moved:
Motion No. 15
That Bill C-20, in Clause 32, be amended by replacing lines 25 to 37, on page 16, with the following
"(2) A charge authorized by the Minister of National Defence may be imposed under subsection (1) a ) on a user; or b ) on a user in respect of a state aircraft of a foreign country.''
Mr. Speaker, in this bill that will commercialize air navigation services, the motions in Group No. 4 are aimed at ensuring that the Department of National Defence will do its part in funding and running Nav Canada.
This bill currently provides that the Department of National Defence will not be subject to the charges that other carriers will have to pay. In our opinion, this distorts the real assessment of DND's operating costs, of the budget funds allocated to national defence, and may have a negative impact on some airports when services are shared by DND and all private air service users.
Why should DND be exempt? The easing of international tensions in recent years has led to perhaps insufficient but still significant cuts to DND. Further cuts are needed, but DND should still be held accountable for all its spending.
If DND is exempted from paying air service charges, its annual estimates will give the impression that it costs less than it really does.
Military flights still mean something in Canada. Our training bases are used by Canadian soldiers, but some of our flight training areas, notably in Labrador, are also used by other countries. Why should DND not pay its share? This would also help us determine what parts of the country benefit from this kind of spending.
If DND generated significant revenues for a special purpose airport, this would allow us to consider the economic impact of this bill on air navigation activities.
Ultimately, what we would like to see prevail, and this is the principle found everywhere else in the bill, that is why we are somewhat surprised at the government's position and we think it would be a good idea to correct the situation, is the user pay principle.
Would there not be a benefit today in ensuring that the real expenses incurred by a department are paid by that department? There are other sectors of government activity that will have to defray these costs directly or indirectly. For example, if we take the health sector, ambulance airplanes are used in Canada to reach remote areas. These people will have to cover the planned charges. Why would this kind of charge be picked up by the health sector and not by the national defence sector? It applies in the health sector, but it could also apply in the tourist sector.
The tourist industry in Canada is very important. It has grown considerably and is expected to grow even more in future. With the new charges, many small carriers may see their economic activities jeopardized. They will have to change their method of operating accordingly. This is not required of a huge department like defence, which spends enormous amounts on protection, but, at the same time, it would not be charged the portion of air navigation costs that apply in its case.
It strikes us as most surprising that, in sectors like health, tourism, businesses, they are trying to justify fee scales for private sector flights but there none for defence flights. Is that not a double standard? Is that not a mistake, in fact?
This seems to be perpetuating, in relation to the defence sector, practices which existed in the government some 15, 20, 25 or 30 years ago. People became aware that these practices were having devastating effects, a loss of control over the cost of operations. If defence does not have to bear its part of the costs, does this not lead to a tendency to use available services more, and to put increased pressure on the system? Finally, there can be no real assessment of what the costs of air navigation for the defence sector are. Are there not facilities in certain parts of Canada which will need to be put into place specifically for defence purposes, without there being any corresponding charges levied?
All of these questions lead us to wish to see an amendment to the bill, one ensuring that this department assumes its share, as other departments must, and as the private sector is required to do, paying its way in the reconfiguration resulting from the creation of Nav Canada and the commercialization of air navigation services.
Reference is also made to foreign government aircraft, which whould also be made to pay. I think it is important, from the safety and security points of view, to know what is going on with these flights, what costs they will generate, what sort of protection we can provide them.
Just imagine something which I certainly do not wish to ever see happen: a collision between a defence or military aircraft and one belonging to a private carrier. This would create a somewhat artificial situation in which one of the parties involved in the accident had never been required to contribute to the quality of safety services. This would surely contribute to a poor opinion of the defence sector. These days I do not think there is anything to be gained by adding to the negative image of a department described yesterday by its minister as in a "painful situation", when serious questions are already being asked about its efficiency and transparency.
The purpose of our amendments is to ensure greater transparency, to make sure that the exact air navigation costs of department of defence activities will be known. This will, I believe, be worthwhile both to the House and to those concerned with costs, in these
times when people are questioning whether money is being used properly. It will be one way of knowing what the real costs are.
Also, private air carriers and Canadian taxpayers should not necessarily be the ones paying for national defence. Why should they have to foot the bill in this case? This is tantamount to giving additional importance to the defence sector. As I said earlier, if I could favour certain sectors by granting them such an exemption, flying ambulances would definitely take precedence over military flights. Let military aviation officials know exactly how much it really costs to fly their aircraft. This is important and it should be taken into account. This is the purpose of our amendment, and we hope the government will support it.
Small carriers really wonder about the additional pressure put on their activities through the new tariff structure. They are justified in saying there should not be a double standard in Canada but, rather, a level playing field. Whether it is the military or the private sector, everyone must bear the overall costs. Under the user pay principle, everyone must make an adequate contribution, so that when the time comes to determine the real costs of defence activities, these costs will be based on actual figures, not incomplete data that does not allow us to know the overall government costs in this sector.
I hope the government will seriously consider our proposal. It is based on sound arguments and it is fully justified. In the middle term, the government's decision to exempt DND from having to pay these costs would certainly not prove efficient from an administrative point of view, or in terms of the follow up of air navigation costs, which is the very basis of the legislation.