Thank you, Kerri.
Mr. Chairman and members of the committee, good afternoon, and thank you for giving us the time to speak to you.
Last night, instead of watching the results show on American Idol, I had the chance to spend two hours in front of the webcast and watch your deliberations on Tuesday. I must say I thought the Transport Canada submission to you was a very good one. I didn't see the slides that were presented, but I've seen some of them before, so I was able to follow that part of the discussion.
What I found more of interest was the question and answer session that you had as a round table afterwards. I put your questions and some of the answers that came from the department into three categories. One was oil pollution, which was described as the heart of the legislation; when you read the bill, it is clear that clause 11 is certainly the most substantive clause, and it is all about pollution. The other two were adventure tourism and maritime liens. I'll speak to both those this afternoon.
I appreciate that time is a precious commodity. We have put a three-page submission before you. I'm going to work on the assumption that you all have a copy of it.
The Canadian Bar Association's national maritime law section is, in general, supportive of Bill C-7. We don't find the oil pollution provisions in any way controversial. The supplementary fund protocol will increase the limits, and we believe it will better prepare Canada for an oil spill.
We don't believe the bunkers convention will have much impact in Canada. We've had a bunkers regime for a number of years. Canada, I'm happy to say, has always been in the forefront of oil pollution legislation worldwide. From 1970 on, we've had a very strong oil pollution provision in the legislation, starting with the Canada Shipping Act. Then in 2000-01, it was consolidated into the Marine Liability Act. So there aren't going to be any changes there. As I said, I don't believe it's going to be controversial in any way. The harmonization of international law is always a good thing, so to see Canada ratify conventions is a plus.
Our concerns, like those of the committee on Tuesday, touched upon two areas: adventure tourism and maritime liens. I would direct you to page 2 of our submission. The two areas touch upon two clauses in your bill: clause 1, the definition of the term “passenger”, and clause 12, which is where you'll find reference to the maritime lien, plus the general maritime limitation period, which I'll comment on as well.
Instead of getting into some of the nitty-gritty detail of clause 1 and the problem with the definition of the term “passenger”, let me approach it by saying that we're coming into summer season here in Canada, and most of us will go to a cottage, either our own or a friend's. As you're walking down the dock to the boats, let us suppose that on your left you have a boat with a motor and on the right you have a canoe. If you pass the bill as it currently reads, I would encourage you to get into the canoe, because the way the text currently reads, if you are injured as a passenger in a canoe, you will get substantially more money if liability is founded than if you get into the motorboat with the engine.
I think that is an anomaly that appears in the drafting. I think it was not intended by the department when it was drafting the bill, and I think it needs to come out.
Right now under the Maritime Liability Act, if you are injured in a boat, no matter how it is propelled, there's a limit of a million dollars for a vessel under 300 tonnes, and most small vessels in Canada fall into that category. In clause 1, you have a definition of the term “passenger”, and proposed paragraph (c) will in effect expose a passenger in a canoe to a higher limit. That may be fair for the person in the canoe, as I said to you, when you have the choice, but it will be very unfair to the person in the motorboat. Harmonization would suggest that we should all, as we do today, have a limit of a million dollars, and paragraph (c) should be removed from clause 1 in the definition of “passenger”.
The other point, which I think is a little bit more interesting, is the one noted by Mr. Volpe on Tuesday afternoon when talking about proposed section 37.1, which is where you find the definition of marine adventure activity.
If we go back to the transport discussion paper in 2005, the initial thought was to try to find a way to get adventure tourism out of part 4. Part 4, as you will recall from your deck on Tuesday, is pretty much about the Athens Convention, and the Athens Convention relates to big ship passenger vessels that are seagoing. We don't have that many seagoing passenger vessels in Canada.
If we do have passenger vessels, Mr. Volpe, in Toronto Harbour, they're cruise lines, but they're not seagoing. They're lake-going, but the fact is the same.
I think we're trying to find a way to pick up on the thought that the honourable member for Pembroke had on Tuesday, of keeping the good operators out of the structure and making sure the bad operators stay in the structure. The trick is to differentiate between the two.
Initially we started out by defining the term “ship”. That was felt to be not workable, and so through the consultation process with Transport Canada and the stakeholders, the idea of an activity came up. If you could put parameters around what was the activity, then that would get the good out and keep the bad in.
The point that you made, Mr. Volpe, on Tuesday was on ship safety standards. There was reference to the Canada Shipping Act and the standards for ship safety in that piece of legislation and enforcement by Transport Canada.
The point that the Canadian Bar Association national maritime law section wanted to make is on one of the criteria that appear in proposed section 37.1. If you put in another criterion requiring the adventure tourism industry to have a seaworthy ship at the commencement of the voyage, properly crewed, it will ensure that you have good operators coming out of part 4, staying in part 3. The bad operators will always be in part 4, because if at the start of the voyage the ship is unseaworthy, they won't be able to invalidate the waivers, they won't be able to get out of the structures of part 4, and the rules that you have in part 4 will continue to apply.
The other concern we have is over maritime liens, which you will find in clause 12. A maritime lien is a privilege claim. You heard discussion about it on Tuesday afternoon. The thing to remember in the discussion is that a maritime lien as a privilege claim generally ranks in priority above other claims against maritime property, be it mortgages or unsecured creditors, and the discussion of priorities always comes up in the context of a bankruptcy or a ship arrest if someone's arguing over a limited pot.
Ship suppliers have a lien today. The department officials on Tuesday described it as a statutory lien. That is lower down the ranking than a maritime lien. What, in effect, the ship suppliers are asking is to allow them to go higher up the ranking and put themselves on parity with the U.S. suppliers.
As a Canadian sitting before you, albeit with a strange accent, I would tend to agree that that's a good thing. However, what you have to do if you give someone a privilege claim is make provision for the traditional safeguards. I think some of the safeguards that are in the U.S. Maritime Lien Act are missing from our lien provision.
There was talk on Tuesday of a “made in North America” type of fix. It seems that there has been a little bit of cherry-picking going on, and some of the good parts have been taken out of the U.S. legislation and some have not.
The best analogy I can make is that you heard comments on Tuesday afternoon of an owner, a ship's master, a ship's agent. I didn't hear any comments on the webcast of a charterer. If I put it into a landlord-tenant type of analogy, the owner of the ship is like the landlord and the charterer of a ship is like a tenant. The issue that you have to come to terms with is this: is it fair for a tenant to be able to bind the landlord to charges on his property if the owner doesn't know anything about it or the landlord doesn't know anything about it? Right now in the bill you have a provision, which is a good provision, but it needs some safeguards put into it.
The last point is that a general limitation period has been proposed. That is a good thing. It harmonizes federal law across the country and that should be encouraged.
The one thing that is missing is what we call a “tolling agreement”. A tolling agreement is a mechanism that allows parties to extend the limitation period by agreement, if they so choose. Today, tolling agreements are allowed in the province of British Columbia, for example. They are not allowed in the province of Ontario. If you're going to have maritime law uniform across the country, then things that make sense and work, as tolling agreements do in British Columbia, should be extended across the country and put into a general maritime provision.
Those are my comments. I'm going to open the floor to the committee for questions. I'll take as many as you want to throw at me. Those I can't answer I'm going to deflect to Mr. Bowie.
Thank you for letting me speak to you this afternoon.