My name is Helen Cutts. I'm the vice-president of policy development at the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency. It's my pleasure to be with you this afternoon. My opening remarks will not take 10 minutes. That will give us more time for questions.
Division 21 in part 4 of the budget implementation act makes a minor technical amendment to the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act, 2012, or CEAA 2012, as it's known in the short form.
[Translation]
In order to provide some context for members of the committee with respect to the amendments proposed by Bill , I will briefly describe the main features of the CEAA 2012.
This new act was brought into force in July shortly after Bill received royal assent.
[English]
These recent changes to federal environmental assessment are part of the responsible resource development plan. The objectives of this plan are to provide for more predictable and timely reviews, to reduce duplication for project reviews, to strengthen environmental protection, and to enhance consultations with aboriginal groups.
CEAA 2012 focuses on major projects. “Designated projects” is the term used in the legislation. Designated projects are identified in the project list regulations. The Minister of the Environment may also require the environmental assessment of a project not on the list. This scheme replaces the “all in unless excluded” approach of the former act.
[Translation]
Responsibility for environmental assessment has also been consolidated with the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency, the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission and the National Energy Board. This replaces an approach that saw the act implemented by 40 to 50 federal authorities each year.
[English]
There are additional mechanisms for federal-provincial cooperation. A provincial environmental assessment may substitute for the federal process. At the end of the environmental assessment, the Minister of the Environment makes a decision, informed by the provincial report. Before approving substitution, the minister must be satisfied that the core requirements of CEAA 2012 will be met.
The Governor in Council may also declare a provincial environmental assessment to be equivalent, exempting the designated project from application of the act. The conditions for substitution must be met in this case as well.
The Governor in Council must also be satisfied that the province will make a determination as to whether the designated project is likely to cause significant adverse environmental effects. It will ensure implementation of mitigation measures and a follow-up program.
There are now legislative timelines for environmental assessments: 365 days for an assessment by our agency; 24 months for an assessment by a review panel.
[Translation]
The minister may extend timelines by three months. Additional extensions may be granted by the Governor in Council. There is authority for regional environmental assessments that move beyond a project-specific focus. These are intended to assist with the assessment of cumulative environmental effects.
[English]
Finally, unlike the former act, CEAA 2012 includes enforcement provisions.
[Translation]
The amendments proposed by Bill are intended to address minor inconsistencies in the text of CEAA 2012 that have come to our attention over the past four months of implementation.
[English]
Clauses 425 to 427, as well as clauses 429 and 431, are intended to ensure concordance between the French and English versions of the act.
Clause 428 corrects an oversight with respect to conditions that can be put in a decision statement. At the end of an environmental assessment, a decision statement is provided to the proponent of a project. This statement sets out the conclusion as to whether the project is likely to cause significant adverse environmental effects. It also sets out conditions that are binding on the proponent; these are mitigation measures and requirements for a follow-up program.
[Translation]
The amendment proposes broader language with respect to the conditions to ensure that a decision statement can include administrative requirements such as reporting on the implementation of mitigation and follow-up.
[English]
Clause 430 clarifies that the obligation for federal authorities to ensure their action with respect to projects on federal lands do not cause significant adverse environmental effects is limited to the environmental effects caused by the components of the project that are situated on federal lands.
Finally, clause 432 proposes to close a loophole in the transition provisions. Currently, there is potential for a project to be exempted under the transition provisions even though it would have required an environmental assessment under the former act and would normally be subject to the new act. Where a proponent of a project was advised under the former act that an environmental assessment was not likely required, the transition provisions in CEAA 2012 exempt it from application of the new process.
This exemption would hold, even though a trigger under the former act—that is, a federal decision about a project—might subsequently be identified. The proposed amendment would subject a designated project, exempted under current provisions, to the requirements of the act if it is determined prior to January 1, 2014, that the project requires a federal decision that would have resulted in an environmental assessment under the former act. This amendment would ensure equitable treatment of similar designated projects under two different legislative schemes.
Thank you.
:
I have a point of order.
I assert that the Standing Committee on Environment and Sustainable Development lacks the authority from the House to propose amendments to Bill or to issue a report to the Standing Committee on Finance and therefore that we should not participate in this clause-by-clause hearing.
Let me remind this committee of where we, as a committee, derive our authority to do the things we do. We derive our existence and our authority from the House of Commons itself. The House creates our committee specifically through Standing Order 104, and the Standing Orders further regulate how our committees are constituted and governed under Standing Order 106.
The House also sets out the specific mandate of each standing committee under Standing Order 108. An excellent summary of this regime can be found in the book entitled House of Commons Procedure and Practice, commonly called O'Brien and Bosc. On pages 960 and 962, referring to standing committees, the document reads:
They are empowered to study and report to the House on all matters relating to the mandate, management, organization and operation of the departments assigned to them. More specifically, they can review:
the statute law relating to the departments assigned to them;
the program and policy objectives of those departments, and the effectiveness of their implementation thereof;
the immediate, medium and long-term expenditure plans of those departments, and the effectiveness of the implementation thereof; and
an analysis of the relative success of those departments in meeting their objectives.
In addition to this general mandate, other matters are routinely referred by the House to its standing committees: bills, estimates, Order-in-Council appointments, documents tabled in the House pursuant to statute, and specific matters which the House wishes to have studied. In each case, the House chooses the most appropriate committee on the basis of its mandate.
Please note that all the abilities cited in this citation flow from the House, not from another committee.
So let us look at what we have here with Bill .
On October 18th of this year, following the adoption of Ways and Means motion 13, the Minister of Foreign Affairs moved, on behalf of the Minister of Finance, that Bill C-45 be read a first time and printed. In October, the Minister of Public Safety moved that Bill C-45 be read a second time and referred to a committee, and after using time allocation, the debate on the second reading of Bill C-45 ended with the passage of the following the motion on October 30th of this year:
that Bill C-45, A second Act to implement certain provisions of the budget tabled in Parliament on March 29, 2012 and other measures be now read a second time and referred to the Standing Committee on Finance.
Hansard on October 30th, immediately following the passage of the motion in the House, specifically quotes the Speaker saying:
I declare the motion carried. Accordingly, the Bill stands referred to the Standing Committee on Finance.
The reference of this bill to committee was always only to the Standing Committee on Finance. The motion passed in the House referred only to the Standing Committee on Finance.
This is important, Mr. Chair. Under the legislative process that the House of Commons follows, a bill can only be referred to a single committee, the committee assigned by the House itself. This does not preclude any other committee from studying the subject matter of the sections of this omnibus bill. The official opposition has always advocated that this bill be split up, and effectively studied. The official opposition actually proposed a series of motions in the House to split this bill, using the same method as was used to pass Bill , the MP pension plan provisions. Sadly, the House did not adopt those motions.
Those motions would have allowed this committee to actually study the separate bills which would have been referred to them, and then each committee could legitimately hold hearings, calling a variety of witnesses, with multiple viewpoints, and then, after hearing these points of view on the sections of the bill referred to them, could formulate reasoned amendments for debate and decision in a clause-by-clause meeting, and then the decision of the committee would be reported to the House in due course.
The traditional practice of committees to allow witnesses to be called from a variety of sources is being overridden by this fake belief that our committee will somehow have a meaningful clause-by-clause consideration of the parts of the bill referred to them by the Standing Committee on Finance.
There is another problem. We are being asked by the Standing Committee on Finance, not the House, to study and propose amendments to a bill, on such a short time line that, as we have seen, there is no opportunity for reasoned debate. In fact, we were not able to invite some witnesses to our meeting today, given the very short timelines. The process has been corrupted.
I wish to relate to you all one line from O'Brien and Bosc on committee reports. On page 985, it says:
In the past, when a committee has gone beyond its order of reference or addressed issues not included in the order, the Speaker of the House has ruled the report or a specific part of the report to be out of order.
I submit to you, as the Chair, that the Standing Committee on Finance is unable to refer any parts of Bill to anyone. Their only duty is to study this bill and to report back to the House with or without amendment.
Let me review quickly how a committee is supposed to deal with a complex bill referred to it by the House after second reading.
Normally, after passage at second reading, the committee which received the bill would organize its time, call for a variety of witnesses based on the lists provided by the recognized parties in proportion to their representation at the committee, hear the witnesses, formulate amendments, schedule a clause-by-clause meeting, call each clause, hear amendments to the clauses, vote on the amendments and the clauses, and then vote on the bill. The results of these decisions would then be reported to the House.
The House, in its wisdom, has even provided a mechanism to allow for a variation on this normal progress of a bill through committee, which it called the motion of instruction.
I refer once more to O'Brien and Bosc, this time in the chapter on legislative process on page 752:
Once a bill has been referred to a committee, the House may instruct the committee by way of a motion authorizing what would otherwise be beyond its powers, such as, for example, examining a portion of the bill and reporting it separately, examining certain items in particular, dividing a bill into more than one bill, consolidating two or more bills into a single bill, or expanding or narrowing the scope or application of a bill. A committee that so wishes may also seek an instruction from the House.
So, if the government was interested in following the rules of this place, and wanted to have a variety of committees study this bill, then it could have moved to instruct any variety of those committees to conduct a review of the portions of the bill, allow amendments to those portions, and to report them separately. But the power to authorize this variance in the legislative process rests with the House of Commons, not the Standing Committee on Finance.
Because we have not received any order of reference from the House, and because there has been no instruction from the House subsequent to the passage of the bill at second reading, I submit to you that it is out of order for this committee to have any vote on any amendment relating to C-45. Unfortunately, our work will have been in vain.
I also submit to you that this committee has the right to initiate a study on the subject matter. In fact, it is really important to do so with the help of witnesses with different points of view. But we do not have the authority to report to another committee, only to the House.
While committees have the power to meet jointly with other committees, a report from a joint committee must report only to the House, not to another committee such as the Standing Committee on Finance.
Once again, I would like to quote O'Brien and Bosc on this. On page 983, when referring to a joint committee, it says:
If a report is adopted during a joint meeting, each committee may present to the House a separate report, even though the two reports will be identical.
So, according to O'Brien and Bosc, Mr. Chair, the report goes to the House, not to another committee.
Mr. Chair, I also refer you to the same chapter, pages 984 and 985, dealing with the way in which a committee can report to the House:
In order to carry out their roles effectively, committees must be able to convey their findings to the House. The Standing Orders provide standing committees with the power to report the House from time to time, which is generally interpreted as being as often as they wish. A standing committee exercises that prerogative when its members agree on the subject and wording of a report and it directs the Chair to report to the House, which the Chair then does.
It is really very clear. I will continue reading:
Like all other powers of standing committees, the power to report is limited to issues that fall within their mandate or that have been specifically assigned to them by the House. Every report must identify the authority under which it is presented. In the past, when a committee has gone beyond its order of reference or addressed issues not included in the order, the Speaker of the House has ruled the report or a specific part of the report to be out of order.
I must remind you, Mr. Chair, the words come from O'Brien and Bosc.
We have rules for committees that show the committees receive their authority from the House, and that also say that committees report their information to the House. The request for us to somehow become subcontractors to shoddy work by the parliamentary assistant to the Minister of Finance should not be given any credence.
I suggest to you, Mr. Chair, that our job is to hear witnesses on Bill and report findings to the House. I do not believe that we should entertain any amendments to C-45, because the bill was never envisioned by the House as being dealt with at any committee other than the Standing Committee on Finance. I have already made reference to this, and it is very well explained in O'Brien and Bosc in the passages I have referred to above.
I further submit that it flies in the face of all our basic principles of being a committee if we agree that committees should receive their mandates from another committee—that is unheard of—and should then report to that committee rather than to the body which gives us authority, the House of Commons.
With that, I humbly await your ruling and decision on the matters I have just discussed.
:
Well, my apologies to the witnesses. I would like to thank you for coming out today to talk about the amendments, but I do have to address some of my colleague's points here.
We started our meeting off today with my colleague opposite asking for additional time on Monday to have further witnesses, which I, Mr. Chair, am amenable to. I am more than happy to allow this to happen, to look at other times to deal within a subcommittee, but I have a conflicting message from my colleague here and, frankly, I am outraged.
We have a history of working well in this committee. We have witnesses sitting here who are ready to talk to.... I think there are only eight clauses here, seven of them minor concordance issues, but we have the opportunity today to look through this. We made a decision as the committee to review this component of the bill, and yet we've just spent half an hour of the time of the witnesses who proposed these.... In fact, we have the vice-president of policy for the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency here to look at these clauses today, and we just spent half an hour talking about why we shouldn't be looking at them. I'm not sure what the NDP's message is on this, frankly.
Do you want to review these clauses or not? Frankly, I do. I cannot believe that we just sat here talking about this after we've been trying to find additional time for witnesses to come out and to work collaboratively to review these amendments. Frankly, I'm flabbergasted.
As committee members, we've had over a week with this letter in front of us, whereby we could all do our due diligence on the technicalities of each aspect of the clauses. I've certainly done that. I know that my colleagues down the way have done that as well. They've sent me questions that we've been trying to work back and forth on in trying to get clarification to make sure that it's consistent with the existing legislation—point blank, doing our jobs as legislators instead of sitting here and talking about whether or not we should be looking at this.
I'm just not sure what the message is today. I cannot believe that we just spent half an hour doing that.
Mr. Chair, I do appreciate your ruling on this, but the last point I'm going to make on this is something that I want on the record, and that's that my colleague said that we have a fake belief for meaningful discussion on these clauses here today. We gathered here as a standing committee of the Parliament of Canada to review these. It was a decision that our committee made, and to say that in front of witnesses who are here, and who are technical experts on the subject, is frankly outrageous. I certainly hope that my colleagues will get their message in alignment, that will work with us.... If there are additional witnesses we need to have on Monday and work on a subcommittee on Monday afternoon—whatever—to meet the deadline that has been tasked with us by the finance committee, I am more than amenable to that. I will put that on the record right now, Mr. Chair.
I certainly hope that we can take the rest of the time to review the amendments with the witnesses who are here. Let’s move on.
Ms. Cutts, do any of the proposed amendments to CEAA 2012 in Bill represent a change in policy intent?