Mr. Chairman, yes. I think looking at broader whistle-blower legislation may be the way of getting around a lot of this. Just one comment, Mr. Chairman, is that if you make it on the person's consent then that person is really the one who's going to judge whether or not a prosecution is going to go ahead because they could stop the prosecution rather than the safety officer. So it's a bit complicated. Mr. Chairman, my feeling would be that this is an improvement, as Mr. Bell says, and when we get into the next government we can look at broader legislation that would cover all these kind of circumstances. Thank you.
Joe Handley on Committee Motion 132-14(6): To Amend Clause 6 Of Bill 23, Carried
In the Legislative Assembly on October 2nd, 2003. See this statement in context.
Committee Motion 132-14(6): To Amend Clause 6 Of Bill 23, Carried
Item 19: Consideration In Committee Of The Whole Of Bills And Other Matters
October 2nd, 2003
Page 1175
See context to find out what was said next.