I'm not done yet.
If you're taking money out of a private operator's ATM, the charges could go as high as $6.15.
I ask members to consider the fact that in many parts of this country, the banks have left. They keep an ATM for a while, then they sell that off to a private operator, and suddenly low-income communities like mine—average communities and older neighbourhoods—are without a bank and have to go to a private, white-label ATM and pay that kind of money to access their own money. Keep in mind, these are seniors and average Canadians, or people who are scraping by. They take out $30, $40, or $50 because they don't have a lot and they don't want to carry a lot of cash, and they're forced to pay those fees.
We've seen the banks acting responsibly and deciding not to charge fees in other jurisdictions, like in Britain. We've got examples in the United States where in fact a TD Bank has a project in one part of that country where they are not charging fees, yet here in Canada the TD Bank does.
I would suggest to you, Mr. Chairperson, after we heard the testimony yesterday from the president of the Credit Union Central, that the credit unions have managed to find a way to have a network of surcharge-free services or ATMs. Why can't the banks? And if the banks won't—and we know they're balking at this—why don't we as a committee act and do something about it?
Mr. Chairperson, if you're going to suggest to me that we can't touch this issue because the word “ATM”, or automated banking machine, doesn't fall anywhere in the Bank Act or in the regulations, I've tried to fix that problem with our NDP-3, which actually throws the words “use of automated banking fee” into the broad arena for providing information.
I think, Mr. Chairperson, we have to get away from this whole issue of the scope of the bill and do our job as legislators and allow it to be taken forward and get some action on this critical issue.