Durham): Thank
you. It's Peter Meier and Phil Pocock, Non-Custodial
Parents of Durham.
I'm a non-custodial parent with two daughters. I've
been denied access on many occasions. My ex-wife was
found in contempt of court on September 15, 1994, and
fined a grand sum total of $1. I haven't seen my kids
since that day.
I just want to make reference to what Ross Virgin
basically said before—that the work's been done. I
have before me Bill 130. All it needs is a few
tweaks and a change to a few words. The bill requires
the chief judge of the provincial division to establish
a program of performance evaluation for provincial
judges, and requires their judicial council to review
and approve the program. At present the chief judge
and judicial council have discretion on whether to take
those measures, and we all know what's happening with
that.
I'll turn it over to Phil.
Mr. Phil Pocock (Executive Member, Non-Custodial
Parents of Durham): Hi,
I'm Phil Pocock. I want to establish three things
as I go through—first, my credentials; secondly, I
want to make two points; and the third thing is, I want
to offer some solutions.
My credentials: First, I have 14 years of experience as
a father of four children in an intact family prior to
the destruction of that family. I did everything in
that family except get pregnant. I have joint custody
written into the separation agreement. My children and I
have court-ordered and -specified visiting rights.
I've never missed a child support payment in the
subsequent 14 years since family destruction. So I have
28 years of experience as I sit here.
• 1645
I have not seen my children for the past eight years.
They live two hours away, in Niagara Falls.
I'm a high school teacher at an inner-city school, a
career I've had for eight years. That school has a
very large population of single-parent children. I
know firsthand, through observation of and conversation
with these children and adolescents, their attitudes
and values. I've seen firsthand the damage done
through lack of a value system, lack of modelling, lack
of family and belonging, and lack of demonstrated
values and principles. I've watched these children and
adolescents try to fill those vacuums with whatever
attitudes and values happen to show up in their
direction.
The last point of credential: I was invited in 1994 by
the Honourable Allan Rock, then Minister of Justice, to
submit a critique of the proposed child support
guidelines. I did submit that critique; it consisted
of some 40-odd pages.
Now to my points. Social and legislated injustices:
so long as we have injustices in our social system
generated by inequality, be they systemic biases in
society or be they established in law, we are providing
opportunity for people to take advantage of others,
using these inequalities.
When it comes to the powerful emotions of anger and
hate, the opportunity provided by inequity will be
exercised and revenge will be exacted. This revenge
may have two forms. One is some sort of emotional
control over targeted persons, usually children and
ex-spouses, and the other is financial control over the
targeted person, usually an ex-spouse.
There are two such inequities that I want to address
here.
The first inequity I want to address is a bias defined
by society at large. It is the stubborn reluctance of
the “tender years” presumption to fade as a
conclusion used by judges and lawyers to assign
custody. Yes, societal attitudes have a significant
effect on our courts. The result of this inequity is
that children usually lose one parent due to
manipulated allegiance and child-leveraged income under
the guise of child support. We can look directly to
Gardener again; he's been mentioned previously in
these discussions today.
The solution to this problem of assigning custodial
parentship, since that decision is biased in court,
must be to remove it from court and assign to a
facility that is empowered to determine best parent.
I'm suggesting mediation. A best parenting test must
be instituted as part of a complete mediation process.
This process must be binding upon both parents, and if
the dissolution of the family continues after
mediation, the findings of mediation must be admissible
in court in their entirety.
The second inequity I want to address is a bias
defined by the federal government and used extensively
by provincial family courts. This inequity reduces
children to tools to be used to leverage financial
gain. At absolutely no time should a child be put in
the position where they can be used as a weapon by
people opposing each other in adversarial positions.
This is exactly what happened when the federal
government produced guidelines defining what children
cost. The guidelines were generated without proper
input and with false assumptions argued incorrectly,
illogically, and assiduously into the process of
decision making, and then the guidelines were foisted
upon an unsuspecting Canadian public without any field
testing to determine their proper impact on children.
They represent an average solution. The average
problem doesn't exist.
The result of this inequity is that children of
broken families are very sensitive to the
reality that they are being used as leverage by one
parent against another. They understand that they are
not being respected as children of the marriage but
instead are being used as tools, as objects, as
commodities with which associated leverage, financial
income, or emotional impact can be made upon the other
parent. Their realization is reflected in their lack
of self-esteem—and this is directly from kids in high
school—and their constant demands for respect through
their acting out.
As I watch these children grow without guidance,
without self-respect, without self-esteem, without
love, and without intent, I see Canada's future
diminished substantially.
The solution—
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Mr. Pocock,
I'm sorry, but you're a little bit over time.
Mr. Phil Pocock: Okay. Let me give you this
solution and then I'll go directly to the final.
A comprehensive and fluidic formula at the mediation
process level is actually the only correct method that
will produce proper support assessments.
Let me go to the final sheet—and this, by the way, is
going to be left for you. Again, I don't have it in
two languages, so I'll leave it with your clerk.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you
very much.
Mr. Phil Pocock: Can I go to the solutions
very quickly?
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): You're well
over time; I'm sorry.
Mr. Phil Pocock: Okay. Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Mr.
Heutehaus.
• 1650
Mr. Frank Heutehaus: Thank you.
Good afternoon,
members of Parliament and senators. My name is Frank
Heutehaus. I'm age 32. Last December I received the
primary residency of my six-year-old son.
The reason I'm here today is to bring up concerns to
the rights of all children to be protected from child
abuse, both physically and emotionally, not only by the
custodial parents but also by the
non-custodial parents and immediate family.
My story began when my child was four years of age, in
the fall of 1995. He was excessively complaining about
being hit and hurt, padlocked in his room, and so
forth. The mother stated this had happened. The
child was locked in a room when they left the home.
They left him unattended on the second floor.
As most individuals would, I brought
these concerns forth to the Children's Aid Society,
which
did what they called an investigation. They concurred
that the child was padlocked in the room, unattended.
They concurred there was bruising on the child, yet
they closed the case, saying my claim was frivolous.
As time transpired, I started to discreetly audiotape
my child during pick-ups and drop-offs and take
pictures of bruises. The most dramatic thing came last
September, when my child had several bruises on his
backside. I brought him into the emergency room
department, where a doctor also felt that the bruising
was excessive and that the child had been hit. He also
said to get in touch with the Children's Aid Society.
Even though I was reluctant, I did so because the
Children's Aid Society conducted a meeting
at a police station.
I thought if the police were involved, it would give me
some protection as to the rights of this child.
When I
went in the day before the investigation, I wanted the
stepfather charged with abuse.
I brought with me the examining doctor's report, which
said that
the child had been hit excessively with force. I
brought pictures of the bruising. I also brought my
own concerns. The officer that evening said he could
not press charges unless this five-year-old child came
in so that they could videotape him and have him make a
sworn statement.
As reluctant as I was to bring my child in, I did so
the next day in the hope that the videotape and seeing the
child would help them to make a decision to protect
this child. Unfortunately, that day the investigation
didn't go anywhere. The child clammed up. They
returned the child to the mother, stating
she had a court order giving her sole custody.
That is when I started my fight for custody of the
child. I was in court last year ten times, and I was
involved in
many proceedings. The most important were disclosure
of the CAS reports and the police reports. Even though
they tried to order the CAS
to release the reports, the CAS
was reluctant to do so. I had to basically threaten them with
media exposure to get the reports released. The
police wouldn't release their reports,
so I had to bring a
contempt of court motion against the police to get the
reports released.
Once all the evidence was released, I looked through
it. I was completely shocked and dismayed at the
fact that before the investigation started, three hours
before, the lawyer for the mother had called, stating that
the mother's home was stable, the environment was
stable,
and that I was emotionally unstable. They had no facts to
substantiate this.
Further, the CAS report stated that the child
does not fear the stepfather. Yet in the videotape
conducted, the child states clearly he is scared of
this man, that this man hits him. He does that six or more
times.
The police and CAS stated that the mother and
stepfather said this was just a custody dispute. There
was no issue of custody until my
child was bruised this way and I brought the motion
forth. The matter continued until
December, when the issue was resolved. The mother did not
contest the abuse charges, and I received primary
residency.
The recommendation I'd like to make to this committee
is that regardless of gender, regardless of the
status—whether custodial or
non-custodial—if an individual, especially the
father or immediate family of the child, cannot bring
concerns about the protection of the child, who was five at
the time, and if the CAS is negligent in bringing out the
facts and dealing with these issues in the child's best
interest, who will protect these children?
Who will allow the other party to come forth and say
we have a situation here, let's work with this
appropriately, and let's look at both sides instead of
just taking one side of the story?
That's all. Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you.
We'll start with questions.
Dr. Bennett, please.
• 1655
Ms. Carolyn Bennett: I would like to use my
time to ask for the recommendations from Durham.
Mr. Phil Pocock: Thank you.
There are eight. I'll go through them very quickly,
since they are part of our submission.
The first is to toughen up the divorce laws to reflect
a much higher value of family.
The second is mandatory mediation, but I caution that
we need very great care in setting it up or we'll
add another burden to this family dissolution process.
The third is the application of the shared
differential formula. The present guidelines need not
be changed. We can simply ignore them and apply
this shared differential formula.
The fourth is accountability for the money used to
support the children. This forms feedback for
any additional moneys that are required. It would
also account for greater communication between the
parents. If they've got to talk about the kids on a
financial basis, a lot more information is going to
exchange hands about the kids specifically.
The fifth recommendation concerns violations of
custody and access, and it's in two parts.
Access and financial support are intrinsically linked,
and this must be recognized in law with reciprocal
penalties for violation of either side.
I liked
something I heard earlier today. It was that
support and custody be linked intrinsically; that the
whole thing be given to the mother and that the visiting
be tied to it. It shouldn't be visiting actually.
I was an uncle for a while, and I've been
a nobody for eight years.
The second part of violations is that I believe they
must be moved into criminal court. We will then have
the capacity of criminal court, with all the
draconian measures provided to deal with it.
The sixth recommendation is that since family court
is based on an adversarial system,
I would like to see it changed to an
inquisitional system. Turn the lawyers into gophers,
and let the judge seek the information he or she needs
to make good decisions.
The seventh deals with the custodial parent
and mobility. The two
most traumatic things you can put a kid through are
divorce and moving. I think if a child is going to be
moved out of his or her neighbourhood and the
non-custodial parent still resides in that
neighbourhood, custody or primary
parentship should transfer to the other parent
instantly. I think that would serve to keep the family
more cohesive.
I believe the last is the most important.
Curriculum must be instituted,
beginning in grade 1 and extending to grade 12, which
includes but is not limited to: the
reintroduction of family values, morality, commitment
and obligation to community, the skills of
communication, conflict resolution and relationship
building, reflection, personal financial management,
and socialization. They all have to be included.
We've lost it, and I think we have to reinstitute it.
Parents are becoming more and more incapable of doing
it, because they themselves haven't had the training.
Those are my recommendations. Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you.
Senator DeWare.
Senator Mabel DeWare: I would like to ask
Mr. Cochrane two questions.
Does he feel grandparents should have the
right to file for custody in the law, providing of
course they are capable?
Does he feel we should definitely set up almost a
mandatory parenting program in cases of divorce?
Mr. Michael Cochrane: On the grandparent question,
under the existing law in every
province grandparents now have the ability
to ask a court for a custody
or access order. In virtually every province
grandparents have been successful in getting those
orders.
In Ontario alone I've probably represented 15
grandparents who have obtained custody of the
grandchildren, in some cases fighting against the
Children's Aid Society to get them and in some cases
fighting their own children.
I have less of a problem with recognizing that legal
reality in legislation now than I did a few years ago.
I think certainly grandparents have a huge role to
play upon family breakdown, and they should be
given some help to do it.
On the parenting courses, do you mean—
Senator Mabel DeWare: No, I mean a plan. They
have to file a parenting plan, dealing with what kind
of support they're going to give. It's a plan for their
children's future.
Mr. Michael Cochrane: Yes, I believe in that, and I
would also add this extra piece to the process.
A submission was made earlier about
taking the adversarial nature out of family law
proceedings.
It's my belief now, after having been exposed to the system as
it is, we should have a family arrive at something
like a family law tribunal, something that will
take a multi-disciplinary approach to helping the
family sort out the issues of their finances, the
children, and whatever other issues
they're up against, perhaps the role of grandparents.
• 1700
That multi-disciplinary panel should have on it a legal
voice, an accounting or financial planning voice, and someone
who's skilled in social work or family support work.
Whatever the family needs, that expertise should be
sitting in front of them. The family would be far
better served by that kind of support—and I should add
public education to the list as well—than
by high-powered
and highly paid lawyers and judges, I think.
Senator Mabel DeWare: I think we can totally
agree with you there.
Before I leave, I want to
thank Frank for his testimony today. I really
appreciate his coming before the committee.
Thank you,
Mr. Chair.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Mr. Mancini.
Mr. Peter Mancini: I have a couple of questions,
the first of which is to
Mr. Cochrane.
You may have answered this in the
answer you just gave.
You are somebody who has also
practised family law.
With respect to the separation agreements
that are often entered into, we've heard
from many witnesses that the drawing out of the
situation is harmful and they'd almost like an
immediate response. The difficulty of that of course
is the assessment and that everything takes time.
Sometimes parties will enter into separation
agreements before they end up in divorce proceedings.
There's some case law that it's
very difficult to change those separation agreements
once they've been entered into.
What's your thinking on that?
As you've said, some people are
emotionally devastated going into this.
Some feel guilty, some feel
they're going to give everything away, some feel
responsible for the break-up, and others are angry. Should
those separation agreements be temporary, or should they
be binding? I guess that's the question I'm asking.
Mr. Michael Cochrane: I think you make a very good
point, that people are entering into agreements when
they're least equipped to make some decisions that
will bind them for their lives. When it relates to
children, most of those provisions can be reopened on
an application to court, but it's tough and it's
expensive.
What I point out in the first chapter of the book
Surviving Your Divorce is there are these
distinct phases people go through, of denial, of anger,
of depression, of false bargaining. They arrive at the
lawyer's office when they are angry, and they leave
when they're in that false bargaining mode. This means
they may have entered into a separation agreement that
isn't in their best interest. It's only later they
come out and move on to that final stage, which
lawyers know of, called acceptance, where you're moving
beyond it. You look back at that agreement, and it
doesn't look very good.
Mr. Peter Mancini: No, and in fact it often happens
that well after the decisions are made even in a court
case, the parties themselves work out an arrangement
that bears no resemblance to either the court order or
the original agreement.
Mr. Michael Cochrane: Exactly, and there's a real
onus on the legal community and on the justice
officials, and I think judges too to a certain extent, to
make sure they're slowing down some of those people
before they do it.
That's why I put so much emphasis on public education.
At the first meeting I have with clients, or during
any time I spend with clients, I tell
them that over the next few months they're
going to go through these very distinct phases. They're
in denial, they're going to get angry, they're going to
get depressed, they're going to do false bargaining, and
then they're going to move on. You have to position
them to make sure they are agreeing at the
moment of acceptance. That's a skill I
think not just lawyers have to bring to this. We can't
just rubber stamp agreements and orders that are placed
in front of the court.
Mr. Peter Mancini: Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you.
Senator Jessiman, please.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: I'd like ask some
questions of Mr. Cochrane.
Do I take it that if
someone reads this book, they might not have to use a
lawyer?
Some hon. members: Oh, oh!
Senator Duncan Jessiman: I'm not trying to plug
your book, but I got that
impression because I too am a lawyer. I don't
practise, but my experience from talking to others
who do practise or talking to people who are having
lawyers act for them is that it's not easy. We say we
just go in and make an ex parte application or an
application serving the other side.
• 1705
Mr. Michael Cochrane: In the book I don't urge people
to do it on their own. What I urge them to do is
to turn themselves into really smart consumers. They
go in and handle their lawyer, rather than the
other way around.
One of the best calls I ever got on that book was
from a lawyer who phoned me up and said, “What the hell
do you think you're doing? I just finished a meeting
with a client, and every 15 minutes the client was
saying that's not what Mr. Cochrane says on page 22.”
That client may have gone to an extreme,
but the client was informed, knew what his choices
were, and when the lawyer didn't present something to
him, such as perhaps
exploring mediation or
talking about joint custody, the client was ready to
engage in a meaningful discussion about the choices.
We need to have a lot more respect for the people who
are coming into the system.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: There seems to be
overwhelming evidence—and if you don't agree with it,
tell me so—that the courts, for whatever
reason, are gender biased. In 80%, some say 90%, of the
cases custody goes to the woman.
Mr. Michael Cochrane: I think this is the biggest
red herring—
Senator Duncan Jessiman: You don't agree with
it.
Mr. Michael Cochrane: —in family law reform. All
this gender bias talk really takes us off the main
focus. I do not see it. If anything, the studies that
have been done support the conclusion that when a man
decides he wants to have custody, in 70% of the cases
he'll get it.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: We want what
you're saying, for whatever it's worth, and you've
practised a long time.
Mr. Michael Cochrane: I've had just as many male
clients get custody as I've had female clients get
custody. In
many cases that study was attacked, because they said
the only reason it's true—they didn't argue
with the outcome—is that men have more money than
women have. I don't accept that.
I think what we really need to have,
rather than presumptions of joint custody, which I do
not favour, is a much more
sophisticated shopping list, one that the judge is aware of
and the lawyers and clients are discussing.
From that more sophisticated list of choices and with
informed consumers, we will get better parenting plans
and we'll get people asking for things they know
they're entitled to, rather than lying down at the
wrong moment in a case and not taking what's really in
their interest or the child's interest.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: I'm sure you know that
in California at one point joint custody
was almost automatic.
Then they got away from that.
This is what we're told they look at today. I
want to read it to you and ask you, as an expert in
this, whether you think the court, or we as a
committee, should consider
something like this.
What we're looking for is some advice from people
like you.
It says that when custody has been granted to either parent, the
court must consider which parent is more likely to
facilitate contact with the other parent and must not
prefer either parent on the basis of sex. The court is
permitted to require that the parties submit plans for
the implementation of the custody order.
Do you think if we had something like that in our
legislation, it would help us?
Mr. Michael Cochrane: That clause
mixes three things: what they call a
friendly parent rule, a type of presumption of joint
custody, and the parenting plan.
I favour the idea of
the parenting plan. I don't think legislating the friendly
parent rule is going to change
anything, and I don't think a presumption of joint
custody is going to change anything.
The parenting plan part I agree with. The other—
Senator Duncan Jessiman: What about this other?
Here's another part from the same code. Paragraph
3040(e) expressly provides that it:
establishes neither a preference nor a presumption
for or against joint legal custody, joint physical
custody, or sole custody, but allows the court and the
family the widest discretion to choose a parenting plan
that is in the best interest of the child.
Mr. Michael Cochrane: That is addressing what I
think is developing a more sophisticated shopping list
for the people in the system. That's the approach I
think we should be pursuing.
Senator Duncan Jessiman: We should be
directing our mind to something like that and
encouraging Parliament to consider legislating in
that direction.
Mr. Michael Cochrane: We should be looking at
making sure that people know
what their choices are and making sure that when they
end up in a courtroom, or in a discussion with
their lawyers, they are aware that all the
choices are on the table, that they can pick from
them all, and that something's not going to get any
advantage over something else, whether it's joint
custody or sole custody.
• 1710
Senator Duncan Jessiman: This is the reason I
would like words like that in the legislation. The
judges see our present act, and it does say certain
things in there. You talked about grandparents; they
can apply, but they can only apply after they've
applied first. They can't automatically apply. They
have to apply to the court to see if they can apply.
That should be eliminated.
But there are other things about lawyers specifically.
They have a responsibility to tell them mediation is
available. So what does that do? The courts just ask
or they have the lawyers sign a certificate that
they've done that. But if we had something like this
right in the legislation—I'm not saying these words,
but bringing it out so the court has to look at it and
the judges have to—I think we'd get somewhere.
Mr. Michael Cochrane: Well, there's an expression
you probably recall from practice called “bargaining
in the shadow of the law”. That's where clients and
lawyers live; we bargain out in the shadows. The
shadow is cast most clearly if you have clear laws that
set out a shape. What you're suggesting would
contribute to that shape so it would create an area in
which lawyers and clients bargain.
I just want to say something else that's related
to that. When we did the mediation advisory committee
in Ontario, it took 12 months. We had mediators, a
unified family court judge, family law lawyers who were
dead set against mediation, and representatives of
the Ontario Women's Directorate putting forward a
feminist perspective on mediation. We spent 12 months
debating what we could do to improve the family law
system and to bring mediation into it and take the
adversarial nature out of it.
One of the conclusions we came up with was that
instead of saying to people, “You must go through
mediation”, what we should be saying to them is, “You
must get educated as you come into the system. You
must know what your choices are.” So we recommended
creating a screen that you would have to pass through
as you came into the divorce system, in which you would
get public legal information about custody choices,
about parenting plans perhaps, and about what mediation
is, so you would have as much information about
your choices as the lawyers and the judges
did.
I was very encouraged to see that Mr. Szabo, who's not
present today, sat on a federal standing committee
dealing with health issues, and they concluded that
divorce is a health issue. It is. It's bad for the
health of Canadians. It's bad for the health of kids.
One of the recommendations they came up with, which I
would urge you to consider, is the requirement for
public education around divorce. I think one
suggestion even addressed the possibility of educating
people before they get married.
I had a call before I
came down here today, as I was just starting to go out
the door, from somebody who was looking for legal
advice. Separation is imminent, and they've been
married for a month—for one month.
Senator Anne Cools: Did you say one month?
Mr. Michael Cochrane: One month.
Senator Anne Cools: That's what I thought you
said.
A voice: Elizabeth Taylor.
Mr. Michael Cochrane: I think people would benefit
from some exposure to information about what it means
to be married, what it means to have kids, what
domestic violence is about, what financial planning is
about, and all those things they're going to confront
in a marriage. They should get that before they get
that marriage licence, which only costs them $50.
I did a calculation that if you spread the cost of
divorce in Canada over the cost of marriage licences, it
would cost $50,000.
A voice: Really?
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Mr. Forseth.
Mr. Paul Forseth: Thank you.
We're getting near the end of the day, so I'll just
try to interject with one pointed question, and perhaps
a number of you can answer.
Repeatedly we've heard the theme of the problems
with the adversarial system. One comment I heard this
afternoon was that we should replace it with the
inquisitorial system. Another comment was that perhaps
we should have a tribunal with a multi-disciplinary
approach, perhaps a round table type of attempt. I
have seen experiments in that regard. I think the
Berger commission on family law tried some of that
in British Columbia as far back as 1975.
But I would ask, is there any other jurisdiction
we can look to—Hungary, France, or wherever—where
we can look at a system that operates quite differently
from the historical British adversarial system
we've inherited? Are there any examples we can learn
from?
• 1715
Certainly other countries have gone down
this road. Human nature being somewhat the same in the
western world, in the way we think and operate and our
lifestyles, there have to be other jurisdictions,
completely different from the adversarial
system we have, that perhaps we can learn from.
Do you have any information about that?
Mr. Michael Cochrane: My recollection—and I'll
look for this when I get back to my office—is that
some pilot projects were tried in Australia on a
round-table tribunal approach. But by the same token,
I wouldn't let that discourage us, because one of the
things I always took great pride in when I worked for
the Ontario Ministry of the Attorney General was that
we often led the world in some of our reforms. We have
a much better approach to family mediation in Ontario,
I would say, than many American states do. We learned
from all the mistakes they made before we put ours in
place. The same thing with support enforcement and
some of the other programs; we could actually export a
model.
Mr. Paul Forseth: Anyone else? Just go ahead,
sir.
Mr. Stan Gal: In my presentation I made a comment
on the family law industry, and I just want to
summarize something on that. While I'm out there
working, family lawyers are out there practising. My
three or four lawyers have practised on me for about 10
years, okay? While they were vacationing down in
Florida, I was in the bankruptcy trustee's office filing
for bankruptcy.
That's all I have to say. Thank you.
A voice: Amen.
Mr. Phil Pocock: I believe the more we try to
structure our legal systems to accommodate all of the
things that can happen in family law, the tougher we
make the implementation from the human standpoint,
the human point of view. We actually seem to be trying
to structure exactly how a family is going to look,
act, and react in Canada in its complete function. I
believe that's an entire impossibility.
So my recommendation is to go back to an
inquisitional system. Asking questions, I believe, as
a teacher, is the best way to learn. But I also
believe that as human beings, we ebb and flow. We need a
hugely dynamic and fluid system. So the fewer laws we
have the better. I don't like laws; I rather like
structure, meta-cognitive structure, to work within.
That's why I suggest education from the very early
years on up as the best way to handle this thing.
Thank you.
Mr. Paul Forseth: Thank you.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Roger Gallaway): Thank you,
Mr. Forseth.
Thank you all for coming this afternoon. I know it's
your time that you're investing in the life of this
committee, and I want to thank you.
This committee is adjourned until 9 o'clock tomorrow
morning.
Thank you all.