I want to place this as a point of order, Mr. Chair.
Once again we are, in my view, looking at a substantive amendment. As for the question of polluter pays, I'm tempted to use the expression “red herring”, but I don't want to try to surmise Monsieur Bigras' motives. I will say that it's a misplaced argument, in that the phrase “just and consistent” in referencing “just” certainly is ample to allow for the principle of polluter pays, which of course is found elsewhere in the same definition section and elsewhere in the act.
What I believe, knowing the great concern that Monsieur Bigras has to protect provincial rights and in particular to do his very best to make the best of a bad act for the province of Quebec, is that Monsieur Bigras' amendment is really directed toward the issue of “asymmetrical federalism”, to use a term. That is to say that this act might apply differently in one province than it would in another province. This is certainly something that changes the tenor of the act. Certainly my comments regarding the impact of this act as we debated it on the distribution of powers between provinces and federal government were all based on the principles seen here, which were that these burdens would fall equally on all provinces.
So now to be told that those arguments I made at that time will no longer apply, because we are going to incorporate a notion of asymmetrical federalism by deleting the reference to consistent distribution of environmental benefits, certainly makes a lot of our debate over the impact of this on provincial governments somewhat beside the point.
So I believe it is a substantive amendment and one that is not related to any previous amendment in the act. I believe, in fact, that it exceeds the scope of the act that was sent to us by the House, and which in fact did not contain any hint of asymmetrical federalism or any hint that burdens would not be shared both justly and consistently.
For those reasons, I ask you to rule this amendment out of order.