Thank you.
I noted your report, in chapter 1, on the management of fees. It's good; it reads well.
About 15 years ago, the Financial Administration Act opened up a new way of charging fees. This, for the bureaucracy of government, is of course a vehicle to charge fees and bring in revenues. At another committee of the House, the Standing Joint Committee on Scrutiny of Regulations, there's been an ongoing running battle over fees. As you point out, the revenue from fees is not supposed to exceed the costs of the program. One of the agencies we chased was Parks Canada. I note you gave them a reasonably good mark, even though they charge fees for entry when the statute that governs them says that Canadians have a right to use the parks; we can't figure out, if there's a right to use the park, why they feel they can charge a fee. But that's kind of a theoretical thing that goes on.
We may be looking for your guidance here. A recently decided Supreme Court of Canada case approved Parks Canada's charging a percentage on the alcohol sales in Banff National Park restaurants. The committee felt that was a tax. The Supreme Court of Canada accepted that it was a fee. The bureaucracy is pushing the envelope here.
There's another case now, which will probably go to the Supreme Court, involving the Broadcasting Act, the broadcasting licence fees. The committee found that millions of dollars of excess revenue over the costs of managing the licences constituted a tax. That will likely go to the Supreme Court now.
The committee has forced the agencies to give back fees or give credits where they've charged illegally in the past. The problem we're running into now is that whether this is a fee or a tax, how do we resolve this problem where the government wants to charge like a tax? For example, for the broadcasting licences, they charge the part II fees, or millions and millions of dollars, where it only costs them about one million dollars a year, or half a million, to run the thing.
How are we supposed to deal with that in Parliament? And how will you come to deal with it as you look at the appropriateness of a fee when it's not a tax? If it's a tax, Parliament will approve it. But a fee is not approved by Parliament; it's simply struck by the bureaucracy.