Mr. Chair, thank you very much for the welcome. I'm happy to be here today, and look forward to the opportunity to discuss the Auditor General's 2016 “Report 4, Oversight of Passenger Vehicle Safety”.
I'd like to thank the Office of the Auditor General for a very thorough and comprehensive review of our motor vehicle safety program. The department welcomes this review. It's a key opportunity for us to improve the performance of our safety program by rigorously identifying areas for improvement. The safety of Canadians and their confidence in the motor vehicle safety regime is a key priority for the Government of Canada.
The safety of motor vehicles in Canada has been steadily improving over the past three decades. In the early 1970s, there were approximately 6,000 deaths and 25,000 serious injuries every year from motor vehicle collisions. At the time, there were approximately 12 million registered vehicles and about 13 million drivers. In 2014, the last year for which there is complete data, Canada had about double that, 25 million drivers and 23 million vehicles, but the number of fatalities had declined to 1,800 and serious injuries to 9,600. In essence, the number of vehicles, drivers, and number of kilometres driven have about doubled, and the number of Canadians killed or injured has fallen by 60% to 70%.
To support continued improvement to motor vehicle safety, Transport Canada develops standards and regulations for new and imported vehicles, tires and child restraints. The department also has a robust safety defect program, which entails the assessment and investigation of public complaints and other indicators that help the department identify vehicle safety issues.
It also has a recall program to oversee manufacturer defect notifications, and follow-up to ensure that defects are remedied. The audit focused on these three areas.
In general, the audit noted that there were some areas where the department did a good job and other areas where there was clearly a need for improvement. The audit noted that not all standards and regulations were developed in a timely manner. In addition, it was felt that the department did not consult widely enough on proposed changes, often just consulting manufacturers in the early development of regulations.
In response, Transport Canada has committed to publishing additional information on planned regulatory amendments on its website, and to seeking broader involvement of other stakeholders and experts, such as the insurance industry and other key players, in the pre-consultation phase of the process.
Another concern identified by the audit was that the department did not have complete and timely collision and injury data and did not demonstrate how research informed the development of safety regulations. In Canada, the collection of collision data, such as basic collision characteristics, crash configuration, vehicle type, etc., is conducted by police officers and reported to provincial and territorial governments, who provide Transport Canada with data to populate the national collision database.
The department is assessing this data against its regulatory needs and developing an action plan to improve data quality and timeliness. Transport Canada is also committed to increasing the transparency of the use of data in the development of regulations. The process to codify this transparency has been implemented, and a summary of the assessment of evidence and research will be more clearly outlined in the regulatory impact analysis statements that are published as part of the regulatory process in the Canada Gazette.
The report noted a need for a long-term operational plan and stable sustainable funding. The department is working on the development of such a plan for the crashworthiness research program. The development of this plan will include an assessment of the linkages between research and the regulatory planning processes, and a review of program priorities. This longer-term operational plan is intended to improve the funding sustainability of the program.
One always likes to look on the positive side, where I would note that the OAG indicated that Transport Canada adequately assessed complaints from the public to identify vehicle safety defects. In particular, it recognized that in 2016, departmental officials identified a potentially dangerous defect in the rear seat belts of the Toyota Rav4 vehicles. The implicated seat belts had the potential of rupturing during collisions and causing death or serious harm. The discovery of this defect led to a recall of nearly 150,000 Rav4s in Canada. Globally, over 2.7 million vehicles have been affected by the discovery of this issue in Canada. The OAG found that the program adequately assessed and tracked manufacturers' efforts to complete safety recall campaigns.
Transport Canada also continues to work to identify means to help improve those completion rates, including the development of improved messaging on the importance of having the remedy completed. It is also envisaged that the proposed changes to the Motor Vehicle Safety Act contained in Bill S-2 will help to improve recall completion repair rates, by providing the minister with the ability to order the manufacturer to bear the financial burden of conducting the repair to the vehicle.
An issue with the defect program that was noted in this audit is the lack of information regarding manufacturers' internal investigations to identify safety defects. This is an area that needs to be addressed, and the issue is one of the major ones that would be addressed through the passage of Bill S-2. That bill is working its way through the parliamentary process, and the department continues to support it to help ensure that the safety benefits of the changes in that legislation can be realized.
It was also recommended that the department request manufacturers to provide information on their safety processes. We have made the request to manufacturers and will review the information as it is received to determine how to incorporate it into the defect program.
Motor vehicles are very important to the social and economic well-being of Canadians. The social costs of these collisions are estimated at $36 billion annually, to say nothing of the impact on Canadian families.
Transport Canada works to help limit the impact of vehicle defects on this number and to support new vehicle safety technologies, which can help mitigate the severity of a crash, should a crash occur, or ideally increase the collision avoidance capabilities of the driver/vehicle operation.
In addition, we will work with our provincial and territorial partners to improve road safety through the road safety strategy 2025. With these efforts, including the action plan and response to the Auditor General's report, together we can make Canada's roads safer as we work toward our aspirational goal of zero fatalities on our roads.
Mr. Chair, we look forward to the committee's questions and comments. Thank you very much.