Thank you, Chair, and thank you to all our witnesses for sharing their testimony today. It's been very informative and very interesting. It's my very first time attending this committee, and I look forward to participating.
I'm going to follow up on some of the very brief testimony that we heard from Mr. Mangin and hopefully talk a bit about some of the issues around Bill S‑216 and the BIA.
The reason I want to do this is that we didn't get the opportunity to hear from Mr. Mangin, but this is an issue that's very, very important to me. I know it's very important to many members of Parliament, but I come at it from a bit of a special perspective, I guess, which is that I have been working on changing the direction and control legislation in this country since 2005. We have known that this is a paternalistic and a colonial piece of work within CRA that has needed to be changed for a very long time and has impacted the ability of the charitable sector to actually do the work they are mandated to do. It is in no way reflective of participatory, democratic good practice in charities. It needed to be changed.
When Senator Omidvar came to me and to many other parliamentarians to speak about the changes to direction and control within her bill, Bill S‑216, we of course were all delighted. We were all on board. We were all working with her. The sector has worked very closely with her, and legal experts have worked very closely with her and her team to develop a really strong piece of legislation.
Of course, when we saw in the BIA that it was named and that the spirit of Bill S‑216 was going to be implemented, I think many of us within the House of Commons and many more within the charitable sector were delighted. When we saw what was actually being proposed, the delight turned a bit to disappointment.
I'm going to read from a few different places for you, and I'd like to put some of this testimony into the record. Then I'm going to pose some questions to Mr. Mangin that he can respond to in writing, bilingually, when he's able to do so.
First of all, I want to start with a letter that was written to the government by Cooperation Canada. For those who don't know, Cooperation Canada is an organization that represents many of the charitable sector groups that work in Canada. It's a very long-standing organization that has been in place for over 50 years. It is very well respected and knowledgeable on this file and has certainly taken a lead on it.
In the letter they addressed to the government, they say:
...the BIA reinforces the colonial and paternalistic approach to the relationship between charities and the partner organizations supporting their charitable purposes. It makes the current regime more challenging for organizations to fulfill their charitable purpose by embedding a rigid and prescriptive approach to funding non-qualified donees inside and outside Canada in legislation. It makes the system more confusing, risky and challenging for registered charities and non-qualified donees to work together, and as such, impedes philanthropic and charitable resources flowing to communities that need them the most.
The serious concerns that the sector has with the BIA and that we would like to see changed within the BIA are the proposed definition of a qualifying disbursement, the proposed language relating to directed gifts and the prescribed conditions for qualifying disbursements to grantee organizations.
I know that this committee has received information from Imagine Canada; I wanted to make sure that that information from Cooperation Canada was also included.
I also wanted to give a little bit of insight into what this looks like on the ground. For example, if you're looking at perhaps an indigenous partnership and perhaps there is a requirement to work with indigenous groups that do not, for whatever reason, have charitable status, what we have in the BIA impedes the ability for charities to support indigenous groups that are doing the work within their communities. I think that's something that no Canadians want as we deal with truth and reconciliation in this country.
There's another example when we look at working internationally. Right now, we have an incredible crisis that is happening in Ukraine. I think it's really important that everyone on this committee recognizes that if we don't get this BIA right, if we don't get the direction and control right, those organizations that can do the best work in Ukraine and can do the best work with refugees who have fled Ukraine, Romania, Poland and other countries won't be able to work with Canadian charities because of the aspect of direction and control that we have in this BIA.
As Mr. Mangin was, I suspect, going to tell us, we need to amend the language on direct giving. This would allow Canadian charities to contribute to pooled funds and support non-qualified donees.
We need to remove the reference to disbursements meeting prescribed conditions and replace it with a requirement that the charity instead takes reasonable steps to ensure that the resources are disbursed and used exclusively in furtherance of a charitable purpose. We need to delete proposed regulation 3703 in its entirety. This would allow for regulations to remain in the CRA guidance documents.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.