Thank you, Graham.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman and members of the committee, and good morning. My name is Darwin Satherstrom. I'm acting director general of the trade programs directorate in the admissibility branch of the Canada Border Services Agency.
I should start by explaining the role of the CBSA. The CBSA is an integral part of the key national agencies within the Department of Public Safety portfolio, dedicated to protecting Canadians and evaluating information from domestic and international sources in assessing a whole range of risks that Canada faces. Our mandate is to provide integrated border services that support national security and public safety priorities and to facilitate the flow of persons and goods that meet all requirements under the program legislation, which is vital to our national economic vitality.
The CBSA has approximately 12,000 employees, including: customs officers; immigration officers responsible for ports of entry, detentions, removals, investigations, intelligence, and immigration control overseas; officials inspecting animals, plants, and food imports; and marine inspection officials. They provide services at some 1,200 points across Canada and in 39 international locations.
On average, we collect $8.3 million in import duties and $68 million in GST each day. The value of cross-border trade with the U.S. alone averages $1.9 billion a day. On average, 18,400 trucks arrive from the U.S. every day, with 10,500 of them processed through southern Ontario border crossings alone. In fiscal year 2004-05 there were approximately 104,000 commercial and courier shipments and releases handled every day nationally.
The CBSA administers more than 90 acts, including regulations and international agreements, some of which are on behalf of other federal departments and agencies, the provinces, and the territories. One of the statutes the CBSA administers is the Customs Tariff Act, or, as it is known, the customs tariff, which falls under the responsibility of the Minister of Finance and which is the trade legislation respecting the classification of imported goods.
The role of the CBSA is to ensure the proper classification of imported goods, and we follow a process adhering to classification principles that are internationally mandated under what is known as the harmonized system for goods classification, as well as national subdivisions within that system. Once classified, an imported good is subject to a rate of duty that's set out in the legislation and that may vary depending on the origin of the good. In cases where there's disagreement between the CBSA and an importer, a dispute resolution mechanism exists to resolve these issues.
In conclusion, Mr. Chairman, we administer legislation that governs the admissibility of people and regulates and controls or prohibits the import and export of goods. We promote Canadian business and economic benefits by administering trade legislation. We detain people who may pose a threat to Canada and remove people who are inadmissible to this country. We interdict illegal goods entering or leaving the country, and we protect food safety and the environment by stopping prohibited or hazardous products arriving at our air, land, and sea ports.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I look forward to the committee's questions.