37-1
37th Parliament,
1st Session
(January 29, 2001 - September 16, 2002)
Select a different session
Proceedings of the Standing Senate Committee on
Energy, the Environment and Natural Resources
Issue 13 - Evidence
| OTTAWA, Thursday, September 20, 2001
|
| The Standing Senate Committee on Energy, the Environment
and Natural Resources, to which was referred Bill S-18, to amend
the Food and Drugs Act (clean drinking water), met this day at
9:32 a.m. to give consideration to the bill.
|
| Senator Nicholas W. Taylor (Chairman) in the Chair.
|
| [English]
|
| The Chairman: Honourable senators, I call the meeting to
order.
|
| I welcome our witnesses, Mr. De Montigny and Mr. Faggiolo
from the Department of Justice. Please proceed with your
presentation and we have questions following that.
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| Mr. Yves De Montigny, Senior General Counsel, Department of Justice: Honourable senators, I am pleased to have this
opportunity this morning to provide you with a general overview
of the constitutional authority both of the federal and of the
provincial legislators to enact legislation with respect to drinking
water.
|
| As you know, water is not a subject that has been specifically
allocated by the Constitution Act of Canada to either level of
government. Other vital areas where there is shared jurisdiction
include health, environment, inflation, and a host of other issues
that were not dealt with in the Constitution Act, 1867. In those
cases, both levels of government have authority to enact
legislation that may affect, in this case, the water that Canadians
drink.
|
| In a 1997 case involving Hydro-Québec, the Supreme Court of
Canada upheld federal legislation that empowered the Minister of
Health and the Minister of the Environment to determine what
substances are toxic and to prohibit the introduction of such
substances into the environment except in accordance with
specified terms and conditions. What is important is that the
courts held that this legislation fell within Parliament's power to
enact criminal laws. We will return to this subject later.
|
| The court took pains to point out that the use of the federal
criminal law power in no way precluded the provinces from
exercising their extensive legislative powers under section 92 of
the Constitution Act, 1867 to regulate and control the pollution of
the environment.
|
| If I may just quote from Justice La Forest, who wrote the main
opinion in this case, he put the matter this way, it is a useful
introduction for my comments:
|
| The situation is really no different from the situation
regarding the protection of health where Parliament has for
long exercised extensive control over such matters as food
and drugs by prohibitions grounded in the criminal law
power. This has not prevented the provinces from extensive
ly regulating and prohibiting many activities relating to
health. The two levels of government frequently work
together to meet common concerns.
|
| We should bear this in mind for the rest of my presentation
because much will turn on the respective role of both the
provincial and federal legislators and government.
|
| Let us first deal with the provincial authority to deal with
drinking water and health concerns in this respect. Historically,
the provinces have been largely responsible for the delivery and
safeguarding of drinking water in Canada. This responsibility
stems not only from various heads of jurisdiction in the
Constitution Act, 1867, but also from the fact that the provinces
are the owners or proprietors of the Crown in each province for
most public lands within each province's boundaries. The
provincial Crown has the same kind of powers over its property
and the use of that property that other legal persons may have on
their own property.
|
| It should be noted that the Crown in right of the provinces
might be bound, even in the use of that power that they exercise
as proprietor of the resource, by valid federal legislation in the
exercise of their proprietary rights.
|
| That is one side of the question. The other source of power that
the provinces exercise is that which comes directly from the
distribution of legislative powers in the Constitution Act, 1867. I
will list some of these powers to give you an idea of the ambit of
some of these powers and the various heads of jurisdiction that
could be used in that respect.
|
| The first head of power that you find in the Constitution Act,
1867, is paragraph 92.5, which gives the provinces authority to
make laws in relation to the management and sale of public lands
belonging to the province. Obviously, legislation governing the
use of public lands and the water on these lands can significantly
affect the delivery of drinking water.
|
| Another head of jurisdiction for the provinces is their
jurisdiction over local works and undertakings, which stems from
subsection 92.10 of the Constitution Act, 1867. As a general rule,
this would include facilities such as water treatment plants, of
course. That is another major source of jurisdiction for the
provinces in dealing with drinking water.
|
| Another relevant paragraph, 92.8, gives the provinces jurisdiction in respect of municipal institutions, which, as we know, deal
with most of these water treatment plants.
|
| Perhaps the most important sources of jurisdiction for the
provincial legislators are: Subsection 92.13. Property and Civil
Rights in the Province; and Subsection 92.16. Generally all
Matters of a merely local or private Nature in the Province.
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| These two heads of power provide extensive authority to
legislate in respect of privately-owned property in the province.
They give the provinces broad legislative jurisdiction over
numerous matters that can affect drinking water. As examples, we
have environmental protection, land-use planning, zoning, water
conservation, flood control, et cetera.
|
| Professor Peter Hogg, is a leading expert in Canadian
constitutional law. In a discussion on jurisdiction over the
protection of the environment in Constitutional Law of Canada,
he wrote:
|
| The power over property and civil rights (s.92(13))
authorizes the regulation of land use and most aspects of
mining, manufacturing and other business activity, including
the regulation of emissions that could pollute the environment. This power, and the power over municipal institutions
(s.92(8)), also authorizes municipal regulation of local
activity that affects the environment, for example, zoning,
construction, purification of water, sewage, garbage disposal
and noise. The provinces can also control activities on
provincial public lands (s.92(5)), which contain much mining
and lumbering. The provinces also possess the power to tax
(s92(2)), and can use it to tax the consumption of products
that cause pollution, such as gasoline, and to exempt
products that reduce pollution, such as insulation.
|
| Such is the ambit of the provincial jurisdiction, and this is, in
fact, the menu of powers that the provinces can use to protect
water quality and the water that we drink.
|
| Before I conclude, I should also add that the Constitution Act
of 1982 included another power to the list of provincial
jurisdictions, and can be found in section 92A(1). It confirms that
a province has legislative jurisdiction over the development,
conservation and management of non-renewable natural resources
and forestry resources, as well as over the development,
conservation and management of sites and facilities in the
provinces for the generation and production of electrical energy.
|
| As you will understand, legislation governing the exploitation
of these resources can affect the quality of the water.
|
| The last power that I should mention in the realm of provincial
jurisdiction, is that found in section 95 of the Constitution Act,
1867, under which the provinces share jurisdiction with the
federal government over agriculture. Such legislation could also
touch on matters that affect the water supply, for example
irrigation and regulating the run-off from agricultural operations.
Those are the areas of legislative authority available to the
provinces to deal with the quality of drinking water.
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| Let us now examine the federal power that could be used as
well to deal with this problem.
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| As is the Crown in right of the provinces, the federal Crown is
also the owner of public lands and, as such, has the same right as
a legal person, or as the provinces, to do anything that we citizens
could do with our own property. That is one source of power for
the federal government to access.
|
| In addition to these rights, there is also section 91.1A of the
Constitution Act, 1867, in which Parliament has the same
authority as the provinces to make laws in respect of federal,
public property. This is the equivalent to the list of provincial
powers.
|
| In addition to powers relating to the ownership of land, you
will find in the paragraphs under section 91 of the Constitution
Act, a host of provisions that give legislative authority to
Parliament to deal with various aspects of water and water
management. Examples of these are, to limit the power of
Parliament to legislate with respect to military bases, to federal
public buildings and to Indian reserves. All of these could
obviously be used to deal with some aspects of water manage
ment and the quality of water in those areas.
|
| The main power that the federal Parliament could obviously
use in this respect would be the legislation governing criminal
law, which can be found in section 91.27 of the Constitution Act,
1867. As you know, Parliament can enact any criminal legislation
to protect Canadians, in particular, from threats to their health
from, in this case, unsafe drinking water.
|
| In fact, the Supreme Court of Canada, in a few recent cases,
among others the firearms reference and the RJR-McDonald case,
came out with three prerequisites for criminal legislation to be
valid. These prerequisites are, essentially: a valid criminal law
purpose - and protection of health is one of those purposes -
backed by a prohibition and a penalty. These are the three
elements that you must find in a criminal statute to be valid.
|
| You must legislate to address a valid criminal purpose, and
among those purposes that have been recognized in the past,
health is one.
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| The Chairman: Could I have those three elements again,
please?
|
| Mr. De Montigny: Yes. The first one is a valid criminal law
purpose, and the jurisprudence of the courts is that the protection
of health is one of these. That is one criterion. The two others are
that this purpose must be backed by a prohibition and a penalty,
or a sanction if you choose. That could take different forms, such
as, imprisonment and fines, which are the most current ones, but
there could be others.
|
| In the RJR-McDonald case, the federal legislation in question
prohibited the advertising and promotion of tobacco products
subject to certain exceptions, and also prohibited the sale of a
tobacco product unless the package containing that product set
forth prescribed health-related information and warnings. For
those of you who still smoke, you can see these warnings on each
and every cigarette package. The evil targeted by Parliament was
the detrimental health effect caused by smoking. Justice La Forest
handed this down in 1995.
|
| It confirmed that the protection of health is a valid criminal law
purpose, as I just indicated. I will quote again from Justice La
Forest because it is quite explicit is relevant to the discussions you
will have.
|
| Given the amorphous nature of health as a constitutional
matter and the resulting fact that Parliament and the
provincial legislatures may both validly legislate in this area,
it is important to emphasize once again the plenary nature of
the criminal law power.
|
| Health as such, as I explained at the beginning of my
introduction, is not allocated specifically to either the federal or
provincial legislators. Some aspects of it are found in the various
heads of power but health as such you will not find. This is what
he means by the "amorphous nature of health as a constitutional
matter."
|
| He continues to quote from the Margarine Reference, which is
a case dating back to the 1940s, Justice La Forest continued:
|
| Justice Rand made it clear that the protection of "health"
is one of the "ordinary ends" served by the criminal law, and
that the criminal law power may validly be used to safe
guard the public from any "injurious or undesirable effect".
The scope of the federal power to create criminal legislation
with respect to health matters is broad, and is circumscribed
only by the requirements that the legislation must contain a
prohibition accompanied by a penal sanction and must be
directed at the legitimate public health evil.
|
| Here are the three criteria to which I referred previously. These
are: a valid criminal purpose, a prohibition, and a penalty. I
continue to quote Justice La Forest:
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| If a given piece of federal legislation contains these
features, and if that legislation is not otherwise a"colourable" intrusion upon provincial jurisdiction, then it is
valid as criminal law.
|
| The criminal law power would also allow Parliament, in all
likelihood, to enact certain measures to prohibit water pollution.
As I mentioned earlier, the Supreme Court of Canada in the
Hydro-Québec case upheld federal environmental legislation
dealing with toxic substances under the criminal law power.
|
| This is probably the most relevant head of jurisdiction for
Parliament to deal with problems associated with the quality of
drinking water. The other head of power that is of some
relevance, although probably more problematic, is what we call
the "peace, order and good government power," which is the
introduction clause of section 91 of the Constitution Act, 1867.
|
| Under that power, which is essentially residual, three theories
have emerged in the jurisprudence to provide a better sense of
what is permissible under that residual power. The first theory is
the "gap branch," which is not very helpful in our case.
According to this theory, the Parliament of Canada could legislate
with respect to matters that the Constitution has recognized as
classes of subject for distribution of powers purposes, but where
the Constitution Act has failed to assign completely this matter to
either one level of government.
|
| The best example I could give you in this respect is the
incorporation of companies. The Constitution Act, 1867 em
powers the provinces to make laws in relation to the incorporation
of companies with provincial objects. You would expect to find
the equivalent power in section 91 with respect to companies
having federal objects. You will not find it. This is where the gap
theory is useful because under this residual power the federal
Parliament has been empowered to deal with incorporation of
federal companies.
|
| In our case, this is not helpful. I do not think this is where you
could hook federal statutes dealing with drinking water.
|
| The second theory that has emerged from the POGG power is
the "emergency theory," that empowers Parliament to enact laws,
which would normally be competent only to the provinces, to deal
with emergency situations. The Supreme Court has described this
in the anti-inflation reference. An emergency situation is defined
as an urgent and critical situation adversely affecting all
Canadians and being of such proportions as to transcend the
authority vested in the legislatures of the provinces, and thus
presenting an emergency that can only be dealt with effectively by
Parliament.
|
| This head of power is probably not extremely useful for your
discussion. I must recognize that the courts have been quite
flexible in the way that they have addressed emergency situations.
In most cases, they have deferred to the government in coming to
a conclusion with respect to whether there was an emergency or
not.
|
| This is probably not relevant in this particular context because
the types of legislation that come under this power would need to
be limited in time. They would have to be of a temporary
character because an emergency cannot last forever. We are
dealing with a legislation that needs to be long lasting and for an
indeterminate period of time. This is not the head of power at
which you should look.
|
| The last theory that has from the "peace, order and good
government" power under the Constitution Act, 1867 is the
"national concern" or "national dimension" theory. According to
this theory, if the subject you are dealing with goes beyond local
or provincial concerns or interests, and must from its inherent
nature be a concern of Canada as a whole, then it should fall
within the confidence of the federal Parliament.
|
| This theory came about in a case having to do with alcohol and
temperance. At the time it was felt that this was a national
concern. It has been used in other situations since then. It was
used to deal with aeronautics. This is a field of jurisdiction that is
not allocated specifically in the Constitution Act, 1867, but has
been conferred to the federal Parliament under this theory.
|
| The same is true of the National Capital Region, which has
been given as a field of jurisdiction to the federal Parliament
under this interpretation of the introduction clause of section 91.
Marine pollution is another example that has come under this
power. The regulation of nuclear plants has also been allocated to
federal Parliament under this theory.
|
| This could look attractive for dealing with the problem of
drinking water. However, there are strict criteria to apply this
power. The main criterion for qualifying as a matter of national
concern is that the subject matter with which you are dealing
must, according to the Supreme Court, have "a singleness,
distinctiveness and indivisibility that clearly distinguishes this
subject matter from other matters of provincial concern." That is
the first requirement.
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| The scale of impact on provincial jurisdiction must be
reconcilable with the fact that we are living in a federal system.
When faced with a piece of legislation presumably adopted under
this head of power, the court must be careful that it is not
over-encompassing, as inflation was argued to be at the time. It
must be something quite precise and distinct, which would not
allow federal Parliament to overstep on a host of other provincial
jurisdictions in the process.
|
| Another question that the court must address in examining a
piece of legislation that is coming under the national dimension
theory is whether the provinces by themselves would be capable
of dealing effectively with that subject matter if federal
Parliament were not stepping in. If the answer is "yes," that will
be a major element in the court's reasoning.
|
| A matter will not qualify per se as coming under this national
concern theory just because it is desirable to have a uniform piece
of legislation across the country or because it makes sense to have
the same legislation again all over Canada. That would directly
conflict with the fact that we are living in a federal state. If that
were the rationale, it would be much easier to have uniform
statutes in every aspect of life and we could get rid of the
distribution of powers in section 91 and 29. The court would be
reluctant to accept that a statute must be under federal jurisdiction
just because it would make life easier to have a statute adopted at
the federal level.
|
| The two main heads of powers, of course, are the criminal law
powers and peace, order and good government under the national
dimension theory. There are a few other heads of jurisdiction that
could have some impact and could enable federal Parliament in
certain circumstances to deal with some aspects of drinking water.
I will list them.
|
| There is section 91.12, dealing with jurisdiction of Parliament
over seacoast and inland fisheries. There is section 91.10, having
to do with navigation and shipping. There is, of course, section
91.29, read in conjunction with 92.11, to which I referred earlier,
that gives Parliament jurisdiction over works and undertakings
that are not local. The local ones are provincial. Those that are not
local but are interprovincial or international will come under
federal jurisdiction. Here we can think of international and
interprovincial shipping lines and work declared to be for the
general advantage of Canada, which is another power that the
federal Parliament can use in exceptional circumstances.
|
| There is also section 95, to which I referred earlier, giving both
the provinces and federal Parliament jurisdiction over agriculture.
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| There is also section 91.2, giving Parliament authority to
regulate trade and commerce; this would be interprovincial and
international trade and commerce, not local or internal provincial
commerce. There is also the power to implement treaties, but here
one must be careful because there is no allocation of powers,
strictly speaking, dealing with the implementation of treaties
adopted and ratified by the federal government.
|
| There was a section - section 132 - dealing with treaties
adopted by the English Parliament at the time, giving the federal
Parliament power to implement these treaties within Canada. Of
course, the situation has now changed. The federal authorities
adopt all treaties binding on Canada and there is nothing in the
Constitution dealing with this. In the labour conventions case in
the 1930s, the Supreme Court of Canada decided that with respect
to the implementation of the treaties adopted and ratified by
Canada, the distribution of powers that is applicable for all other
matters would also be applicable to the implementation of these
treaties.
|
| In other words, if the subject matter of the treaties falls within
provincial jurisdiction, the provinces will need to adopt statutes to
implement the treaty.
|
| Finally, there are a few other doctrines I would like to bring to
your attention in dealing with the constitutional distribution of
powers. One of these doctrines is what we call the "double aspect
doctrine." As you may recall, I said that most powers that are
allocated under section 91 and 92 are allocated on an exclusivity
basis. Except for agriculture and a few others such as pensions,
most powers are allocated either to the federal Parliament or to
provincial legislators.
|
| That does not mean that both the provinces and federal
Parliament cannot legislate with respect to the same matter.
Again, using the "aspect doctrine," the courts concluded that in
some cases one subject matter can be dealt with from different
angles. For example, health can be dealt with from the angle of
criminal law, to protect health. Health can also be dealt with
through provincial jurisdictions with respect to hospitals or to the
regulations of the medical profession.
|
| With a single subject matter it depends how you treat it and
approach it. In many cases, even though the jurisdictions that you
will find in the Constitution are allocated on an exclusive basis, in
practice you will find that many subject matters are dealt with
both by the provinces and the federal government.
|
| For example, we have provincial and federal departments of
transport, because transport can be local or interprovincial or
international. The same is true of a host of other issues and
subject matters.
|
| In cases where the two legislations - provincial and federal -
are validly adopted because they fall under different heads of
jurisdiction, the question that rises is, what happens if there is a
conflict between the two? There is nothing explicitly said in the
Constitution Act about this, but the decisions of the courts are
quite clear and explicit. If there is a conflict, the federal statute
will prevail in all circumstances.
|
| The conflict notion has been interpreted quite narrowly. To say
that there is a conflict, you must come to the conclusion that it is
completely impossible for the citizen to abide by the two statutes
at the same time. It is as if on authority tells you "go" and the
other tells you to "stop." It is either one or the other; you cannot
do both at the same time. This is the only situation where you will
face a problem of conflict and then you will be applying the
paramountcy doctrine. It is quite narrow in terms of application.
|
| We should also be mindful that the federal government can use
its spending power, which is not a power to adopt legislation.
|
| It is not provided for as such in the Constitution Act, 1867, but
it is a power inferred and derived from the power to levy taxes to
legislate in relation to public property and to appropriate federal
funds. Although the courts have never pronounced explicitly on
the existence of this power, it is obvious to most constitutional
scholars in the country that this is a valid power.
|
| Using this power does not enable the federal Parliament to
legislate. It just enables federal government to provide money.
Conditions can be attached to the money as long as those
conditions are not perceived or interpreted as an indirect way to
legislate in a field that is a federal jurisdiction. This nuance must
be drawn. Aside from the legislative powers, there is also the
power to spend money and attach conditions to the money being
allocated to the provinces or to individuals.
|
| The Chairman: Thank you very much. I will turn the floor
over now to Mr. Faggiolo.
|
| Mr. Guy Faggiolo, General Counsel, Legal Services, Health
Canada: I will support the presentation of Mr. De Montigny.
|
| Senator Kenny: My first question is with respect to who has
authority over waters that touch or cross provincial boundaries or
touch or cross international boundaries?
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| Mr. De Montigny: In principle, as soon as the flow of water
crosses a boundary, it comes under federal jurisdiction.
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| Senator Kenny: Sometimes it is a boundary.
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| Mr. De Montigny: As soon as the water crosses a boundary, it
becomes a federal jurisdiction, not for all aspects of it but for
most of it.
|
| Senator Kenny: Sometimes the water itself constitutes the
boundary?
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| Mr. De Montigny: Yes, like the Ottawa River.
|
| Senator Kenny: Would that fall under federal authority?
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| Mr. De Montigny: In most aspects, but it does not mean that
because it is federal no provincial statutes apply. Everything must
be put into context. These are tough questions to answer in the
abstract because it depends on what is at stake and what is the
nature and true object, as the courts would qualify it, of the
legislation. In general, I think you can say this.
|
| Senator Kenny: You have described at some length what
sounds to me to be a patchwork quilt that covers the country. I
know you have just given us a summary. My question is this: Will
Bill S-18 resolve the patchwork quilt we are seeing? Will
legislation like this, be constitutional and will it, by setting
standards, make it simpler for people to understand what their
water quality will be like?
|
| Mr. De Montigny: I cannot pronounce on the constitutionality
of Bill S-18 or any other bill. It is not part of my mandate. I
suppose officials of the justice department are not in the habit of
giving legal opinions to other bodies than the government. I can
say that, in practice, a particular statute could solve a problem. A
distinction must be made between the problem to be solved and
the constitutional authority to adopt that statute.
|
| That constitutional authority may come from different heads of
power, and it is not only true for water, it is true for any other bill
that is adopted. Many of the statutes currently on the books take
their authority or their constitutional underpinning from various
heads of power. The case of drinking water is not an exception. It
is not an exception that its validity could presumably come from
different heads of jurisdiction.
|
| Having said this, a particular statute - quite apart from how it
is justified, constitutionally speaking - could or could not solve a
problem depending on the nature and substance of that bill.
|
| Perhaps my colleague can go further in commenting on
Bill S-18 as such. I will not, for obvious reasons, go any further.
|
| Mr. Faggiolo: Regarding your question as to whether Bill S-18
would make things simpler by having national standards, it is a
matter of policy and you will be hearing from officials later next
week. At this point, we should defer to what officials from Health
Canada or the Canadian Food Inspection Agency may have to say
on that question.
|
| As to whether the bill would be constitutional, it depends,
ultimately, on how the courts will view the legislation. If they find
valid reasons to enact criminal legislation, then they would find
the statute to be valid.
|
| Senator Kenny: The core of my question is this: Are we
adding another layer to what is already a hugely complicated and
complex system of water regulation, or are we simplifying it with
this piece of legislation?
|
| Mr. De Montigny: We are not talking at the same level. The
Constitution itself provides for various heads of power under
which you can adopt different pieces of legislation, and any
legislation will not solve this problem. The Constitution will
remain as it is. They are empty boxes that you can fill with
different pieces of legislation. Whether this piece or any other
piece will make life easier for Canadians or officials or whoever,
that is a policy question I am not qualified to answer.
|
| Senator Kenny: I will ask someone else then.
|
| Mr. De Montigny: Maybe health officials next week will be in
a better position.
|
| The Chairman: You made a statement that once water crosses
a boundary it falls under federal authority. In the West we have
rivers across three provinces. Would that mean that a river leaving
Alberta and crossing into Saskatchewan, for example, would
automatically becomes federal, and Saskatchewan has no title?
|
| Mr. De Montigny: The river as such would then be under
federal jurisdiction. It is not at what particular point but the whole
flow that would come under federal jurisdiction.
|
| The Chairman: Any water withdrawn from the river, once it
crosses a boundary can be under almost exclusively federal
regulation, then?
|
| Mr. De Montigny: Exactly. It is like a pipeline. You must
distinguish between the powers that the provinces could exercise
as the appropriator or owner of the water as they do for lands.
Public provincial lands and water on these lands would still be
under the property of the provinces. That is one part of the
answer. If the province, for example, wanted to sell water flowing
in these rivers, it would be under their power to do so, subject, of
course, to federal legislation if it is an interprovincial river.
|
| You really must draw a clear distinction between the rights that
you can exercise as the owner of the natural resource and the
rights that you can exercise as a legislature, the right to enact
legislation, which are quite different.
|
| Senator Christensen: I do not have a legal mind, and your
presentation was certainly a legal one. Senator Kenny's questions
were the kind of questions that most Canadians want to know
about. We are looking at a patchwork here. We are dealing with a
food that we ingest every day probably more than any other food.
|
| When something goes wrong, instant attention is needed.
Having so many jurisdictions to deal with a given situation
becomes a problem because you cannot deal with it quickly and
you should be able to do so. Any legislation that we deal with
should improve any given issue. The sponsor of this bill will be
able to speak to it eloquently and has the legal mind behind it to
be able to deal with it.
|
| In 1996 and 1997, Bills C-78 and C-14 were put forward but
were not pursued. Can you elaborate on why they were not
successful?
|
| Mr. De Montigny: I will defer to my colleague on the second
half of your question. You are correct in saying that water
regulation involves a patchwork of different pieces of legislation,
regulations, and so on. However, the same is probably true of
most other fields of jurisdiction in the country. Canadians might
be surprised to realize just how intertwined and meshed the
regulations are regarding transport, environment and health. These
matters are all dealt with from different angles under provincial,
federal and municipal laws. This is the nature of Canada as a
federal country. On an abstract plain, there is nothing in particular
with water as opposed to other subject matters that I have
mentioned.
|
| Senator Christensen: In the minds of the public, and certainly
in the minds of individuals, it is at the core of our very
well-being.
|
| Mr. De Montigny: Yes. In some case it works well; in others it
does not. There is tightly knit cooperation between the three
levels.
|
| Senator Christensen: There are a lot of other things that we
cannot equate to this patchwork, but everyone knows what a glass
of water is. That it is germane to every human being. It is an
important issue and it is one we are trying to address.
|
| Mr. Faggiolo: With regard to Bill C-14 and its predecessor you
are right, they were tabled in the House and both died on the
Order Paper. Again, this is a question of policy. I will pass your
question on to the officials, who will be able to deal with that
matter when they appear before us.
|
| Senator Eyton: I was curious with your comment that in your
role you felt you could give legal opinions to the government but
it seemed to restrain your ability to give an opinion here. As far as
I know, we are an important part of the government.
|
| I have not practiced law for a long time, but I would have
thought that it is an easy stretch to include water within the ambit
you have described under the criminal law powers. If not water,
what else? Drinking water is a vital commodity for all of us. I do
not have a problem thinking that the jurisdiction reached that far.
|
| I want to pick up on Senator Christensen's comment about the
previous bills along the same line that were introduced in 1996
and 1997. Are you aware of any position or attitude of the
provincial governments relative to those attempts and, perhaps,
this attempt to regulate drinking water under the Food and Drugs
Act? Are you aware of any experience in the past or now?
|
| Mr. De Montigny: I will defer to my colleague on the second
part of your question.
|
| As to your first comment concerning the criminal law power
being relevant in dealing with the kinds of problems you are
addressing in this committee, on an abstract level you are
probably right, criminal law - at least in the way it has been
interpreted in the past - would certainly enable Parliament to
deal with a health problem that is perceived to be serious. From a
theoretical point of view, that is correct that a priori at least,
criminal law power would enable Parliament to deal with such a
problem.
|
| That is the legal answer. There is also the policy question,
namely, whether this is advisable to do. I cannot comment on that.
I will turn to Mr. Faggiolo with the province's attitude about this.
|
| Mr. Faggiolo: The provinces' attitude regarding this bill has
not been gauged to my knowledge. We are in contact with
provincial officials in respect to many matters at Health Canada.
Minister Rock has indicated in the House that the drinking water
guidelines were established with the cooperation of the provinces.
Again, the question you ask is one that is better answered by
officials. As I said with respect to Senator Christensen's question,
I will refer your question to Health Canada officials so that they
can deal with the matter when they are here next week.
|
| Senator Eyton: My question may have had something to do
indirectly with policy but it really concerned the attitude of the
provinces opposite the constitutional questions you were talking
about. To that degree it is not policy.
|
| Mr. De Montigny: The provinces have many levers, constitu
tionally speaking. In practice, the provinces have been the main
players in dealing with and regulating the water treatment plants
and the quality of water. They may have views about the fact that
the federal Parliament will step in and take some of this
responsibility itself. As a lawyer, I am not sure I am qualified to
pass any judgment on this.
|
| Senator Wiebe: My question relates back to a question posed
by Senator Kenny when he asked whether or not this bill
addresses the drinking water concerns that Canadians have. Your
response was that you could not comment on that because you
could only comment to government. I, like Senator Eyton, felt
that I was part of government. Furthermore, a senator wrote this
bill.
|
| First, where do we go to get the answer? Second, if our
understanding of the definition of "government" is wrong, what is
your definition of "government"?
|
| Mr. De Montigny: As a practice, the federal Department of
Justice has never given legal opinions, because of the solicitor/
client privilege, to any person or body other than the government
itself. By "government" I mean the executive branch of the
government. In a way I am already breaking with practice today
in just coming here and giving you this broad overview. As far as
I am aware, this has not been done frequently in the past. That is
all I can tell you.
|
| As to whether this bill or any other bill would address the
problems that you would want to have addressed, even if I had
views on that they would not be legal views. Policy judgments are
required here and I am not sure a lawyer is the best-qualified
person to answer that. Perhaps the health officials who are coming
next week will be in a better position to answer these questions.
|
| As much as I would like to - even if there was no problem in
terms of our relationship - I frankly do not think I could
comment on this because I do not have the expertise.
|
| Senator Christensen: From a strictly legal and legislative
point of view, what is your opinion of Bill S-18? What difficulties
do you see with it? Could you tell us how any changes could be
accomplished or how that bill will affect other bills? This is
strictly from a legislative and legal point of view.
|
| Mr. De Montigny: Frankly, I have not turned my mind to that
particular question. I have seen preliminary opinions in the
department on this bill. Again, for the reasons I gave you earlier, I
cannot share them with you. There has been no extensive review
of this bill pertaining to what it would mean in practice, how it
could interrelate with other pieces of legislation, or whether it is
constitutional or not. I can say some work has been done but not
extensively.
|
| Senator Christensen: Of whom do we ask these questions?
|
| Mr. De Montigny: You have your own research assistants. The
Library of Parliament staff are qualified to deal with this. These
are the people you can turn to.
|
| The Chairman: Something is missing from your examples. As
an environment committee, we have come across examples where
the federal government appears to have much more control over
inland fisheries and streams where fish live. Are you telling me
we have control over the kind of water fish drink but not over the
kind of water that people drink?
|
| Mr. De Montigny: You are partially right. Parliament has
jurisdiction as such on fisheries and everything relating to
fisheries, including the quality of water.
|
| There was a case around 1981 that looked at an instance of
industrial pollution in a stream of water containing fish which fish
were regulated by a federal statute. The federal government was
allowed to intervene because of the implications on fish and on
the industry.
|
| You may draw conclusions about this, but there is a clear
distinction because fishery control is an explicit power in the
Constitution, whereas water control as such is not a subject matter
described or allocated in the Constitution. That relates back to my
earlier comment that both levels of government have levers and
powers to deal with various aspects of water depending on which
heads of power they are trying to legislate.
|
| The Chairman: That leads to some interesting conclusions
that we could make, but I will turn it over to Senator Grafstein.
|
| Senator Grafstein: Thank you for dealing with my bill so
expeditiously. Since it was introduced in March, the situation has
not improved. Rather, it has become worse in terms of public
health and public safety as it emanates from our drinking systems
right across the country from one coast to the other. This summer
dozens of boiled-water advisories were issued right across the
country. There is a clear and present danger to public health.
|
| That was the reason that I became interested in this bill. We
heard in our caucuses and in the corridors that a severe, clear and
present danger to health exists, to our dismay, in every region of
this country and that could lead to disastrous circumstances,
particularly in the Aboriginal communities. I know that claim is
pretty well anecdotal but it is being supported by independent
evidence.
|
| I start with that as a proposition. This obviously brings the
federal government's responsibilities to bear under "peace, order
and good government" to face this clear and present danger to
public health, which exists right across the country although with
different causes. If this were a regional problem, we would not be
here. That might be helpful to you and your officials as you wend
your way through this issue.
|
| I am not finished yet but I have so far read 35 different pieces
of federal legislation that regulate water in some manner of
speaking. We regulate bottled water, packaged ice, water on buses
and trains and in parks. The federal government is indeed
involved in the regulation of water.
|
| In addition, I have since discovered that the federal government
is directly involved in setting warning standards about public
health as it relates to drinking water. In my view, that puts senior
officials in Ottawa in a serious position of public responsibility.
Once they have responsibility for standards - although not
criminal standards - then the public health officials in Ottawa
could face personal liability if they have some notice or some
information about water in any region of the country and they fail
to bring to the attention of citizens. That is a serious problem for
public health officials in terms of public responsibility. They
cannot simply walk away from that.
|
| Having said that, I will deal with the narrow subject of this
particular evidence. In 1996 your department drew a conclusion.
We have not seen that opinion. I am sympathetic to Senator
Wiebe and other senators in their comments. I understand that
your role is to act as a lawyer to the department. You have a
solicitor/client relationship with the department, with the govern
ment. We in the Senate have a responsibility to determine whether
your advice is adequate. We can also seek independent advice.
That is the role of Parliament. We must decide on our own
whether we think this bill is constitutional, but you must give us
some help. I will try to constrain my questions to areas where I
think you can give help.
|
| You have already given an opinion on this. You and your
department gave an opinion to the Department of Health, or
whoever was responsible, for the Drinking Water Material Safety
bill to which Senator Christensen referred. You have given
evidence that the Drinking Water Material Safety bill, Bill C-16,
died on the Order Paper. It was re-introduced in October 1997 but
again died on the Order Paper because of an election. Your
department already gave an opinion that the proposed Drinking
Water Material Safety Act was constitutional. Otherwise, the
government could not have introduced the bill; it is a condition
precedent.
|
| We do have indirect support for the fact that in the safety of
drinking water materials - which is, in fact, the substance of this
bill - there is no difference. This is the pith and substance; the
formula is the same. You have essentially given an opinion
already and you have said it is constitutionally valid. Otherwise
Parliament could not have dealt with the previous bill. Is that a
fair statement?
|
| Mr. De Montigny: I was not in the department at the time. I
am not aware of that opinion.
|
| Senator Grafstein: Do not waste our time. Do not have the
department wasting the Senate's time, at a time in this country
when Senate time will be very valuable. Please find out from your
officials whether they gave an opinion on that bill - and I
believe they must have - and tell us whether the pith and
substance of that bill was the same as this particular bill.
|
| Mr. De Montigny: I could probably say in all fairness that, if a
bill was introduced in Parliament, you are right, the officials
would have vetted it from a constitutional point of view.
|
| Senator Grafstein: Not vetted, but an opinion had to be given
from your department to the government agency responsible
indicating that that bill was valid. It is not a view; it is an opinion.
|
| Mr. De Montigny: Yes.
|
| Senator Grafstein: We do have an internal solicitor-client
opinion. I am saying that, in pith and substance, there is no
difference between this bill and that bill. When the policy people
come here, let them differentiate between the two in terms of pith
and substance so we do not waste this time to go on a frolic of our
own as to whether it may or may not be constitutional.
|
| Let me give you another narrow question, and you can ask your
officials to deal with this. Is water a food, legally?
|
| Mr. De Montigny: Well, it depends on the definition of
"food".
|
| Senator Grafstein: Is water a food legally?
|
| Mr. De Montigny: At the moment?
|
| Senator Grafstein: Yes.
|
| Mr. Faggiolo: Senator Grafstein, I think the answer can be
found by reading the definition of "food" in the Food and Drugs
Act.
|
| Senator Grafstein: That is not my question. I am asking
legally, not talking about statute, but legally, common law,
because your opinion is based not only on statutory law but
common law. Is drinking water a food? I am about to ingest this.
Is that a food?
|
| Mr. De Montigny: I do not think there is any legal answer to
that question. It depends how you define "food," and the
definition could be whatever you want it to be in a statute. I do
not think there is one from a strict legal point of view.
|
| Senator Mahovlich: A watermelon is over 90 per cent water.
Food is water.
|
| Mr. De Montigny: You could, in a statute, if you wanted to,
exclude water from being "food." It is just a question of legal
definition.
|
| Senator Grafstein: Could water be included?
|
| Mr. De Montigny: Yes.
|
| Senator Grafstein: That is really my question. There is no
barrier to including water as food.
|
| Mr. De Montigny: No.
|
| Senator Grafstein: In fact, we already set standards for this
food federally. The only difference between this bill and the
federal practice is that I am taking those standards and turning
them into quasi-criminal law. This is in no way, shape or form to
displace existing provincial legislation. When we talk about dual
aspect, there is nothing to prevent the federal government
legislating on top of everyone else and setting higher standards.
|
| Mr. De Montigny: Again, it is for the court to decide whether
the true nature or the pith and substance of this legislation or
Bill S-18 would be health prevention or dealing with health risks.
|
| Senator Grafstein: Let us come at it backwards. If I decided,
intentionally, tomorrow to contaminate a water supply in one
region, would the criminal aspect apply?
|
| Mr. De Montigny: Certainly the federal Parliament, as I
indicated, could deal with prevention and the regulations of
drinking water from a criminal point of view.
|
| Senator Grafstein: In fact, the criminal power is based on
preventative justice to say, "Do not contaminate water."
|
| Mr. De Montigny: Yes. The only limit I would add to what I
have said previously with respect to the criminal law power is that
there is a fine line you must be careful not to overstep. Criminal
law is basically meant to prohibit and sanction. If you are going
too far into regulating as opposed to prohibiting, you may have a
problem constitutionally.
|
| Senator Grafstein: Is that not the very essence? At the end of
the day, the criminal power is preventative justice, but does the
federal government not already do that under the Food and Drugs
Act? It takes food and establishes preventative justice by labelling
and warning and taking food off the shelves. We already do that,
do we not?
|
| Mr. De Montigny: Sure.
|
| The Chairman: Thank you, witnesses, for a most interesting
morning. As you mentioned a number of times during your
evidence, you will talk to officials. Next Tuesday at 5:30 we will
be talking to Health Canada and the Canadian Food Inspection
Agency. You are welcome back, because the story gets more
interesting as time goes on. Thank you again for appearing.
|
| The committee adjourned.
|