Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Ladies and gentlemen, it's a great honour to be with you. There's a sense of déjà vu testifying again about CEPA reform.
I'd like to begin by commending the Government of Canada for finally recognizing in law the right of every Canadian to live in a healthy and sustainable environment. This is long overdue, but it is an important step toward the eventual recognition of this right in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which is where 90% of Canadians agree it belongs.
There are already 156 nations around the world that recognize the right to a healthy environment in law through constitutions, legislation or regional human rights treaties. It was recognized by the United Nations General Assembly in July 2022. Canada supported this resolution and voted for it, as did 160 other nations. No states were opposed.
Of course, the right to a healthy environment—it's important to say—is not a new human right. It's been around for decades. Quebec included this right in its Environment Quality Act back in 1978 and in its Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms in 2006.
While it's an important first step, I think it's important to say that the provision in Bill S-5 regarding the right to a healthy environment has several significant weaknesses.
The first weakness is the phrase “as provided under this Act”, which means that Canadians' right to a healthy environment is circumscribed to those issues that are addressed by CEPA. This strikes me as odd, because it means that no Canadian has the right to a healthy environment under the Canada National Parks Act, the Pest Control Products Act, the Impact Assessment Act or any other federal environmental legislation. My first recommendation is to remove the phrase “as provided under this Act”.
Second, Bill S-5 is quite narrow in the way it describes the right to a healthy environment. The UN resolution from July 2022, which Canada voted in favour of, uses the language “clean, healthy and sustainable environment”. Each of those three adjectives—“clean”, “healthy” and “sustainable”—has clear a definition in the Oxford English Dictionary, which I've provided in my written brief.
There's also a bill before the American Congress, called the environmental justice for all act, which has a much more comprehensive articulation of this right: “the right of all people to clean air, safe and affordable drinking water, protection from climate hazards, and the sustainable preservation of the ecological integrity...of the natural environment.”
In summary, my recommendation for proposed section 2 in Bill S-5 is to use the UN language that Canada supported earlier this year: “protect the right of every individual in Canada to a clean, healthy and sustainable environment”. We'd delete the phrase “as provided under this Act” and retain the phrase “subject to any reasonable limits”.
The third weakness is a lack of mechanisms through which this right can be enforced. A right without a remedy is not really a right. Imagine a scenario in which a Canadian community is being exposed to toxic substances at levels far above the Canadian average or levels that violate the Canadian ambient air quality standards. Should people in this community, whose right to a “clean, healthy and sustainable environment” is clearly being violated, not have anywhere to turn? Sections—