Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
I would like to thank our witnesses for being with us this afternoon.
I will begin with clause 9, which sets out the right to a healthy environment. Subclause 9(1) reads as follows:
9. (1) Every resident of Canada has a right to a healthy and ecologically balanced environment.
It seems to me that this is a very vague conceptual right, with no references. Yet some provinces have implemented the same system. I'm thinking of the Quebec Environmental Quality Act which states the following in section 19.1 with respect to the right to a healthy environment:
19.1 Every person has a right to a healthy environment and to its protection, and to the protection of the living species inhabiting it, to the extent provided for by this Act and the regulations, orders, approvals [...]
What is the effect of this lack of reference to federal legislation? What is the effect of a lack of parameters? It says here that people have a right, but that right does not refer to the Canadian Environmental Protection Act or any other statute. What is the difference between leaving this clause as is and specifically saying “to the extent provided for under existing legislation”?