Thank you, Mr. Chair and members of the committee.
Thank you for inviting me to appear before you to clarify some points with respect to Bill C-4, An Act respecting not-for-profit corporations and certain other corporations, and to answer any questions you may have. It's a pleasure to be here.
I'm the senior director of the corporate and insolvency law policy and internal trade directorate at Industry Canada. I'm joined by Wayne Lennon, the senior project leader on the not-for-profit file, who works directly with me, and Coleen Kirby, manager of the policy section at Corporations Canada, the agency that would be responsible for the administration of the statute.
As you've already heard from the Minister of State for Small Business and Tourism and other witnesses before this committee, this is a bill that has a long history. Variants of this bill were introduced in Parliament in 2004, twice in 2008, and now in 2009. The bill is intended to improve and modernize an old statute that applies to some 19,000 federal not-for-profit corporations. It does so in a number of ways.
For example, it greatly simplifies the incorporation process, replacing ministerial discretion for issuing letters patent with a process more akin to incorporation as a right. It reduces the paper burden and associated costs for smaller corporations by allowing them to forgo audits of financial statements, with the support of members. It provides the maximum flexibility to not-for-profit corporations to organize their affairs through articles and bylaws. It allows information to be provided to members by electronic means, including the holding of electronic meetings, if members so wish. It provides a clear and well-understood defence for directors and officers against unwarranted liability. It provides members with a new set of rights, including the right to financial information, the right to make proposals for discussion at an annual meeting, and the right to use the oppression remedy in the event of a conflict within the corporation. It provides more public transparency for a corporation that obtains its funding through public solicitation or by government grants. It provides clear rules and procedures for a whole range of contingency situations, including debt financing and trust indentures.
Admittedly, many of these provisions will never be used by most corporations. But the new act will eliminate ambiguities that in some instances can cost a not-for-profit corporation thousands or even hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees before a resolution can be reached.
These are only a few of the bill's many improvements over the current legislation.
As committee members know, Industry Canada was aided during the development of the policy that led to this bill by the input of hundreds of stakeholders who were consulted in 2000, 2002, and 2005. During those consultations, many suggestions and recommendations were received, a great number of which found their way into the proposed statute.
Members of the committee, my colleagues and I are prepared to assist you in any way we can by answering any questions you may have.
Thank you.