Thank you.
My name is Rob Cunningham. I am a lawyer and senior policy analyst with the Canadian Cancer Society.
In my testimony today, I'd like to make four key points.
First, there is our disappointment regarding the absence of implementation of new federal action measures--including over the past two years--despite intense urgency and an announcement to do so in May 2008.
Then, with respect to priority recommendations, our second point is that the border post near Cornwall should not be moved back to where it was. The change has made a difference.
Third, the federal government must actively press the American government to shut down the illegal factories on the U.S. side of Akwesasne, the major contraband source.
Fourth, the federal government must take action on the unlicensed illegal manufacturing on three Canadian reserves, specifically through better control of the supply of raw materials to these unlicensed manufacturers.
Before continuing, I would like to acknowledge the excellent work done everyday by front-line enforcement officials and others at the departmental level. Without these efforts, things would be far worse.
I would also like to acknowledge that in Bill C-9 the federal government has brought forward--albeit with some delay--the new measures for an enhanced stamp, and we support that.
So with respect to our disappointment, of course, for us it's a public health issue. I have more than 300 studies and reports about the impact of higher prices and taxes on reducing consumption. This was tabled with the House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance.
This is our submission to you today. I invite you to turn to tab one. You see how Ontario, Quebec, and New Brunswick have the lowest tobacco taxes in Canada of all provinces, but the highest rate of contraband. This visually demonstrates that higher taxes are not the cause of the problem, but instead its the proximity to the source of illegal supply. Other provinces have been able to maintain much higher rates of tobacco taxes.
In our materials we have a series of recommendations that we have made for many years about available remedies that have not been implemented and that do not require on-reserve enforcement.
We also have a tab for the motion adopted unanimously by the House of Commons a year ago, urging action on contraband. So we have a context where there's all-party support for action. We do need a comprehensive strategy. A task force was announced in May 2008 to come up with specific concrete action measures. That is our disappointment, that nothing has been implemented as a result of that initiative.
With respect to the border post, I invite you to turn to tab two, where you see a map. The reserve straddles the Ontario and Quebec borders and the U.S. border in New York state. The red dot on the yellow Cornwall Island shows where their border post used to be. It was the case that smugglers would simply just drive around the border post and come into Canada. Moving the border post into Cornwall, on the other side of the bridge, has become a choke-point to block that mechanism off, and that's why we've seen the progress.
At tab four, for further study, you have examples from the Quebec, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick governments. Phillip Morris International says revenues were up, tax paid sales are up, after this border post was moved.
One question that we don't have an answer to is the establishment of a fast-track lane at this border post. Is that going to create a new problem? That's been a recent development and we don't have the answer to that.
Our second priority recommendation is to press the U.S. government. We believe this has to be done at the ministerial level, at the political level, by the Minister of Public Safety, with his counterpart, the U.S. Attorney General, who has responsibility for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms. They have the legal instruments available.
What needs to be done is a political decision to put enforcement resources in this part of upstate New York. It's our recommendation that we are not going to have action unless we make it a priority in our bilateral meetings, and until the then, the United States government will not make it a priority.
Finally, with respect to unlicensed manufacturing, the number has grown to 50 in Canada, and that's of concern. What do we do about it? We need a strategy, and our recommendation is that we have to control--one way or another--the supply of raw materials.
We recognize it's sensitive to go on reserve for enforcement. We're not recommending that, but if you can prohibit it, either through charges for aiding and abetting the supply of leaf tobacco to these unlicensed factories, or supplying cigarette filters or other materials, or amending the legislation to make it easier for enforcement authorities to do exactly this, to intercept it before it gets on reserve, that is a strategy that we recommend as part of a comprehensive strategy.
Other recommendations are in our materials.
Thank you very much for the opportunity to testify. We look forward to your questions.