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Transport committee Thank you very much, Madam Chair. Thank you for having us here today, members of the committee. My name is Jim Given. I am the president of Seafarers' International Union, and I'm also chair of the Cabotage Task Force worldwide for the International Transport Workers' Federatio
September 13th, 2017Committee meeting
James Given
Transport committee I'll attempt it, just because I like to talk. Bill C-30 deals with the EU and with CETA and is limited to EU first and second registry vessels. If you look at the expansion of the movement of empty containers, it's being opened up to any flag vessel, which would be Panama, Lib
September 13th, 2017Committee meeting
James Given
Transport committee When you look at the industry as a whole and you start opening up cabotage to foreign carriers, it has a snowball effect. The rates conditions and working conditions on board foreign-flag vessels, and some of these are actually first registry European vessels, second registry Eur
September 13th, 2017Committee meeting
James Given
Transport committee Mr. Badawey, you talked about the St. Lawrence Seaway and especially the Welland Canal. It's an area that I think is close to both of our hearts, since we're from that area. I think this is one area where we agree. When you look at port infrastructures, when you look at the Well
September 13th, 2017Committee meeting
James Given
Transport committee If I may, I wanted to touch on what you talked about with regard to a Canadian owner who owns a foreign-flag ship who decides to flag his ship outside of Canada. There are many. They do it for many reasons, not just crew costs. They do it for taxation. To flag a ship outside of C
September 13th, 2017Committee meeting
James Given
Transport committee I actually look at this outside of the Montreal-Halifax corridor. A lot of that traffic now goes by train. I know you get into issues sometimes of double-stacking and having to unload to go under underpasses, etc.—the infrastructure. I look at the north, the Arctic sealift that
September 13th, 2017Committee meeting
James Given
Transport committee I can't speak to whether they are or aren't. I know that in the Arctic they do; in certain areas they do.
September 13th, 2017Committee meeting
James Given
Transport committee I've heard the testimony. My point is that Canadian companies right now, under the current coasting trade system, have an opportunity to move them if they want to. If they don't want to, the foreign ship or foreign company that applied for the waiver is free to move them. There a
September 13th, 2017Committee meeting
James Given
Transport committee It's my understanding right now, and I stand to be corrected, that the only company that has provisions to have containers in Canada for more than six months is Maersk Line, through a special provision. Other containers do get moved around. We see the field of them sitting in Mon
September 13th, 2017Committee meeting
James Given
Transport committee We've proven that they don't follow the same regulations when they're in Canada. There are two issues at play. The ship gets a coasting trade waiver. That covers the ship. The crew then apply for work visas through the temporary foreign worker program. There are two separate is
September 13th, 2017Committee meeting
James Given
Transport committee That's perhaps an unanswerable question. When you get into international waters, it's covered by international law and the law of the sea. When you get within the 200-mile limit or the 12-mile limit of Canada, the law then changes. However, again, working under cabotage, the crew
September 13th, 2017Committee meeting
James Given
Transport committee Actually, I do, through the International Transport Workers' Federation. I'm an expert for them, for the ILO and the IMO.
September 13th, 2017Committee meeting
James Given
Transport committee When you look at cabotage, the Center for Seafarers' Rights did a survey for us just a month ago, and we looked at United Nations member countries. Of course, we excluded the countries that were landlocked, and then we looked at the countries that had two ports or more. Sixty-sev
September 13th, 2017Committee meeting
James Given
Transport committee The traditional maritime nations, when you look at Canada, the United States, Norway.... Sweden is the first registry. Norway is the first registry. Denmark is the first registry. Germany is the first registry. They're not their second registries. Those countries are strong marit
September 13th, 2017Committee meeting
James Given
Transport committee —it's left up to the rest of the world to try to enforce it. Yes, I did say that. Excuse me.
September 13th, 2017Committee meeting
James Given