Thanks.
I believe you all have a copy of the brief that Lake Ontario Waterkeeper submitted. I'll just walk you through our proposals and our comments from that brief. As well, I have had an opportunity to review some of the transcripts from the previous committee hearings, so I can also respond to some of the statements that were made in the past.
Lake Ontario Waterkeeper is a registered Canadian charity. We work on waterways in the Lake Ontario watershed and we also support the growth and development of Waterkeeper programs across the country. We're a grassroots movement, so every Waterkeeper program has a boat. We're out on the water. We take the perspectives of the communities and we in every way possible bring them to the attention of decision-makers. We try to let you know how some of these federal laws and policies affect the communities that are living on waters across Canada.
The Navigable Waters Protection Act, for us, is a really important statute. It recognizes a right of the people to navigate waterways that goes back thousands of years. It's an important part of our legal history. And it reflects and reminds people that every person has a right to access waterways across the country, that the waterways are there for the people.
We are concerned with proposal one, to amend the definition of “navigable waters” to exclude “minor waters”. We would, in our experience, recommend against doing this for two reasons. First, in our opinion and our review, such an amendment isn't necessary. The act only applies to waters that are already navigable. If a waterway is really minor and isn't navigable, then the act wouldn't apply to begin with, so it's not a necessary amendment. Second, dividing Canadian waterways into major and minor waterways creates a two-tiered environmental and common law protection system where some Canadians would have access to certain protections and certain rights that other Canadians wouldn't. In our opinion, this changes and undermines the original intent of the legislation.
In the same way, proposal two, to amend the definition of “work” to explicitly exclude “minor works”, we also see as being unnecessary. The reason is that the Navigable Waters Protection Act only applies to works that interfere substantially with navigation, so there's already a separation of major and minor works in the wording of the act. Changing the definition at this time, again, would just promote a system where some waterways are more protected than other waterways.
In terms of proposal three, for the same reason, the idea of removing the four named works from the act is extremely problematic from the perspective of the grassroots and the communities who are living and working and playing and relying on these rivers and lakes and oceans across the country. In pretty much every case, bridges, booms, dams and causeways interfere, by definition, with navigation. We have seen in Canada incredible waterways, such as the Petitcodiac River in Moncton, completely destroyed and completely altered because of the construction of a causeway.
So to eliminate those four named works from the act and not require an environmental assessment before they are constructed can, we know, cause problems. We have seen it cause problems, and we would want to make sure that it doesn't happen again in the future. After the environmental assessment is completed and after the terms and conditions are imposed, it is possible for such works to go ahead and for navigation and fish and fish habitat and other water rights to still be protected.
Then there are the areas where we don't have as much of a comment, for instance, updating the fine range. We agree with this, we understand the logic behind it. We would support that to create both general and specific deterrents. We've recommended that you look at the Fisheries Act, section 78, for guidance on what might be a more up-to-date, modern fine range.
We have no comment on the wreck removal convention. The inspection powers are key to making the environmental assessment process work properly. I believe, as you've heard, under the Environmental Assessment Act, when the terms and conditions are imposed, the Environmental Assessment Act itself doesn't...there's no penalty for violating it. So the two acts, navigable waters and environmental assessment, go hand in hand. Inspection powers certainly help to strengthen that process.
Finally, the five-year review clause seems like a great opportunity for the public to also respond and bring to your attention key issues and key impacts of this legislation on their communities. So we would support and recommend in favour of inserting a five-year review clause.
Generally, I just want to underscore the importance of this act and how it affects our communities, and to talk about the idea of whether the purpose of the act is to protect navigation or to protect navigability.
In our opinion, in our view--we're supported, again, by 2,000 years of legal theory and legal policy and the principle of rights and justice--every person has a right to navigate a waterway. The Navigable Waters Protection Act was created to give certain people, under certain conditions, an opportunity to infringe upon that right. So the purpose of the statute is to protect the public's right to the water, not to protect the right of business or industry or private developers or whoever is interested in impeding navigability.
Again, the purpose of the act is to protect the public interest. For that reason, we were also concerned by a lot of the documentation where Transport Canada refers to their clients as being those who wish to impede navigation, as opposed to the public. We believe that most Canadians believe--certainly from our experience, when we're in the community--that the federal government's job is to protect Canadians and individuals and the public right, first and foremost. That's what most people believe is happening. In the environmental assessment process and the navigable waters permitting process, that's the role they see Transport Canada playing. That's what their expectation is of the government. We just wanted to bring that perspective to you as well.
There's been a lot of talk about environmental assessment. We would in particular like to bring to your attention concerns about the suggestion that this Navigable Waters Protection Act assessment process delays the approvals process. Again, that goes back to the purpose of the act. The purpose of the act is to protect navigation, so the idea that environmental assessment is in some way a delay or an obstacle is really problematic. The community, for the most part, participates in good faith in the assessment process. They're trying to make these projects and proposals better. They're trying to strike a balance between the needs of development or industry and the needs of the community. And to say that the approvals process is an impediment suggests that people are going in assuming that they have a right to a Navigable Waters Protection Act permit, and it's not actually true. We would want to make sure that, when people are applying for licences, they understand the great privilege that is being given to them.
Finally, I would also like to clarify, on the environmental assessment issue, that not every Navigable Waters Protection Act permit comes with a Fisheries Act permit, and there are two reasons for that. One, as I believe you've been told, it is possible to, for example, build a bridge that doesn't impact fish habitat in any way, so in such a case the Navigable Waters Protection Act would be the only licence, the only opportunity for the public to comment. And in the other case, Fisheries and Oceans has a “no net loss” policy for fish habitat. So if fish habitat is being altered or destroyed to construct a bridge or a causeway or something similar, if the person building the bridge can build other fish habitat or create new fish habitat and there is, technically, no net loss of fish habitat, then in a lot of cases DFO does not require that an environmental assessment be done. So there are many instances, from a community perspective, where the navigable waters is the only licence that creates an opportunity for public comment, consultation, input, and improvement.
Finally, I would like to reiterate the idea that Canadians do expect that we have equal rights to swim, drink, fish, and navigate our waters safely, so the idea of dividing waterways into major or minor waterways and giving some communities more protection and more rights than other communities is extremely concerning. This is particularly important for communities that live in places like Toronto or Oshawa or Kingston, or areas on the Great Lakes or industrial areas where we've already lost a lot of our waterfront areas. Many of our rivers are no longer navigable, but they easily could be with restoration. It would be devastating to a lot of communities to label certain rivers as minor waterways because they are not currently navigable when the community's expectation is that with some investment and some support, those waterways could very easily be navigable again.
As an example, I would cite the Petitcodiac River, where the federal government, the local government, and the community are doing a lot of work, looking at the causeway that destroyed the river in the 1960s. When it's removed, we will see the restoration of that river. We will see an incredible river come back. We wouldn't want anybody to think that it's a minor waterway just because at this particular moment in time it happens to be in trouble.
We don't want to write off any communities. We don't want to write off any rivers that could, in fact, be great rivers again in the future. There's a real fear among the grassroots that this is what these amendments would do.
Those are the comments I have for now. I would add that commerce is not the only navigational use that benefits communities. We do have a shipping industry in Canada, but also, on the Great Lakes in particular, the recreational boating industry is worth billions of dollars to Ontario.
So we wouldn't want to see the right to navigation limited to one particular sector. It really does have to remain in the hands of all people for the common good.
Thank you.