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Veterans Affairs committee Thank you, Mr. Chair and members of the committee. I believe the clerk of the committee has circulated copies of the presentation in both official languages. There are four areas that we would like to briefly review today. The first is the different approaches adopted by the C
October 21st, 2010Committee meeting
Lyn Elliot Sherwood
Veterans Affairs committee I'm sorry, we don't have the export number. We do have information on the number that are certified for donation or sale for the special tax incentives every year. It's not an outrageously high number. The number of export permits overall is a few hundred for all categories of ma
October 21st, 2010Committee meeting
Lyn Elliot Sherwood
Veterans Affairs committee The Cultural Property Export and Import Act requires that to be protected, to come under export control, objects must be at least 50 years old. In the case of military insignia and accoutrements, there is a minimum threshold of $3,000. So under the existing legislation, for medal
October 21st, 2010Committee meeting
Lyn Elliot Sherwood
Veterans Affairs committee If I may, Mr. Chair, I would like to answer that question. The purpose behind the Cultural Property Export and Import Act is really to keep our heritage in Canada. Exporting objects of value is allowed, but for certain things considered to be of national importance, there is a p
October 21st, 2010Committee meeting
Lyn Elliot Sherwood
Veterans Affairs committee You're right. In protecting our heritage, we try to strike a balance between the public interest and the rights inherent in personal property. That is the reasoning on which the present legislation is based. For medals of great significance, like the Victoria Cross, to my knowle
October 21st, 2010Committee meeting
Lyn Elliot Sherwood
Veterans Affairs committee Under the Cultural Property Export and Import Act it is the Canadian Cultural Property Export Review Board that is responsible for that determination.
October 21st, 2010Committee meeting
Lyn Elliot Sherwood
Veterans Affairs committee The transaction and consideration that are described in Bill C-473 match the term used in the Cultural Property Export and Import Act, determining a fair cash offer. The term “fair market value” is used in an entirely different context in the Cultural Property Export and Import A
October 21st, 2010Committee meeting
Lyn Elliot Sherwood
October 21st, 2010Committee meeting
Lyn Elliot Sherwood
Veterans Affairs committee To my knowledge, since this act came into force, in 1977, there have been no prosecutions involving medals.
October 21st, 2010Committee meeting
Lyn Elliot Sherwood
Veterans Affairs committee There was one, 10 or 15 years ago, relating to an illegal export, but the medal was repatriated from the country in question.
October 21st, 2010Committee meeting
Lyn Elliot Sherwood
Veterans Affairs committee Most of the medals currently circulating on eBay or elsewhere date from the First World War or the Second World War.
October 21st, 2010Committee meeting
Lyn Elliot Sherwood
Veterans Affairs committee It isn't necessarily the person who received the medal who is selling it. It may be a family member, a third-generation descendant, someone who does not have a sense of belonging.
October 21st, 2010Committee meeting
Lyn Elliot Sherwood
Veterans Affairs committee At present, most medals don't have a value of more than $3,000; their value is ordinarily lower than that.
October 21st, 2010Committee meeting
Lyn Elliot Sherwood
Veterans Affairs committee May I?
October 21st, 2010Committee meeting
Lyn Elliot Sherwood
Veterans Affairs committee The issue we raised in our presentation was that right now the Cultural Property Export and Import Act covers medals that are 50 years old and older.
October 21st, 2010Committee meeting
Lyn Elliot Sherwood