An Act to amend the Canada Transportation Act and the Railway Safety Act and to make consequential amendments to other Acts

This bill was last introduced in the 39th Parliament, 1st Session, which ended in October 2007.

Sponsor

Lawrence Cannon  Conservative

Status

This bill has received Royal Assent and is now law.

Summary

This is from the published bill. The Library of Parliament often publishes better independent summaries.

This enactment amends the Canada Transportation Act. Certain amendments apply to all modes of transportation, including amendments that clarify the national transportation policy and the operation of the Competition Act in the transportation sector, change the number of members of the Canadian Transportation Agency, create a mediation process for transportation matters, modify requirements regarding the provision of information to the Minister of Transport and modify and extend provisions regarding mergers and acquisitions of air transportation undertakings to all transportation undertakings.
It amends the Act with respect to the air transportation sector, in particular, in relation to complaints processes, the advertising of prices for air services and the disclosure of terms and conditions of carriage.
The enactment also makes several amendments with respect to the railway transportation sector. It creates a mechanism for dealing with complaints concerning noise and vibration resulting from the construction or operation of railways and provisions for dealing with the transfer and discontinuance of operation of railway lines. It also establishes a mechanism for resolving disputes between public passenger service providers and railway companies regarding the use of railway company equipment and facilities.
The enactment also amends the Railway Safety Act to create provisions for the appointment of police constables with respect to railway companies and procedures for dealing with complaints concerning them.
In addition, it contains transitional provisions and consequential amendments.

Elsewhere

All sorts of information on this bill is available at LEGISinfo, an excellent resource from the Library of Parliament. You can also read the full text of the bill.

Votes

June 14, 2007 Passed That the amendments made by the Senate to Bill C-11, An Act to amend the Canada Transportation Act and the Railway Safety Act and to make consequential amendments to other Acts, be now read a second time and concurred in.
Feb. 21, 2007 Failed That Bill C-11 be amended by deleting Clause 5.
Feb. 21, 2007 Failed That Bill C-11 be amended by deleting Clause 3.

October 5th, 2006 / 3:55 p.m.
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NDP

Peter Julian NDP Burnaby—New Westminster, BC

Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.

Thank you for coming and for your presentation. I think we've all heard your comment around ground rents, but I see them as an issue separate from the issue of Bill C-11 itself. But those comments were valuable, and I think that issues is something we, as a transport committee, could certainly look into in the coming weeks.

I'd like to come back to Bill C-11, because, like my colleagues, I have some concerns about your comments both around the issue of the clarity of air fares and the air travel complaints commissioner. You seem to indicate that, within your association, there are two points of view on the regulation of advertising around air fares. Would that be fair to say? Some of the carriers, some of your members, support that idea.

October 5th, 2006 / 3:40 p.m.
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Liberal

David McGuinty Liberal Ottawa South, ON

Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

Mr. Gaspar, it's good to see you. Thanks for coming in and thanks for your concise and on-the-mark presentation. It's always helpful for me and my colleagues, I'm sure, to hear the industry address the most salient parts of a bill that affects their businesses and their concerns.

I want to put to you two questions I put to the Canadian Transportation Agency yesterday. They deal with Bill C-11. In my view, I didn't get a satisfactory answer to either question. I confirmed yesterday with the Transportation Agency that the minister would be empowered under this bill to instruct the CTA to determine airline airfare clarity regulations--clarity regulations I think is the specific wording in the bill--and when they would be deemed to be necessary. I asked the CTA what might constitute necessary. Would it be a certain amount of evidence, a trend, a particular abuse, an incident of some kind? They were not able to answer. So I put that to you, from an airline perspective.

. I know you spoke moments ago about $99 fares and let's work on the sustainability of $99 fares rather than the sustainability and clarity of advertising. For a lot of Canadians, I think they are confused. For a consumer who travels and for my colleagues and their families who travel, we can sometimes be very misled by advertising. Can I put that question to you, first of all, on clarity regulations? In your mind, when might they be deemed to be necessary?

October 5th, 2006 / 3:30 p.m.
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Fred Gaspar Vice-President, Policy and Strategic Planning, Air Transport Association of Canada

Thank you very much.

Mr. Chairman and honourable members, good afternoon. Thank you for inviting me here this afternoon to speak with you on the matter of Bill C-11.

Let me first take a few moments to familiarize you with our organization. The Air Transport Association of Canada was founded in Ottawa in 1934 as the national voice of Canada's fledgling aerospace and aviation industry. ATAC today is composed of a membership of over 200 companies of all sizes that collectively account for over 95% of commercial aviation revenues in Canada. We would like to address this committee, however, from the passenger's perspective, for it is the passenger's interests that ought to be at the heart of everything we do.

In Bill C-11 we see a bill that ostensibly deals with many issues related to passengers' concerns: air travel complaints, reviewing mergers and acquisitions, airfare advertising, and the use of airline data and passenger information. The sad reality, however, is that none of these measures actually address any of the real issues of concern to our passengers. You know yourselves what those are. You travel by air more than most Canadians. You know that what passengers want more than anything else from their air travel experience is safety, efficiency, and the right balance in the price and service mix. So that is the proper perspective from which to view these measures.

Indeed, it is a perspective that casts this bill in a less than flattering light, not for what it addresses, but for what it does not. It purports to introduce measures that are friendly to consumers, but does not actually help to lower costs, does not help to improve efficiency, and does not help to improve value.

For more than a few years now, ATAC and its members have been pleading with successive governments on behalf of our passengers to reduce the crippling effect of government ground rents due by passengers at airports. Established in the mid-1990s in conjunction with the development of airports, these rents have contributed approximately $300 million annually, and $2 billion since their inception, to general government coffers. The total contribution has already exceeded the net worth of those facilities at the time of their transfer, which was approximately $1.5 billion, a figure, by the way, which in no way accounted for the significant upgrades to those facilities, since most of them were practically falling apart.

Transferring the airports allowed the government to offload that cost to the local authorities, which recouped the investment costs from the users, namely, airlines and passengers. In short, it is a misnomer to label these payments as rent. They are actually a simple but brutal tax on flying, and they make the system about $300 million a year more expensive than it needs to be or ought to be. We respectfully submit that if Parliament is truly interested in pursuing the best interests of passengers, it should first and foremost occupy itself with this pressing matter.

Still, we are presented with a series of measures in this bill that require our scrutiny. It is probably fair to say that the most high profile of these measures is the proposal to fold the activities of the air travel complaints commissioner into those of the broader Canadian Transportation Agency mandate. From our perspective, this is a sensible move, insofar as the existence of that office represented little actual value for taxpayers' money. This has been an institution that stands out from other sectors in its purpose and role. There is no complaints commissioner for other modes of transportation, nor is there such an office for practically any other sector of the economy. The reason is self-evident. Clearly, there can be no better arbiter of the consumer interest than a healthy and highly competitive aviation sector.

Let's recall that when the office was created, it was in an era of much hand-wringing about the future state of competition in this industry. Air Canada had just completed its acquisition of Canadian Airlines in 2000, and many observers, including many parliamentarians at the time, expressed significant concerns about Air Canada's potential dominance in the market.

Despite this industry's assertions at the time that the marketplace would in fact provide the appropriate level of service and competition demanded by consumers, the office was established, among a series of other measures, in an attempt to create by legislation a regulatory framework that would protect consumer interests in the perceived absence of competition. But as we said it would, the marketplace did in fact return to a level of providing competitive service that responded to the demands of consumers. Anyone doubting that assertion need look no further than the fact that WestJet's market share today, for example, is at approximately 40%, higher than any level previously achieved by Canadian Airlines.

While there will always be some level of service disruption in our industry from time to time, we respectfully submit that a careful analysis of the role and value of the complaints commissioner since the position has existed clearly demonstrates that a healthy and competitive marketplace, and not another layer of government bureaucracy, can best respond to the need of consumers.

Similarly, the proposed authority granted to the minister to review mergers and acquisitions in all sectors of transportation is another example of a legislative tool introduced during the hysteria of 1999-2000 that has little, if any, practical value for passengers. Unlike the previous measure, however, this one actually does offer very real harm to the interests of passengers.

Nearly all stakeholders in commercial aviation, from consumer groups to infrastructure service providers to airlines, support lowering the barriers to investment in this sector.

We all recognize that ours is a very highly capital-intensive business, with large start-up and operational costs that are required to support, ultimately, a low-yield business climate. If a healthy, competitive aviation sector is the goal, why put in place regulations that cast doubt on Canada's openness to investment in this sector?

Moreover, this authority vested in the minister runs counter to the stated principles of the CTA, including those that say that “competition and market forces are, whenever possible, the prime agents in providing viable and effective transportation services”.

As with the previous measure discussed, since this was a tool introduced to deal with a perceived problem that never materialized, parliamentarians should rightly be asking themselves: what is this for and what does it do for consumers?

As to the matter of empowering the minister to regulate airfares, we encourage parliamentarians to remember where this came from and to ask themselves what value it represents to passengers. Indeed, some of our own members may tell you it has some value. Carriers who primarily distribute their tickets through provincially regulated tour operators and travel agencies, for instance, may see some value in a federal standard that would apply throughout Canada, while others who market their services directly to consumers question the need for this measure in the first place.

Certainly we are all united by the common interest of ensuring that consumers are fully and directly informed as to the makeup of their ticket cost. ATAC's concern with this proposal in regulating airfares advertising simply rests with the potential for abuse. As you well know, the final average cost of a discounted airline ticket in this country is comprised of anywhere between 25% and 40% in additional various government and government-created monopolies' taxes, fees, and charges. I don't think it would be fair to consumers in any way to hide information from them as to who is getting their travel dollar. They have a right to know.

While we take no specific view as to the propriety of this measure, we question the focus on disclosing the full price when the real focus should be on helping to reduce it. After all, shouldn't we be more concerned with making a $99 fare to Toronto more sustainable in the long run than wringing our hands about whether or not that $99 fare includes all the various government fees and charges?

In a similar vein, this proposal also purports to empower consumers by giving the CTA the authority to regulate the display of its terms and conditions for international services on the carriers' websites. We would certainly agree with the notion of ensuring that consumers are fully informed of the terms of carriage, which is why we clearly state the restrictions applicable on any ticket prior to the completion of a sale. We would caution the committee, however, to seek clarification on the meaning of this measure.

As some members may know, the full tariff is a legal contract consisting of thousands of lines of detailed text, spelling out every travel eventuality and arrangement known. The full text of a tariff rule can run over a hundred pages. We respectfully submit that it is in keeping with the spirit of the legislation to clarify this clause in order to provide consumers with practical and clear information as to the terms of carriage, rather than a requirement to publish the full text of the tariff itself.

As to the matter of sharing aviation data between government agencies, our industry takes no specific view as to the merits of these provisions. This is a broader social question, which is not limited to the commercial interests of airline service providers. From our members' perspective, our limited concern rests with the integrity of that data, which rightfully belongs to our passengers. We urge government to proceed cautiously when sharing data information and to do so only to the extent necessary, and to ensure the integrity of our databases by limiting any data-fishing exercises.

Finally--and to be fair--this legislation proposes a few housekeeping measures, which the industry can support. It contains clauses to require that persons acquiring an air service from another licensee must themselves hold an unsuspended licence. It exempts operators of seasonal service from the obligations of providing notice when suspending a service, for obvious reasons. And several other sections are also amended to provide the CTA with greater flexibility in making its determinations on a number of regulatory matters. The industry, by and large, supports these measures in principle.

So while this legislation is not entirely without merit, I return to my opening statement about assessing the bill from the passengers' perspective. If we can agree, more than anything, that passengers want safety, efficiency, and value in their travel experience, we have to ask ourselves what, if anything, this bill accomplishes from that perspective. Sadly, the answer is very little.

Ultimately, motherhood statements about airfare advertising rules, air travel complaints, and reviewing mergers and acquisitions do nothing to lower the costs at airports or improve the travel experience for passengers.

As some parliamentarians may recall, this bill is the third incarnation of this legislation. For some strange reason, Transport Canada keeps focusing on these measures that offer words in place of action to actually address the cost structure of this industry and the interests of passengers.

With that, I can only conclude by saying that the aviation industry in Canada is disappointed in this legislation but looks forward to discussing issues of meaningful reform, including those contained in the Canada Airports Act. Also, we hope to finally see some meaningful airport rent reductions for our industry and passengers.

Thank you. I look forward to your questions.

October 5th, 2006 / 3:30 p.m.
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Conservative

The Chair Conservative Merv Tweed

Good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to meeting number 17 of the Standing Committee on Transport, Infrastructure and Communities.

Our order of reference from September 21 is Bill C-11, an act to amend the Canada Transportation Act and the Railway Safety Act and to make consequential amendments to other acts.

Today we're joined by Mr. Fred Gaspar of the Air Transport Association of Canada.

I think we have a quorum. I know we have another set of witnesses coming forward, so I will ask you to proceed.

October 3rd, 2006 / 4:45 p.m.
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NDP

Peter Julian NDP Burnaby—New Westminster, BC

If we look at this, the additional responsibility, and all of the other additional responsibilities we've discussed for Bill C-11—you mentioned earlier that you deal with about 3,800 cases annually—what would be your forecast in terms of having these new powers? What would be the number of cases that you may handle?

October 3rd, 2006 / 3:50 p.m.
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Bloc

Mario Laframboise Bloc Argenteuil—Papineau—Mirabel, QC

Bill C-11 will create more work for you. Do you think that it will create problems?

October 3rd, 2006 / 3:30 p.m.
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Gilles Dufault Acting chairman, Canadian Transportation Agency

Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

Mr. Chairman, committee members, my name is Gilles Dufault and I have been the Acting Chairman of the Canadian Transportation Agency since July 1st of this year. It is my pleasure to be with you here this afternoon to answer any questions that committee members might have with respect to Bill C-11. I am accompanied today by Mr. Seymour Isenberg and Ms. Joan MacDonald, respectively Director General of Rail and Marine Transportation and Director General of Air and Accessible Transportation.

First of all, I would like to take a few minutes to describe our organization and its responsibilities. Before I begin, it is worthwhile to point out that the current Canadian Transportation Agency is actually Canada's oldest administrative tribunal, one whose mandate and fields of jurisdiction have evolved along with the changes that have taken place in the country's transportation system.

October 3rd, 2006 / 3:30 p.m.
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Conservative

The Chair Conservative Merv Tweed

Thank you, and good afternoon everyone.

This is meeting 16 of the Standing Committee on Transport, Infrastructure and Communities. Following the orders of the day, we're here to deal with Bill C-11, an act to amend the Canada Transportation Act and the Railway Safety Act and to make consequential amendments to other Acts.

Joining us today are Gilles Dufault, Joan MacDonald, and Seymour Isenberg from the Canadian Transportation Agency.

As we are right on schedule, I would ask that you make your opening presentation, and the committee will then have some questions for you following that.

Mr. Dufault, the floor is yours.

September 26th, 2006 / 4:35 p.m.
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Director General, Surface Transportation Policy, Department of Transport

Helena Borges

I am going to answer you in English.

Currently the process applies to the railway discontinuing operations or abandoning the railway line. Once the railway discontinues operations—it will no longer offer a freight service—it has to offer the line up for sale to another private entity, for example, a short line. If there are no takers, it currently has to go through the process of offering the line to the levels of government. The federal government receives an offer if the line crosses municipal jurisdictions or a first nations reserve; then it goes to the provincial government, and subsequently to the municipal government. Each level of government has 30 days to decide whether or not it wishes to acquire that corridor for any purpose that the municipality or the level of government would want.

If there are no takers and the municipality, which has the last offer, does not take the line for urban transit purposes, a bicycle path, or whatever, then the railway has the authority to discontinue it. Then it becomes a piece of property like any other that can be sold, as with any piece of property. It is no longer under the process, because it has already followed the thorough discontinuance process.

What we are adding through Bill C-11 is one intermediate step between the province and the municipalities for urban transit authorities that cross multiple jurisdictions—for example, West Coast Express or TransLink in B.C., AMT in Montreal, GO Transit in Toronto. Where they serve multiple municipalities, they would be dependent on getting all the municipalities together to agree to buy that line for them. This allows them, right after the province—because they are provincial creatures—to put in an offer themselves and buy that whole corridor for their urban transit purposes. It in fact makes the process stronger and preserves more of these corridors for potential urban transit or other community uses.

September 26th, 2006 / 4:20 p.m.
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NDP

Peter Julian NDP Burnaby—New Westminster, BC

My final question is again on Bill C-11.

In the merger review provisions there is an indication that public interest is being considered in the merger reviews, but I have not seen any specific recommendation or specific reference to how the public might be involved in the merger review process. It seems to be set by the minister. What provisions could be made, or what provisions exist--perhaps i've missed them--that actually allow the public to get involved, particularly when we're talking about air traffic in regions of the country where a merger could have fairly significant repercussions?

September 26th, 2006 / 4:15 p.m.
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NDP

Peter Julian NDP Burnaby—New Westminster, BC

Thank you.

I have two questions specifically on Bill C-11. You mentioned in your opening remarks that the pilot project around air traffic complaints raised against the airlines has proven successful. How did you determine that success? What level of complaints are we talking about? How were they dealt with? How were the actual passengers themselves who raised the concerns questioned in terms of whether or not they felt the process had been a valid one? What information or documentation is available to us?

This is very relevant given the changes in Bill C-11, and some concerns should have been raised as to whether or not this is the best approach to take in terms of air traffic complaints.

September 26th, 2006 / 3:55 p.m.
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Liberal

David McGuinty Liberal Ottawa South, ON

Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. Congratulations on your re-election.

Mr. Minister, welcome to the committee. It's good to see you again. Thank you for coming to speak on Bill C-11.

Let me thank you as well for your generous comments in the House last week, where you admitted that most of the heavy lifting on Bill C-11 and in fact, for that matter, most of your government's transportation agenda was done by the previous government, by the department, and by transportation stakeholders who have been working on this for over a decade. I appreciate your largesse in that regard.

I'd like to ask you two specific questions, and I want to know how the bill deals with both questions, if I could.

The first has to do with the safety of our airports. You've heard about the incident in Montreal earlier this month; a journalist was able to penetrate six or seven times on the periphery of Trudeau airport. Without identification, he was able to gain access without being stopped. With all due respect, Minister, your comments on this matter have been vague. They have been inconclusive. Canadians are very worried about this. It was compounded today by media reports, Mr. Chairman, about members of criminal organizations, including the Hell's Angels, intimidating security officers at our airports in order to operate--we take from the article--their flourishing drug trade.

How is this bill specifically going to deal with this question, in the first instance, of airport security?

September 26th, 2006 / 3:45 p.m.
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Conservative

Lawrence Cannon Conservative Pontiac, QC

The third component will deal with shipper protection provisions. Consultations are under way with shippers and the railways on potential changes to those provisions. The intent is to table a bill later this fall.

Allow me to highlight some of the amendments contained in Bill C-11.

Section 5 of the act contains the national transportation policy declaration, which provides a general context for the legislation. You will recall that, in its report, the Canada Transportation Act review panel recommended that the policy statement be updated. Although the underlying principles are well accepted, the panel agreed with many stakeholders who said the statement is too long and too confusing. Furthermore, the statement needs to be updated to add principles related to the environment and security.

The act sets out the powers and responsibilities of the Canadian Transportation Agency. Amendments contained in Bill C-11 will affect the agency's role and structure. There will be a reduction in the number of full-time members, from seven to five, and members will be required to reside in the national capital region. This is expected to reduce its administrative costs without affecting the efficiency and the effectiveness of the agency.

Rather than relying solely on regulatory remedies, the CTA review panel supported the use of alternative dispute resolution mechanisms that emphasized negotiated solutions to disputes between carriers and their customers. Such approaches are often quicker, less costly, less confrontational, and more effective than regulatory measures.

In June 2000, the agency launched a pilot project based on mediation. This has proven quite successful. Bill C-11 will give the agency formal authority to engage in mediation on demand with respect to matters under its jurisdiction.

Bill C-11 also introduces a new merger review process that extends to all transportation carriers and service providers under federal jurisdiction, notably in the areas of air, rail, marine, buses, trucks, airports, and marine ports. This process would build on the strengths of the existing merger review process currently in place for the airlines.

Bill C-11 contains a number of important provisions related to air travel. In this regard, I want to emphasize that this government is committed to promoting competition in the air transportation sector and offering increased consumer choice to the travelling public. It is my intention to set out a more comprehensive air policy later on.

The bill contains several measures to enhance consumer protection. Among these is the obligation for carriers to display their terms and conditions of carriage more prominently at their business offices and on their Internet sites. Consumers are entitled to know the terms and conditions of the air service before they book a flight, to help them make informed travel choices. Amendments also help to ensure that consumers obtain fair airfare advertising that is clear, transparent, and not misleading.

Mr. Chairman, allow me to expand briefly on this last element: air fare advertising.

Good information helps Canadians make informed choices. Consumers want to be able to compare different airlines, advertised prices and to know, upfront, how much they will pay for air services when setting out to purchase airline tickets. Carriers are realizing this, and it is reflected in their changing practices today. Consumers are also becoming smarter as evidenced in the increasing use of the Internet for ticket sales.

However, concerns have been raised by some consumers that price advertisements, whether in newspapers or on Internet sites, still do not contain complete or clear pricing information. For that reason, the amendment proposed in the bill would give the minister, where required, the power to authorize the making of regulations respecting transparency in the advertising of prices of air services, regardless of the medium used.

The amendments provide guidance regarding what types of costs should be included in the base price of an airfare and what costs may be advertised separately. The regulations, should they become necessary, would be enforced by the agency and would ensure that the standards would be consistently applied across the industry.

The Office of the Air Travel Complaints Commissioner was created, you'll recall, in 2000 as part of a specific amendment to the act. It has served a useful function during the transition period of the last few years; however, the complaints function has become integrated into the regular work of the agency. With changes in the marketplace since 2000 and more competition, especially from low-cost carriers, the number of complaints against Air Canada and other carriers has stabilized to what we would call a normal level, approximately consistent with their market share. In addition, complaints now increasingly relate to matters that fall within the core functions of the agency.

Since the fall of 2004 the function of the commissioner has been entrenched in the agency through the implementation of the air travel complaints program. The agency has been able to continue to adequately respond to consumers' complaints in an informal manner and consistent with its ongoing mandate. The proposed amendments would therefore make permanent and transparent the complaints resolution function of the agency by integrating this function into the regular operations of the agency.

Bill C-11 also addresses the need of publicly funded passenger rail services. It will implement a more effective mechanism to resolve disputes during contract negotiations between passenger service providers and the freight railways.

VIA Rail, commuter rail authorities and other publicly funded passenger rail operators prefer to conclude commercial agreements with infrastructure owners. If negotiations prove unsuccessful, publicly funded passenger rail service providers will be allowed to seek adjudication from the agency on the terms and conditions of operations on federal rail lines, including access fees and charges for services provided by the railways. Adjudication will be precluded for existing commercial contracts except for resolving train priority issues under the existing VIA Rail agreements.

In addition, the line transfer and abandonment provisions will be extended to include urban corridors, passenger stations, and urban transit authorities.

I want to emphasize that the proposed improvements to the rail passenger provisions are strongly endorsed by the commuter rail operators in Vancouver, Toronto, and Montreal. They would like to see these changes implemented as soon as possible.

Bill C-11 also addresses the issue of railway noise. The agency used to consider complaints about noise from railway operations. However, in December 2000 the Federal Court of Appeal ruled that the agency lacked jurisdiction to hear noise complaints. Therefore, no federal regulatory body is presently mandated to regulate railway noise. Bill C-11 will amend the act to require that railways not cause unreasonable noise when constructing or operating a railway, taking into consideration the requirements of railway operations and the interests of affected communities. As well, the agency would be granted authority to resolve noise complaints if a voluntary settlement cannot be reached between the parties. The noise provisions have strong support from interested parties, including a number of members of Parliament.

Bill C-11 contains a provision that will enable the Minister of Transport to make a one-time-only request to the agency to adjust the revenue caps for grain movements to reflect current maintenance costs of hopper cars. This will provide for an adjustment that is not dependent upon a disposal. This amendment is widely supported by western Canadian grain producers.

Many of you may be curious about how Bill C-11 amends the Railway Safety Act. Let me explain in a couple of seconds. Under Bill C-11 the CTA is being amended to repeal the provisions that grant police powers to railway companies and to incorporate comparable provisions in the Railway Safety Act. In addition, amendments to the Railway Safety Act will require that the railways establish an independent review mechanism for responding to public complaints against railway police. The review mechanism will be filed with the minister for approval.

Before I close, Mr. Chairman, I would like to flag one other provision. Bill C-11 introduces a new provision that authorizes the transport minister to enter into an agreement with a provincial authority under which the provincial authority would regulate a railway in the same manner as the minister. This is aimed at facilitating the introduction of expanded O-Train service in Ottawa, which falls under federal jurisdiction and is therefore subject to federal safety regulations.

The city plans to convert the existing rail corridor into a dedicated two-track electrified streetcar-type light-rail train (LRT). However, since LRT typically operates with different control systems and different braking characteristics, LRT equipment and operations do not need the majority of the rules, regulations and standards currently set out pursuant to the Railway Safety Act.

A tentative agreement has been reached with the city and the province under which the city would assume all applicable responsibilities for the Ottawa LRT system.

Mr. Chairman, we believe these amendments will greatly improve the CTA and benefit air travellers and communities across the country, urban transit providers, grain producers, and the environment.

Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman and members of the committee.

September 26th, 2006 / 3:45 p.m.
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Conservative

The Chair Conservative Merv Tweed

Welcome back, everybody. I do want to thank you for the opportunity to serve as your chair again, I welcome Mark to our committee, and I look forward to sharing some of the highlights.

Pursuant to the order of reference of Thursday, September 21, 2006, Bill C-11, an act to amend the Canada Transportation Act and the Railway Safety Act and to make consequential amendments to other acts, we are fortunate today to have the minister joining us. I would ask the minister to take the floor and make his presentation.

Mr. Cannon, please.

September 26th, 2006 / 3:45 p.m.
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Pontiac Québec

Conservative

Lawrence Cannon ConservativeMinister of Transport

Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.

First of all, I wish to extend my congratulations on the exceptional choice that the members have made to reconfigure, or re-elect, or push you into the position of chair. I want to congratulate also the two vice-chairs.

I'm accompanied by Helena Borges, who is the director general of surface transportation policy, and Brigita Gravitis-Beck, who is director general of air policy.

I appreciate the opportunity to address the members of the committee. I would like to open by reiterating the government's overall approach to amending the Canada Transportation Act. The act is a legislative framework for economic activities related to air and rail transportation in Canada and covers a number of general matters such as the role and responsibility of the Canadian Transportation Agency.

The act, which came into effect in 1996, included a requirement for a statutory review. The panel was appointed in June 2000 and undertook extensive consultations across Canada before submitting its report in June 2001.

In the five years since that review, amendments to the legislation have been introduced through bills tabled in Parliament twice: Bill C-26, in 2003; and Bill C-44, in 2005. Both of these bills died on the order paper.

The government recognizes that there have been extensive consultations and consensus-building with stakeholders over this, and that there was considerable support for many of the provisions that were in Bill C-44.

Stakeholders are anxious for the government to move forward with improvements to the CTA. The government wishes to proceed with CTA amendments on which there is consensus using the former Bill C-44 as the base, with appropriate revisions.

In order to expedite passage of the amendments, the government has decided to split C-44 into three more manageable components. As you know, Mr. Chairman, Bill C-3, an Act respecting international bridges and tunnels and making a consequential amendment to another act, is presently before the Senate.

Bill C-11 is the second component and deals with the air provisions, rail passenger provisions, railway noise, the grain revenue cap as well as a number of general provisions.