Thank you, Chair.
What should be in this clause is a balance, including sustainable development. It's missing. It's missing in every clause of Bill C-469. On the matter of sustainable development, the House voted on December 1, two months ago. The NDP--every member of the NDP--voted against sustainable development. I have it right here in Hansard. I'm not questioning motives, but I'm sharing facts that the NDP did not support sustainable development.
They do support, though, changes to Canadian legislation that would permit special interest groups to profit, and this is actually providing an incentive for them to take action. It removes the Federal Court's existing discretion.
What is the result of this? Well, it's anti-sustainable development. As we've heard, it creates American-style litigation. It empowers special interest groups and activists trying to intimidate. We heard from the witnesses that the reason they supported Bill C-469 was that they wanted to have a stick to bully and intimidate.
It will be bad for the environment. Why? Because it creates duplication. It creates red tape. You have this government trying to eliminate red tape and the coalition trying to increase red tape and duplication. It will increase administrative and legal costs for government and industry. It will threaten existing first nations agreements.
It'll threaten existing facilities like Hydro-Québec, and that's why Hydro-Québec is against Bill C-469. That's why Mr. Woodworth brought this up with members of the Bloc. I too am puzzled about why Bloc members would be supporting something that would be bad for Quebec. They're supposed to be standing up for Quebec, and it seems that this government is the only one standing up for Quebec, for all Canadian provinces, for all territories, for all Canadians. It'll threaten B.C. Hydro, and B.C. is my province. I'm very concerned about this.
We heard from the witnesses that it will kill jobs. How will that happen? It will create uncertainty in existing permits, uncertainty in existing legislation, and the economy is the number one thing for Canadians right now. This government is committed to improving the economy and creating jobs, and Bill C-469 will kill jobs.
Clause 21 is one of the important clauses within the bill. It creates an incentive for certain residents or entities within Canada to seek profit. They will be able to receive costs for counsel even if they don't have counsel. That's why I'm hearing clearly from Canadians that this is a bad bill. Clauses 19 and 20 carried, even though members of the coalition wanted to amend them, acknowledging that they were bad. Yet they supported them even without having them amended.
This bill moves forward. Our time is limited, which is also a shame in that we can't speak adequately.
Chair, I think I've made my points. Clause 21 is bad and we will not support it.