Thank you, Madam Chair.
Good afternoon, members of the committee. The Canadian Environmental Law Association welcomes this opportunity to speak to the impact assessment act.
As you may know, CELA is an Ontario legal aid clinic. We've been around since 1970. We specialize in environmental law, and on behalf of our clients, we've been involved in federal EA proceedings under the EARP guidelines, CEAA 1992, and CEAA 2012.
It is on the basis of that experience that we have assessed and evaluated the impact assessment act, and in our conclusion, the act is inadequate and incapable of regaining public trust in the federal process.
I've set out the detailed reasons for that conclusion in our written submission that I filed with the clerk and that I provided to each member of this committee. I'm not sure if you've had a chance to read it or whether it's caught up with you yet. I should say at the outset that I apologize for the length and complexity of those written submissions. I don't get paid by the word. I'm just simply trying to identify all the things in the act that need to be fixed, and frankly, that's a long list.
In our written submission we've also offered 35 different recommendations in relation to the act. You'll be relieved to hear that I don't intend to go through all 35 this afternoon. I don't have the time, in any event. I thought it might be more helpful and perhaps more efficient for me to simply highlight the top five concerns that we have about the bill.
In my respectful submission, the problems with the act really arise from the unfortunate decision to use CEAA 2012 as the starting point for the act, as opposed to beginning with a clean slate and drafting a whole new statute. In my respectful submission, it's obvious and regrettable that the basic architecture of CEAA 2012 has been carried forward into the impact assessment act, subject only to a handful of new provisions that, frankly, do not fully fix the problems and the weaknesses associated with CEAA 2012.
In my view, replacing one deficient law with another deficient law will not do the trick if we're serious about sustainability and about restoring public confidence. If anything, the act as drafted will continue or compound the many problems we see right now in recent CEAA cases.
What are the major concerns? I've boiled them down to five overarching concerns.
Number one, the act creates excessive discretion at virtually every assessment stage and every decision point under the legislation. You've heard that concern from several other witnesses, and I fully agree with them. Now, in making that submission, I recognize that giving broad discretion confers maximum flexibility to federal officials, but at the same time, it significantly diminishes the certainty and the predictability that proponents, members of the public, and others are asking for in the federal process.
Number two, the act fails to establish an independent quasi-judicial authority for gathering information and making credible, evidence-based decisions. This was one of the most important and far-reaching recommendations of the expert panel, yet the proposed impact assessment act does not reflect it at all. Instead the act simply retains political decision-making on the basis of some vague considerations. That's not a new and improved regime; that's essentially same old, same old. In this regard, I concur with Mr. Northey's testimony last week, when he strongly endorsed the need for an independent body or a tribunal to make decisions under this act.
Number three, the act fails to entrench meaningful public participation in all key phases of impact, regional, and strategic assessments, as well as in the self-assessment process that's been outlined for projects on federal lands. In short, too many critical details for public participation have been left out of the act, or have been left to unknown future regulations or undrafted guidance materials. That's not good enough.
Number four, the act fails to limit or prohibit life-cycle regulators from being members or even chairs of review panels under the act. This represents another key recommendation from the expert panel that has not been implemented in this legislation. To be clear, CELA does not object to having life-cycle regulators participate in the review panel process, but regulators should not be leading or co-leading the impact assessment for the reasons offered by the expert panel.
Finally, number five, the act fails to include mandatory triggers or clear procedures for the conduct, content, and outcome of regional and strategic assessments. Again, several other witnesses have noted this, and I concur with their submissions.
In conclusion, I urge the committee to take a hard, long look at the proposed act. If you agree with CELA and many other witnesses that there are fundamental problems with the act as proposed, that seems to leave this committee with very few viable options. Given its fundamental flaws, the whole act really should be rewritten in its entirety. That's certainly my preference, and that would be my primary recommendation to this committee.
However, given the committee's rather compressed timeline for reviewing Bill C-69, a complete do-over of the impact assessment act does not appear to be a realistic option for this committee to undertake on its own in the time frame. That leaves us with one other potential option, which is to try to patch up this act with a series of piecemeal amendments here and there. However, to me, that seems like putting band-aids on a patient who really needs major surgery, so that piecemeal approach will not work.
From a public interest perspective, CELA submits that it's far more important to get this law right than it is to rush things and get a bad law passed. In my view, the expert panel report gave all of us an excellent blueprint for constructing the new impact assessment law, so if this committee is inclined to amend the legislation, then let's use the expert panel report, not CEAA 2012, as the starting point for doing what's right.
Subject to any questions, Madam Chair, those are my submissions.