Mr. Chair, members of Parliament, thank you for inviting us to share with you some comments on Bill S-5, the Financial System Review Act.
My name is David Phillips, and I'm president and CEO of Credit Union Central of Canada, also known as Canadian Central. Canadian Central is the national trade association for its member organizations, and through them, 368 Canadian credit unions. Credit unions are full-service cooperative financial institutions that are owned by their member customers.
Canada's credit unions operate a branch network with more than 1,700 locations. These branches serve more than five million members and employ almost 26,000 people across Canada. Almost one-quarter of credit union locations serve small communities where they are the only financial services supplier in terms of bricks-and-mortar presence in that community.
Credit unions in Canada are provincially regulated financial institutions. However, Canadian Central is incorporated as an association under the Cooperative Credit Associations Act. As such, Canadian Central is itself a federal financial institution with a corporate charter that is extended by this legislation. Further, all of our provincial central members have opted to be regulated under the Cooperative Credit Associations Act.
In 2010 the credit union system welcomed provisions in the Jobs and Economic Growth Act that made amendments to the Bank Act to allow for the establishment of federal credit unions. We are currently providing input to the Department of Finance in connection with regulations that would allow credit unions the opportunity to operate a federal charter under the Bank Act.
From the perspective of credit union centrals and potential federal credit unions, we have an interest in Bill S-5. There are three matters we wish to address in connection with the bill.
First, we want to indicate our support for the proposed amendments to the Canadian Payments Act that will allow a federal credit union to participate in the governance of the Canadian Payments Association as part of a cooperatives class of CPA member financial institutions.
The amendments will allow federal credit unions to vote for CPA directors who represent cooperative financial institutions. Without this amendment, federal credit unions would not have a real voice in the governance of the Canadian Payments Association, because they would be nominally represented by directors who are elected from the commercial banks.
Placing the federal credit union in the cooperatives class will preserve and strengthen the credit union system's representation at the Canadian Payments Association. It ensures that a federal credit union will be represented by a director who can bring the perspective of cooperative financial institutions to CPA matters.
Secondly, we wish to indicate our support for the proposed amendment to paragraph 376(1)(g) of the Cooperative Credit Associations Act. This amendment increases the powers of associations incorporated under the act to market and to sell their technology services. It will allow a credit union central to provide payment technology services to any member of the Canadian Payments Association, thereby introducing more competition into this market.
Finally, we are not so pleased about the proposed amendments to sections 425 and 428 of the Bank Act in Bill S-5. These proposed Bank Act amendments have the effect of reversing two recent Supreme Court of Canada decisions in which the court determined that an unperfected personal property security interest held by a credit union had priority over a subsequent Bank Act security interest held by the bank.
While we understand the federal government's wish to clarify the situation resulting from the court's decision, we seriously question why a special security mechanism that is only available to the banks should continue to be retained in the Bank Act.