SUBCOMMITTEE REPORT

TECHNICAL STANDARDS
AND SAFETY ACT, 1999

LOI DE 1999 SUR LES NORMES
TECHNIQUES ET LA SÉCURITÉ

CANADIAN INSTITUTE FOR ENVIRONMENTAL LAW AND POLICY

OPERATING ENGINEERS
ADVISORY COUNCIL

CONTENTS

Thursday 1 June 2000

Technical Standards and Safety Act, 1999, Bill 42, Mr. Runciman / Loi de 1999 sur les normes techniques et la sécurité, projet de loi 42, M. Runciman

Canadian Institute for Environmental Law and Policy
Mr Mark Winfield

Operating Engineers Advisory Council
Mr Norm Stinson

STANDING COMMITTEE ON THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY

Chair / Président
Mr R. Gary Stewart (Peterborough PC)

Vice-Chair / Vice-Président

Mr Brad Clark (Stoney Creek PC)

Ms Marilyn Churley (Broadview-Greenwood ND)
Mr Brad Clark (Stoney Creek PC)
Ms Caroline Di Cocco (Sarnia-Lambton L)
Mr Jean-Marc Lalonde (Glengarry-Prescott-Russell L)
Mr Jerry J. Ouellette (Oshawa PC)
Mr R. Gary Stewart (Peterborough PC)
Mr Joseph N. Tascona (Barrie-Simcoe-Bradford PC)
Mr Wayne Wettlaufer (Kitchener Centre / -Centre PC)

Substitutions / Membres remplaçants

Ms Marilyn Mushinski (Scarborough Centre / -Centre PC)
Mr John O'Toole (Durham PC)

Also taking part / Autres participants et participantes

Ms Kathy Levine, legal counsel, Ministry of Consumer and Commercial Relations
Mr Robert Dowler, director, marketplace standards and services branch, MCCR
Ms Karen Golden, senior policy adviser, policy and agency relations branch, MCCR

Clerk / Greffière

Ms Donna Bryce

Staff / Personnel

Mr Lewis Yaeger, research officer, Research and Information Services
Mr Christopher Wernham, legislative counsel, Ministry of the Attorney General

The committee met at 1551 in committee room 1.

SUBCOMMITTEE REPORT

The Chair (Mr R. Gary Stewart): Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. We'll call the meeting to order. The first bit of business is the report of the subcommittee. I will read it, if I may.

"Your subcommittee met on May 17, 2000, and has agreed to recommend:

"(1) That the committee commence consideration of Bill 42, Technical Standards and Safety Act, 1999, on Thursday, June 1, 2000.

"(2) That the Canadian Institute for Environmental Law and Policy be invited to appear as a witness before the committee for a half-hour time slot.

"(3) That clause-by-clause consideration commence on June 1 following the witness presentation. If available, amendments may be filed with the clerk by 12 noon on Tuesday, May 30, 2000.

"(4) That the Chair, the clerk and the subcommittee be authorized to attend the annual meeting of the National Conference of State Legislatures in Chicago on July 16 to 20; and that approval of the House be sought."

Is there a mover on this?

Mr John O'Toole (Durham): Mr Chair, I have a proposed amendment.

The Chair: You have to move it first.

Mr O'Toole: I move the report of the subcommittee. With your permission, I would submit an amendment to paragraph 2.

I move that paragraph 2 of the subcommittee report be amended by adding the Operating Engineers Advisory Council as a witness.

The Chair: Any debate on that? All in favour? The motion is carried. Shall the subcommittee report, as amended, carry? Carried.

TECHNICAL STANDARDS
AND SAFETY ACT, 1999

LOI DE 1999 SUR LES NORMES
TECHNIQUES ET LA SÉCURITÉ

Consideration of Bill 42, An Act to enhance public safety and to improve competitiveness by ensuring compliance with modernized technical standards in various industries / Projet de loi 42, Loi visant à accroître la sécurité publique et à améliorer la compétitivité en assurant l'observation de normes techniques modernisées dans plusieurs industries.

CANADIAN INSTITUTE FOR ENVIRONMENTAL LAW AND POLICY

The Chair: We will move on to the agenda. The first witness for Bill 42 is from the Canadian Institute for Environmental Law and Policy. If you would introduce yourself, sir, please. Welcome to the committee.

Mr Mark Winfield: Thank you, Mr Chairman. My name is Mark Winfield and I'm director of research with the Canadian Institute for Environmental Law and Policy. I'm pleased to be able to address Bill 42 here today.

The Canadian Institute for Environmental Law and Policy is an independent, not-for-profit environmental law and policy research and education organization. We were founded in 1970 as the Canadian Environmental Law and Research Foundation. You may be wondering why an environmental organization is here today to talk about a bill that deals with public safety and consumer affairs issues. Really, the reasons are that we have actually just completed a study on the Technical Standards and Safety Authority, which is central to this bill.

What drew us into this was that the institute a few years ago undertook a study on the regulation of underground storage tanks and it was published as a book called Toxic Time Bombs. One of the things we looked at was the fact that it was actually the Ministry of Consumer and Commercial Relations rather than the Ministry of the Environment that regulated these things. That's what gave us an introduction to this.

In 1996, in the course of doing the annual report that we do each year on changes to environmental laws, institutions and policies in Ontario, we came across something called the Safety and Consumer Statutes Administration Act, which had been passed in June 1996. What this act did, among other things, was to provide for the creation of the Technical Standards and Safety Authority. The authority was one of four so-called delegated administrative authorities which were created to take over regulatory functions of the Ministry of Consumer and Commercial Relations. The TSSA and the other authorities are private, not-for-profit corporations to whom the administration of the statutes administered previously by MCCR were turned over. In the case of the TSSA, it's the statutes related to elevating devices, amusement devices, fuel storage, boilers and pressure vessels, so a fairly broad range of things related to public safety.

In addition to being private, not-for-profit corporations, the other important feature of the delegated administrative authorities seemed to us to be the fact that the majorities of their boards of directors were drawn from the economic sectors of the industries they were supposed to regulate. This seemed to us to raise a whole range of questions around political and legal accountability and about the potential effectiveness of these organizations.

In the following year, we received some funding from the Law for the Future Fund of the Canadian Bar Association and two private foundations to do a more detailed study on the implications of the TSSA and its sister organizations. We're tabling the results of that study today, which I understand you've been provided copies of. It is essentially our brief on Bill 42, because the legislation deals with a number of issues central to our findings with respect to the TSSA.

In the course of our study, we identified a number of significant concerns regarding the delegated administrative authority model, most clearly illustrated by the TSSA. The first, and perhaps one of the most significant, was that underlying the creation of the delegated administrative authorities was the notion that government would steer and the authorities would row. In other words, that government would give policy direction but that the authorities would actually implement government policy, so it was possible to distinguish between policy and administration.

One of the problems we identified with this model, though, was that when the government passed the statute creating the authorities, it failed to actually give them any clear policy direction. All you see in the statute is some vague references to providing for a safe, fair and competitive marketplace. There was no clear mandate given, for example, in the case of the TSSA to protect public safety or the environment or how such concerns were to be balanced in relation to the economic interests of the regulated industries. In our view, Bill 42 compounds this problem because it removes what policy direction is provided in the existing legislation administered by the authority, and I'll come back to the reasons for that in a minute.

The second area of concern that we identified with respect to the delegated administrative authorities was the issue of the status and the composition of the board of directors. Here, as we said in our original study, there seemed to us to be a potential for the institutionalization of conflict of interest as an organizing principle of public policy, in the sense that you had people who were essentially the regulatees in the position of potentially being the regulators. In our study we highlight in particular the lack of clear conflict-of-interest rules to deal with precisely that situation either in the statute, in the administrative agreement between the MCCR and the TSSA or in the TSSA's bylaws, to deal with the particular situation where the interests of the economic sectors from which directors come are potentially affected by what the TSSA does.

The third major area of concern that we identified was the issue of accountability. Here what we found is that as a private corporation the TSSA escaped most of the normal accountability structures that apply to government agencies. For example, it's not subject to oversight by the Provincial Auditor. It's not subject to oversight by the Ombudsman and oversight under the Ombudsman Act. It was not originally subject to oversight by the Environmental Commissioner under the Environmental Bill of Rights. It's not subject to the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, so the status of the records is different in terms of public access. It's not subject to the lobbyist registration requirements. If you lobby the TSSA or its sister organizations, you don't have to register with the lobbyist registrar because it's a non-governmental entity.

1600

The government did take steps to bring the TSSA back under the requirements of the Environmental Bill of Rights, but it remains outside of the requirements of these other statutes, the Audit Act, freedom of information, Ombudsman, all of those things. We regard this as a fairly serious gap, particularly in light of some of the concerns that have come up in the last few weeks around oversight and accountability, and particularly when government functions are transferred out of government. We also note that the formal accountability structure that was created for the Ontario-delegated administrative authorities is significantly weaker than that established for similar authorities in other jurisdictions.

In the course of doing our study we looked at similar organizations in the United Kingdom, New Zealand, Alberta and at the federal level. In each of these cases we saw that explicit provision had been made for the maintenance of parliamentary oversight, that they remained subject to oversight, where it is appropriate, by auditors general, ombudsmen, and, where appropriate, subject to freedom of information and protection of privacy legislation.

In terms of Bill 42, what all this means is a number of things. Basically what Bill 42 does is consolidate the seven safety-related statutes administered by the TSSA, but it also does something else which is very significant. In our view, it strips out all of the substantive provisions of the existing statutes and replaces them with general authority for the Lieutenant Governor in Council to make regulations instead. So where you look at something like the Elevating Devices Act, you see there are a whole bunch of specific prohibitions about requirements to get licenses, prohibitions on operating unsafe devices, requirements for investigations if something goes wrong. All of that is being removed and simply replaced by authority for the Lieutenant Governor in Council to make regulations instead.

We would object to this in principle anyway because it, in effect, diminishes the role of the Legislature and increases the discretion of the executive in terms of policy-making. But in this case it's a particularly severe problem because of the nature of the TSSA, because it means there's even less direction given to the authority by the Legislature in terms of in what direction to steer. In practice, in our view, because effectively almost all of the Ministry of Consumer and Commercial Relations technical and policy expertise in the areas of regulation handled by the TSSA went to the TSSA, it seems to us that the content of whatever regulations might be made by the Lieutenant Governor in Council is inevitably going to strongly reflect input from the authority. In effect, the authority would be put into the position of steering as well as rowing, and that is precisely what the Minister of Consumer and Commercial Relations at the time, Norm Sterling, said would not happen when the authority was created. The basic problem here is that the authority isn't accountable to the public in any concrete way for the policies it makes in the way the government is. You can't unelect the directors of the TSSA in the way that you can unelect the government if you didn't like what it does.

There are a couple of other specific problems we've identified in the bill. One in particular that's been drawn to our attention are the provisions of section 36. What this does is to give extremely broad discretion to the statutory directors. You have to understand that, because of the way the delegation works, the TSSA's vice-presidents act as the statutory directors for the purposes of the delegated legislation. It effectively gives them the power to waive or to vary the requirements that are set in the regulations. So even if the Lieutenant Governor in Council actually gives a direction for the regulations, there's then a power given to the authority staff to set aside those directions and do something else.

With respect to what to do with Bill 42 in the context of this, as we expressed in our report, we are in the position of having to oppose the bill in principle. We also note in this context particularly the removal of the substantive provisions from the existing legislation, which we cannot support. We also note that earlier drafts of the bill did in fact retain some of the key provisions of the safety-related legislation, but these have all been taken out in the version that was actually introduced into the House in December.

Specifically what we would suggest, and this reflects the recommendations you see in the final chapter of the report, is that steps be taken to strengthen the accountability framework for the delegated administrative authorities and to bring them into line with what other jurisdictions have done. You'll see section 42 of the bill already contains a reference to the Environmental Bill of Rights and the Gasoline Handling Act. We would specifically suggest that the bill be amended to bring the delegated administrative authorities under the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, under the Ombudsman Act, under the jurisdiction of the Provincial Auditor, and to bring those lobbying the TSSA under the requirements of the Lobbyists Registration Act.

We would also like to see the opportunity taken to clarify the mandate of the delegated administrative authorities, particularly TSSA, to give clear priority to protection of public safety and the environment in the execution of its duties. We would also like to see the possibility of some consideration being given to amendments to strengthen the independence of the board of directors. In particular, you'll see we've made a recommendation that the act be amended in a way that would require that a majority of the directors of the board be independent of the economic interests which are regulated by the authority.

I'll close there and would be pleased to answer any questions you might have.

The Chair: Thank you, Mr Winfield. Questions?

Mr Jean-Marc Lalonde (Glengarry-Prescott-Russell): Just one question. Right at the beginning you said you were concerned about the underground holding tanks, which comes under MNR at the present time.

Mr Winfield: No, it actually was under Ministry of Consumer and Commercial Relations. The regulatory responsibility was transferred to the Technical Standards and Safety Authority when the administration of the Gasoline Handling Act and the Energy Act delegated to the authority.

Mr Lalonde: Are you referring to the fuel tanks?

Mr Winfield: Yes. The underground storage tanks for gasoline at gas stations would be the most obvious example.

Ms Marilyn Churley (Broadview-Greenwood): As people will know from the amendments I put forward-and I apologize for them being so late; we got caught up in other issues last week-I have obviously seen this report and have put forward some amendments to reflect some of the concerns as outlined by you today. Perhaps you could expand on this a little bit. I guess we're all extremely conscious of what happened in Walkerton. I believe you alluded to that, although you didn't say "Walkerton." I assume what you were saying was that unless we're very careful here that there's accountability, it could be an accident waiting to happen. I suppose that's how I'm interpreting what you said.

Mr Winfield: I think that would be a correct interpretation. Our concern is that the authority's mandate very clearly deals in public safety and in the safety of devices and activities which Ontarians deal with and encounter in their everyday lives. We've dealt with the authority staff quite a lot in the course of doing the study and we're very impressed with their consciousness of these issues, and they're concerned by them. But one also has to look to the future and the possibility that the current staff may be replaced by others who may not be as conscious of these matters. At that point, oversight by the auditor and the Ombudsman and the Environmental Commissioner becomes very important, because those are how we get early warnings of the potential for trouble.

We do know from events in the last few weeks that there were concerns expressed by legislative officers about the situation, or at least the circumstances that may be related to the situation which has arisen in Walkerton. One would want to have those early-warning systems in place in this case, because again you're dealing with very basic public safety issues and at the moment those structures are lacking. I think it's of particular concern given the newness of the model and the need for independent oversight and also the gap between what was established in Ontario when these kinds of entities were created relative to what was done in other jurisdictions, which was to very clearly establish that kind of accountability framework from day one.

Mr O'Toole: I'd just like to thank you very much for your presentation. You have spent considerable time analyzing, and I appreciate that as a public service to the people of Ontario. You draw to our attention the importance of the letters patent, and I'm certain you've reviewed those yourself. For the record, it's to promote and undertake activities which enhance public safety, including training, certification, licensing, registering, audit, quality assurance and other things. It's a comprehensive list that probably adds to what exists today in a framework where, I believe, the ministry remains responsible for the public safety statutes and regulations and oversees TSSA's performance. It has oversight authority.

As such, you raise a very good point. If there is a conflict of some sort, ultimately the question does go back to the government, to the minister or to the Premier. It's important that the public's interests that you respect today, I also respect. Others may want to comment on this legislation that's before us in clause-by-clause,. There are amendments before us as well and we hope to address some of those.

1610

Mr Winfield: I would just very briefly make a couple of points in response.

We've looked at the letters patent; there are a couple of concerns there. One is the degree to which they indicate the substantive definition of the TSSA's mandate and direction by the TSSA itself, rather than by the government. That's a concern because the whole underlying notion behind this model was that the government is supposed to give direction and then the authorities are supposed to follow it. That's quite important from an accountability framework perspective. As one of my co-authors of the study put it, rather than giving direction in which to row, the government provided a boat and said, "Pick a river." The authority filled the gap, as it had to do, but the concern is also, though, that there is a duality to the mandate which has emerged. We've seen in some of the statements from the board of directors and others that they do seem to have as much focus on competitiveness and economic concerns to regulate sectors as they do on public safety regulation. That concerns us, because the experience in Canada with organizations where there's been a mixing of regulatory and promotional roles is not a pretty one. We've had some very serious developments that way.

We also have some concerns, and these are all laid out in the report, about the capacity of the government to oversee the authority. All of the expertise, in effect the entire technical standards division of the MCCR, went to the TSSA, so all of the policy and technical expertise moved over with the authority. You're left, really, as I understand it, with about five staff who are in charge of looking after TSSA, plus the other four delegated administrative authorities, plus the new home warranty program, plus, I think, either the cemeteries or funeral homes-I can't remember which. There's some concern about the oversight capacity and there is also, as I say, again in the context of the bill, the degree to which the government is going to be able to respond to what the authority might suggest in terms of the regulations that might be made under this bill to replace the substantive provisions of the statutes.

I'll just leave it there. That's sort of where we're coming from in terms of our concern.

The Chair: Any other comments on the debate? If not, Mr Winfield, thank you very much for your presentation, sir.

Mr Winfield: Thank you, Mr Chair.

OPERATING ENGINEERS
ADVISORY COUNCIL

The Chair: The next delegation is from the Operating Engineers Advisory Council; if you would identify yourself to the committee, sir. Welcome.

Mr Norm Stinson: My name is Norm Stinson and I'm the chairperson of the Operating Engineers Advisory Council, which advises the Technical Standards and Safety Authority in matters concerning, currently, the Operating Engineers Act.

I'm also the chief operating engineer at CAMI Automotive at Ingersoll and have been an operating engineer for about 40 years-I'm giving away my age here.

I am presenting today as the chair of the Operating Engineers Advisory Council, which, as I mentioned, supports the TSSA and, through them, the Ministry of Consumer and Commercial Relations.

The council was the former board of review and it was advisory to the technical standards and safety division of the MCCR. The council consists of stakeholders from the power plant industry who are drawn from both labour and owner/user interests.

Since the formation of the TSSA, the members of this council have worked closely with the TSSA staff to review and provide input into the proposed Technical Standards and Safety Act. In addition, we have rewritten the accompanying power engineer regulations-or, I should say, the draft of those. In this process, we have received presentations from several interested stakeholders representing industry associations, thus providing us with a broad perspective of the issues.

It is our understanding that the draft act has had second reading in the Legislature. We believe that its enactment will enhance public and industrial safety in Ontario. The operating engineers of Ontario have a proud record of power plant safety, which the new act will help maintain.

The Operating Engineers Advisory Council appreciates this opportunity to address the committee regarding the proposed Technical Standards and Safety Act concerning two issues.

The first one is the term "operating engineer" versus "power engineer." The term "operating engineer," which is used in the existing act, we feel is outdated. "Power engineer" would be more consistent with the other provinces, except for Quebec. "Power engineer" is consistent with the SOPEEC, the Standardization of Power Engineering Examination Committee, which is a move towards standardizing qualifications and standards across Canada. "Power engineer" is more descriptive of certified personnel who operate and maintain power plants, and "power engineer" is consistent with the Institute of Power Engineers, which is a chartered professional organization across Canada.

The existing Operating Engineers Act regulations refer to "operating" and "stationary." Those are basically one and the same, but the two terms get bandied back and forth.

All other provinces call such people power engineers, as I mentioned. In British Columbia, the right to this title was won in the courts. I understand it went all the way to the BC Supreme Court.

We are working towards national standardization of education and qualifications through IPEC and SOPEEC. I mentioned SOPEEC before; IPEC is the International Power Engineering Curriculum. The Institute of Power Engineers has been a certified national organization, as I mentioned, since the 1930s. The members are operating engineers, primarily, and power engineers in other provinces.

In the interests of consistency and standardization, we request that in the new act and regulations all references to "operating engineer" or "stationary engineer" be eliminated and replaced with the term "power engineer." Thus, we would expect to see the new regulation be the power engineers regulation and for certificates of qualification to refer to us as "power engineer."

The second item is, we would like to have the act include wording to ensure the effective continuance of industry advisory councils. The board of review is written into the existing Operating Engineers Act as an advisory body to the MCCR. Since the formation of the TSSA, we have operated as the Operating Engineers Advisory Council. This was a change based on mutual trust and it has worked out well. Other groups of stakeholders also have advisory councils. Each is expecting to have input into the act and their relative regulations, including administration, both now and in the future. We have no reason to believe that this will not continue, and we are interested in maintaining the existing format. We have a letter of commitment from John Walter stating that we would have that support from the TSSA.

1620

The councils are an important link between the MCCR and TSSA and their stakeholders. Their existence provides a measure of trust between the parties, a means for stakeholders to influence the content and administration of the act and regulations, a valuable resource to both the TSSA and MCCR for both technical support and advice, as well as feedback on non-technical issues.

Many stakeholders feel they need some assurance that legislative changes will not take place without their knowledge and an opportunity to advise. We have seen past occasions when controversial changes were made to the Operating Engineers Act regulations without consulting the board of review or other stakeholders, except for a partial group who were lobbying for specific changes. Unfortunately, this leaves some stakeholders with distrust of the process. To establish the future of advisory councils, we request that the new act include wording to support the existence and functions of each of the advisory councils as they exist today.

At the present time, each council is expecting to have input into the formation and administration of each of the respective regulations to follow this act. In the future, as in the past, it is expected that changes will be made to each regulation, as required, to help assure safety in Ontario. To assure continued stakeholder input into the regulations and their administration, I would suggest this wording change that we request. This should include a requirement that the respective advisory council be consulted and given the opportunity to make recommendations with respect to all proposed changes before they are made. Of course, we recognize that the TSSA and MCCR would not be bound to follow those recommendations.

I thank the committee for this opportunity, and request full consideration be given to these requests. These two items will do much to achieve stakeholders' acceptance of the new legislation. We would appreciate a response if that's possible.

As a footnote, I must represent some of our stakeholders in that some of the stakeholders are concerned that the act may be passed ahead of the regulations. I understand that's not the normal way of doing things, but I just want you to be aware that some people are concerned that if the act goes through without the regulations, they may not be able to have any influence on the regulations.

The Chair: Thank you, Mr Stinson. Any comments or debate? Ms Churley? No. Government members?

Mr O'Toole: Thank you very much, Mr Stinson. I respect the professional CV you provided here. Certainly you have 40 years of valid observations. As you are probably aware, in the development of this framework legislation there were extensive consultations with over 200 individual groups. In your response you can acknowledge if you were or were not involved. But it's my understanding that the TSSA has committed to continue that further consultation process, that model.

What this really does, in my understanding, is put the regulatory support for these seven acts into a framework that's more flexible, more accessible. Certainly under the letters patent TSSA is still ultimately responsible for ensuring public safety. It's also your responsibility, as you've done today, to bring to the attention of the TSSA concerns you might have, some of which may be technical and safety in nature and some of which may have other motives, if I could leave it at that.

Technically, in my short time here, on two or three occasions we've had groups come with us to help define "technician," "technologist," the whole sensitivity around some of these terms. I didn't realize it was so intimidating or territorial, but I think the same provision applies with the term "engineer." This trade, as well recognized, as well respected as it is in Ontario, probably serves as a model for the rest of Canada as it is. I think I've sort of responded to the two points. The continued consultations-it's on record; you've been here, and I thank you for that, to put it on the record and hold us accountable. It's a continuous review process, the model they've developed. I hope that, respectfully, responds to some of the issues you've raised in your presentation.

Mr Stinson: We do recognize, of course, that you would not want to put into the act that the council be a formation accountable directly to the MCCR. But perhaps you could make the legislative agency-perhaps the administrative authority could be made responsible for maintaining those councils. As long as the TSSA is that authority, I don't think many of us have much concern, but we don't know where this is going in the future.

Mr O'Toole: If I may, without starting a dialogue, there's one other a small point. I do believe ultimately the overarching responsibility rests with the government, whoever that is. So you're not absolved; you're kind of at arm's length, and I think that's important to put on the record.

The other point I was trying to make was that, something you mentioned in your presentation, the act would pass before the regulations. Quite honestly, that's the way it happens. In my limited experience, you pass the bill and you sort of cross your fingers that the regulations will support that. I'm not trying to be too flippant there.

Ms Churley: You've got it.

Mr O'Toole: It's important to be vigilant. I think the delegations we've had today are testimony that you have come here, unsolicited and unfettered, through whatever means, and are being heard, as you should continue to be heard.

Mr Stinson: I do appreciate that.

Mr O'Toole: They'll be gazetted. I think as the regulations go, that's the formal process. They would be published and you would have a chance to comment then, if not before the development.

Mr Lalonde: On the second page, the back of the copy that you've given us, in the paragraph which starts, "At the present time," you indicate, "I would suggest that the act include wording to support the existence of advisory councils as they exist today." Where would you see that in the act? Could you tell us where it should appear in the bill?

Mr Stinson: Precisely what page or what section, I'm not sure.

Mr Lalonde: This would prevent me from reading this whole thing over again. If there's an amendment to be brought forth, we would-but at the present time I'd just like to know which section you refer to.

Mr Stinson: I don't know. Can you help me on that one, John? Where should it go?

Interjection.

Ms Churley: Can we ask for some assistance from somebody who knows the act, where it might go?

Ms Kathy Levine: I'm Kathy Levine. There is no provision in Bill 42 for consultation with advisory councils, exactly. There's no express provision.

Ms Churley: He's looking for an amendment.

Ms Levine: That's right.

Ms Churley: We're asking where, if we were to make such an amendment, you would see it go within the existing-

Ms Levine: Legislative counsel might have some opinion on that, but it would be an addition to Bill 42. It would be a new section to Bill 42.

Mr Lalonde: It would be a new section; so we would have to study it a little further. The fact that we didn't get this notice before prevents us from doing some research on that. I do recognize the importance of consultation in this case.

The Chair: When we're finished with the delegation, we'll have legislative counsel come back up and give us some advice on that. Would that be satisfactory?

Mr Lalonde: Yes.

Mr Jerry J. Ouellette (Oshawa): You asked for the name change from "operating engineers" to "power engineers." When the Operating Engineers Act came forward, why was that recommendation not made at that time?

Mr Stinson: That was made-what year was that? I believe it's the second-oldest act in the Ontario government. That act was made before the turn of the century, if I'm not mistaken. It is a very old term.

Mr Ouellette: What I'm seeing in another piece of legislation I'm working on is that there are constantly changing names for various aspects of engineering and that the field is constantly diversifying. How do you come forward with a name that's going to cover all, so that the next time a name is changed or specifics applied, it can be applied without changing legislation?

Mr Stinson: I would not anticipate another name change if we've got this one. As I say, it would be consistent then with other provinces, except for Quebec.

Mr Ouellette: Yes, I see you've mentioned that in there. So you don't think there would be any other diversification of name change?

Mr Stinson: No.

Mr Ouellette: I know in the Professional Geoscientists Act, we're seeing a considerable number of name changes there.

Mr Stinson: Within the operating engineer group right now, we have first, second, third and fourth class. I would still see that continuing. You would have power engineer first class, second class, third class, fourth class.

The Chair: Any additional questions? If not, then, Mr Stinson, thank you very much for your presentation. We appreciate it.

Mr Stinson: Thank you for the opportunity.

The Chair: I'm going to suggest to the committee that we have about a 10-minute break so we can discuss the get some advice from the legislative lawyer to answer Mr Lalonde's questions, and if it could be done.

Mr O'Toole: How long? A couple of minutes, or what?

The Chair: Let's say five minutes. I think that's probably enough.

The committee recessed from 1632 to 1644.

The Chair: We'll call the meeting back. I would like to introduce legislative counsel, Chris Wernham.

As well, Mr O'Toole, you are the parliamentary assistant who is carrying this bill. Would you like to make some comments and indeed introduce the people with you, please?

Mr O'Toole: I just want to start by introducing the people who will be helping us to work our way through Bill 42. Immediately on my left is Allan Williams, policy adviser to the minister. We also have ministry staff: Rob Dowler at the far end is director of the marketplace standards and services branch at the ministry; Karen Golden, policy and agency relations branch; Katherine Levine, the scriptor of this bill; Scott James, industry self-management liaison unit; and Carol-Lynn Lepard, communications services branch. Many of us have read the things she sends us to help advise consumers.

Also with us today we have the Technical Standards and Safety Association, John Walter, president and CEO, and David Scriven, corporate secretary. Thank you for joining us. For the record, you might want to know that I also thanked the presenters earlier today.

I have a duty as parliamentary assistant to read into the record a preamble which hopefully will help us to go through expeditiously the amendments that are before us.

I'm pleased to speak in support of the Technical Standards and Safety Act and introduce it for clause-by-clause reading at the standing committee on the Legislative Assembly.

The purpose of this act is to enhance public safety in Ontario with respect to the operation of amusement and elevating devices, boiler and pressure vessels, the hydrocarbon fuel sector, the activities of operating engineers and upholsterers, and stuffed articles.

The act consolidates many-

Interjection.

Mr O'Toole: Stuffed full of what, is the question.

The act consolidates many fundamental elements presently found in the seven statutes governing technical standards and public safety that are being repealed. It establishes one streamlined framework and retains the essential elements of a licensing scheme. The technical standards in the current act would be transferred to regulations, which then can be amended more rapidly to keep pace with technology and developments. This would allow regulated industries to make improvements in safety equipment quickly as new technologies become available. The administration of these statutes has already been delegated to the Technical Standards and Safety Authority under the Safety and Consumer Statutes Administration Act, 1996.

The TSSA is accountable to the government for its performance under a legally binding administrative agreement which sets out the details of reporting requirements, financial arrangements and governance. The ministry retains responsibility for the public safety statutes and regulations, and oversees TSSA's performance to ensure public safety standards are maintained and, in many cases, improved.

To develop this bill, the Ministry of Consumer and Commercial Relations has worked in close co-operation with the Technical Standards and Safety Authority. The evidence to date indicates this administrative model is working well to enhance public safety.

The TSSA, a private, not-for-profit organization, can retain the fees it collects from the industries for the services it provides. Revenues can then be directly reinvested into public safety programs and services.

The TSSA has delivered services more efficiently than government has in the past. For example, figures indicate that the number of inspections has increased over the last five years for elevating and amusement devices, and the number of serious injuries from accidents has significantly decreased.

The TSSA has strengthened partnerships with associations and government organizations across Canada and the United States to promote a greater understanding of Ontario's public safety requirements. This is helping to achieve a greater degree of compliance among companies from other jurisdictions to allow them to operate safely in Ontario.

The legislation would pave the way for businesses in technical industries in this province to continue the very high standards they have achieved to date. This new legislative framework would reduce red tape for the industries by modernizing and improving the efficiency, responsibility and flexibility of the existing legislation, while at the same time enhancing public safety.

Streamlining is another key feature of the legislation. For example, the new legislation provides for uniform decision-making and appeals processes for all of the technical industries administered by TSSA. The new system would be simpler and more cost-effective for both TSSA and its stakeholders.

In developing the legislation, the Ministry of Consumer and Commercial Relations and TSSA conducted extensive consultations with industry specialists and consumer groups. More than 200 stakeholders were consulted in drafting the proposed new legislation, and TSSA is committed to further consultations on any of its future proposed regulatory changes. The consultations included representatives from large industry groups like Paramount Canada's Wonderland and Otis Elevator to small business representatives like the Independent Retail Gasoline Marketers Association. Consumers were also represented during the consultations through groups like the Consumers Council of Canada.

The bill is really a compilation of the best aspects of seven predecessor statutes, and I invite the committee members to commence its review in clause-by-clause.

1650

The Chair: Thank you, Mr O'Toole. We will move then to-

Ms Churley: Can I ask one question, or is that allowed under the procedures now?

The Chair: It's allowed, Ms Churley.

Ms Churley: See how respectful I am being here? I just want to ask you not really a technical question, but you mentioned that the number of elevator inspections has increased. You know I have a particular interest in this. Being the former minister, my name gets to be in them.

Mr O'Toole: That's right. I see your name in all of them.

Ms Churley: Actually, the question isn't specifically on elevators. You used elevators as an example of service increases. I know that revenues have gone up, and in certain cases user fees. What I'm wondering is if you have documentation in all the areas to back up your claim that you are in fact doing more inspections across the broad.

Mr O'Toole: With your indulgence, I'll let Rob answer, but in a more lighthearted response I would say we're always doing more with less.

Ms Churley: And I go up and down with you every day.

Mr O'Toole: That's fine.

Interjections.

Ms Churley: I can't tell you how many times I used to hear that. OK, sorry.

Mr Robert Dowler: Unfortunately, I don't have the specific number with me in regard to elevators, but I can give you an overall number for TSSA.

Ms Churley: Actually it wasn't elevators. John used that as an example. I was interested overall and not in specific areas.

Mr Dowler: Overall, OK. Let's see. Prior to delegation to TSSA, the ministry conducted approximately 138,000 inspections per year. That number has increased to 178,000 under TSSA. That's across all the seven regulated sectors.

Ms Churley: In terms of fees, have there been across-the-board regular increases, or is it really uneven in terms of who's paying more for what they're getting?

Mr Dowler: My understanding is that the fee schedule has not changed dramatically since devolution to TSSA. There is a proposal, which is being consulted on right now, to rebalance the fee schedule. Some sectors are felt to be paying a little too much; some perhaps not quite enough.

Ms Churley: That's what I was getting at, actually.

Mr Dowler: That is a proposal which is being circulated at present, but to my knowledge it has not been implemented yet.

The Chair: We will move into clause-by-clause of Bill 42. Any additional questions, comments or amendments to the bill, and if so, to which sections?

Ms Churley: I want to move an amendment to section 3.

The Chair: We'll do that when we get there.

Ms Churley: Oh, I see. We have to do it in section 3. I haven't done this in a while. I forgot the way it works.

The Chair: I'm learning a little too, to be honest with you.

Shall sections 1 through 3, inclusive, carry? All in favour? Carried.

Your amendment, Ms Churley?

Ms Churley: Are we in section 3.1 now?

The Chair: Yes.

Ms Churley: I move that the bill be amended by adding the following section:

"DESIGNATED ADMINISTRATIVE AUTHORITIES

"Composition

"3.1 (1) Despite subsection 3(2) of the Safety and Consumer Statutes Administration Act, 1996, the Lieutenant Governor in Council may not designate an administrative authority as a designated administrative authority if a majority of its board of directors are representatives of the economic sectors comprising things governed by this act.

"Revocation of designation

"(2) The Lieutenant Governor in Council shall revoke the designation of a designated administrative authority in accordance with section 6 of the Safety and Consumer Statutes Administrative Act, 1996, if, at any time, a majority of its board of directors are representatives of the economic sectors comprising things governed by this act.

"Member appointed by minister

"(3) The term of appointment of a member whom the minister appoints to the board of directors of the designated administrative authority under subsection 8(1) of the Safety and Consumer Statutes Administration Act, 1996, shall be fixed."

The Chair: Do you wish to make any comments before I ask for debate?

Ms Churley: Yes, I do. Mark Winfield gave an overview of some concerns his organization has about this. I want to apologize on the record again that I wasn't able to get the amendments to the committee earlier. I had meant to, and we were overtaken with other events.

I think part of the problem here is that this was like a big, fat technical bill and perhaps not a lot of people paid attention to it. I had the opportunity to sit down and meet with Dr Winfield yesterday or the day before, and he brought some of these issues to my attention at that time.

I should remind the committee that our party, the NDP, voted against the initial bill, and it's expressed very well in Hansard why. I believe Mr Martin, who is our critic for MCCR, indicated we would perhaps be supporting this bill. However, upon reflection and noticing some concerns, particularly in light of our earlier concerns on principle in many ways, I do have some major concerns. I've moved this amendment to deal with one of the major ones Dr Winfield expressed concern about, and that is possible conflict of interest and that the majority of the board of directors are representatives of the economic sectors they're actually serving.

I would ask for support for this amendment, because I believe it will deal with the concern around the issue outlined by Dr Winfield, and I'd be happy to answer any questions I can about it.

Mr O'Toole: I again want to respond by saying that I appreciate the input by Dr Winfield. I think it's important consumer advocacy, and I support that. However, in the context of this bill, this new section would not necessarily be in order, in my view. I'd abdicate to the legal counsel, but actually this would be covered in the Safety and Consumer Statutes Administration Act, which created the TSSA. In that respect, the governance issues could be addressed through that legislation, as opposed to adding them out of context. They're inappropriate for this section. Legal counsel, would you support that layman's impression?

Ms Levine: Yes. The SCSAA is the legislation that does establish the framework for delegation of regulatory authority over a delegated statute. That would be the appropriate legislation to deal with issues of the board of directors. In fact, it is addressed in-

Mr O'Toole: It's in Bill 54 already, which we dealt with last in 1996.

Ms Levine: That's right.

Ms Churley: What's in that bill?

Mr O'Toole: The board composition.

Ms Churley: What I'm trying to address here is what is within that bill then, and the same concern is expressed in my amendment here. I cannot understand why it can't be included as another section to 3 here to clarify, because this is the bill we're dealing with now. That bill has already gone through the Legislature and has been passed. How can I amend that bill, except to persuade the government to do it? I don't understand the legal reasons why, within this section here, which deals with the designation of certain-let me take a look at this a second. I don't see why it can't fit within the content of this section. This is a major public concern. That's the only way to address it within this bill.

Mr O'Toole: With respect to what you said, I'm putting it on record right now that the ministry is certainly committed to reviewing the administrative authority in the coming months, as constituted in what was the Safety and Consumer Statutes Administration Act. On the record, we are committed to reviewing the legislation which governs the model you're trying to amend here, the governance model, in the next few months. Your amendment, in the context of this discussion, could be sent to the minister. He's interested in reviewing it.

1700

Ms Churley: I have to tell you that although it was done very quickly, I was told by leg counsel, or at least my legislative assistant was told, that this amendment was in order. I don't know who he talked to, but I would like to get a clarification.

Ms Levine: I'd like to clarify my comment. It's more a question of where it is appropriately addressed rather than whether it's in or out of order, which I can't speak to. We have legislation that establishes a framework for not just the TSSA but for five delegated administrative authorities. So issues that pertain to the manner of delegation are the subject of the SCSAA. But as to what is in or out of order, I can't-

Ms Churley: So now you're telling me it's not necessarily out of order; that in your view you could see that it might be appropriate in another piece of legislation, but it's not out of order.

Ms Levine: No. That is not my call to make.

Ms Churley: Having said that, the motion is then still on the floor. I believe, if we're passing this piece of legislation today, that it's important to include this amendment in the legislation.

Mr Brad Clark (Stoney Creek): I have a couple of questions. Five administrative authorities, you mentioned, are covered under a separate act. Does that act address the appointment of the people on those administrative authorities?

Ms Levine: It deals with the board composition and has a statement that there have to be consumer representatives and industry representatives on the board. That's dealt with in the legislation. It also provides that the minister may appoint a minority of members to the board.

Mr Clark: So the minister may appoint a minority of members to the board, but there have to be consumers on the board also?

Ms Levine: In terms of the-

Mr Clark: Can you explain the board composition, so that I understand it?

Ms Levine: It is dealt with in section 8 of SCSAA, or Bill 54, as you still call it. It says, "The minister may appoint at pleasure one or more members to the board ... as long as" they "do not constitute a majority" and the composition includes representatives of consumer groups, business-

Ms Churley: Can you speak up a little? I'm sorry.

Ms Levine: I'm sorry.

Mr O'Toole: "The members appointed by the minister may include representatives of consumer groups, business, government organizations or such other interests as the minister determines."

Mr Clark: So that is a separate act. Is that correct?

Mr O'Toole: Yes, we're reading from the Safety and Consumer Statutes Administration Act, I guess.

Ms Levine: Yes, the SCSAA, as we call it, because it is such a long name.

Mr O'Toole: Bill 54.

Ms Levine: Bill 54.

Mr Clark: I don't support that we should be amending it and putting something in this act when it's covered under another act. That's my position.

Mr Lalonde: It's the word "may" that they just mentioned, "The minister may appoint." "May" doesn't mean "will be appointed." The minister could turn around and appoint only industry reps on it. I do recognize the importance of this amendment. This way we have at least some industry sector reps and some non-industry reps on that, according to the amendment she brought up there. So the word "may" doesn't mean that it must.

Ms Churley: We need to be clear. We're not leg counsel. I was advised that this amendment is OK and in order. I haven't been told otherwise yet, and we can argue whether it's in or out of order, but I guess we need confirmation of that. I believe it is in order, from what I've been told.

Mr O'Toole: To clarify the record, if I inadvertently said it's out of order, that's not-

Ms Churley: That's what you said.

Mr O'Toole: Yes, OK. Well, I correct that and say it's not essentially out of order, and I guess we could vote on it.

The Chair: If there are no other comments, we deem this motion to be in order.

Ms Churley: Can we have a recorded vote, please?

The Chair: Indeed.

AYES

Churley, Lalonde.

NAYS

Clark, Mushinski, O'Toole, Ouellette.

The Chair: The amendment is defeated.

The next one: Ms Churley, 3.2.

Ms Churley: I move that the bill be amended by adding the following section:

"Duties

"3.2 Each designated administrative authority shall exercise its powers and duties under this act in such a manner as to protect the environment and the health and safety of the public."

The Chair: Would you like to make a comment?

Ms Churley: Yes, I think this will add to the bill, to have it very explicit within the bill, and at this point it isn't. Again, as Dr Winfield pointed out, when you as a government are busy putting all our safety laws and regulations into the hands of the private sector, it's important that we have stated as clearly as possible in writing within the bill the substantive duties of that non-profit private agency. So I actually don't see any reason why people wouldn't agree to having this in.

Mr O'Toole: In a general sense, the entire purpose of this act, the Technical Standards and Safety Act, is to enhance public safety. It's in the letters patent and it's in the mandate. In that sense it would be wrong to exempt them in any regard from that duty, due diligence in that mandate. This might imply that it's pointing it out as something it isn't doing otherwise, and I put to you that it is.

Ms Churley: That's all very well, and it's nice to take your word for it. But the problem is that there has been a stripping out of all the substantive elements that used to be there when it came under the ministry. Now the board of directors, as has been pointed out by Dr Winfield, and all the staff from this section within your ministry is over in this agency. They are going to be the ones in charge of writing these regulations, and because we're now in a situation during the transfer that we don't have these substantive elements in the legislation, I think it's important that we have this within the act.

Mr O'Toole: I again refer to the section of Bill 54, which is the genesis of this TSSA and which we will be referring to, and the designated administrative authorities' duties:

"7(1) A designated administrative authority shall carry out the administration of designated legislation delegated to it and shall do so in accordance with law, this act, the designated legislation and the administrative agreement, having regard to the intent and purpose of this act and the designated legislation.

"Additional activities

"(2) Nothing in this act restricts a designated administrative authority from carrying out other activities in accordance with its objectives."

In other words, I suspect it's just sort of repeating. It's clear that the request here-the environment and the health and safety of the public are implicit with respect to this authority of the TSSA.

1710

Mr Lalonde: I don't see the reason to add this amendment, because the purpose of the bill is to protect the environment and health and safety. This is exactly what we're saying in there.

Ms Churley: Could I ask a question? Could you explain to me-I understood what you just said, although I don't agree. That doesn't clear up the problem we have here with this particular piece of legislation. What would be your problem in having this added to the bill? How could it harm when it can only do some good in terms of substantively stating its duties and powers; that is, to protect to the environment and the health and safety of the public? That's what the entity is all about. In other words, what problems would it cause? That's what I'm asking.

Mr O'Toole: In a general sense the previous NDP amendment, as well as this one, is dealing really with, in my view, Bill 54, the delegated authorities, as such, they were the genesis of the TSSA. In that, they do have responsibility in the broadest and specific sense to address public safety and the environment. I have some difficulty with why this amendment is adding something which-

Ms Churley: I'm sure you heard Dr Winfield's comments on this. He identified a number of weaknesses in the model. I think what we're trying to do here is improve it out of concern for-and let me put on the record that I have the greatest respect for John Walter and his staff. I work directly with John and I know first-hand about John's integrity. This is not in any way an attack on Mr Walter and the staff. I know they're dedicated.

This is simply trying to make a bill stronger in the public interest. I believe from what I've seen, and I admit I haven't had a lot of time to read it, but in my own initial review of it and in light of what Dr Winfield had to say, it appears to me that one of the problems is the failure of the government to provide the authority with clear policy direction-Dr Winfield made that clear-either through the SCSAA or the administrative agreement.

What you seem to be saying is, don't worry about it; it's taken care of in Bill 54. I don't believe it is. I believe we have to strengthen this bill and put this particular section in there. I still don't understand, John, from your comment to me, why it would be a problem to have it in this bill.

Mr O'Toole: In a general sense, the scope here in section 1, that we've already voted on, is the purpose of applicable definitions. "The purpose of this act is to enhance public safety in Ontario by providing for the efficient and flexible administration of technical standards with respect to the matters referred to in section 2." That lists the seven different statutes that are being combined.

Ms Churley: That's a pretty general overview.

Mr O'Toole: I think if you go back to 54-we read the section before-it's quite specific in its duties. The letters patent that we looked at earlier in Mr Winfield's delegation to us are also quite specific. We could just go on for 100 years on this one.

Ms Marilyn Mushinski (Scarborough Centre): I've spent so much time discussing separation of powers in the last few weeks that I need to get some understanding of this. It would seem to me that, first of all, in the title itself, Technical Standards and Safety Act, implicit in that is what's trying to be achieved in the amendment. I'm just trying to figure out what the governing legislation is here.

It's TSSA's responsibility to protect public safety. That's implicit in the title, right? It's also set out in its letters patent, correct? My understanding is that one of the acts which TSSA is responsible for is scheduled under the Environmental Bill of Rights. Is that correct?

Mr O'Toole: Yes.

Ms Mushinski: OK. Is there any plan to change that under 42?

Interjection.

Ms Mushinski: OK. Is there currently some kind of a review underway with respect to the administrative authorities under this bill or under 54?

Ms Karen Golden: I think this bill deals with the technical standards and safety of the regulated industries, as opposed to Bill 54. This amendment is talking about the governance of all the different administrative authorities. With respect to the governance of the administrative authorities, my understanding is that staff are preparing to conduct a review of this administrative authority model through the summer. Changes that are purported to be made to all of the administrative authorities could best be reviewed in that context, in the context of Bill 54 and in the context of this cross-review, as opposed to putting in sections in an act that is seen to be a technical standards and safety act for one administrative authority. That would seek to somehow change the rules of governance across the board.

Ms Mushinski: Right. I couldn't have said it better myself. That's good.

Ms Churley: I understand what you're saying. I fundamentally disagree that we should just see this bill as a technical bill. That's in fact what a lot of people thought when they first looked at this big, thick bill. There's some independent analysis that is telling us that there are some fundamental problems and issues which we need to resolve while we're taking the public safety into account.

We have to pay attention to that. I take great issue today with saying, "Don't worry, we don't need to put it in here because we're going to deal with it in another place, in another bill, at another time." I don't think that's appropriate. We are dealing with environmental protection and we're dealing with public safety.

I believe that to any extent that we can strengthen it in this bill-because we know it's going to pass at the end of the day. It would give me some more comfort, unless there's some reason it shouldn't be in here. Beyond that, I don't accept that it is better dealt with later, in the future, down the road in another bill.

Mr Clark: With reference to the report from CIELAP, I had an opportunity to speak to Mr Winfield, and I raised the spectre that the ministry was telling me that there was going to be this review process of this other bill which would deal with all of the authorities. In light of that, would it be imperative that these things be in this act, or would it be more appropriate that we deal with it on the other side? He said: "There's merit to both, but if it doesn't get done here, we could still deal with it on the other side. It makes sense there also."

That's why I'm feeling comfortable with the suggestion that we deal with it with the review and look at it with all of the administrative authorities together. I hear what you're saying. I'm just saying that in my mind it makes more sense to deal with it with the bill that deals with all of the authorities, as opposed to just one specific one and leave the other ones hanging. That is my position on it.

1720

Ms Churley: This could be used as a prototype. Is this review happening at this very moment?

Mr Dowler: If I could help with that, the terms of reference have been prepared for the review. We expect that the review will be conducted over the course of the summer and fall, and we hope to have a draft prepared in late fall.

Ms Churley: A draft prepared in late fall.

Mr Clark: With respect then, that gives us an opportunity, and it also gives Mr Winfield and yourself a real opportunity to look at these suggestions and deal with it with the review and incorporate your suggestions in that bill.

I'm not trying to be hard to get along with. I'm just trying to think pragmatically. Very sincerely, I have concerns about some of these things I spoke to him about. But I am comfortable in letting it go through the review process and dealing with it at that point.

Ms Churley: If I may, and I'm glad you talked to Dr Winfield about this, I'm never comfortable losing an opportunity to improve a bill and make it more responsive to concerns about safety.

There is a review happening and a supposed draft in the fall. We don't know what's going to happen with that. We're in a committee today where we have an opportunity in this particular bill to make a difference now. That is my argument. I don't feel comfortable that later down the road we have an opportunity. It may or may not happen. We're here now, dealing with this bill. I still strongly recommend that we take this opportunity to do the right thing and get this in the bill that's before us today.

Mr O'Toole: In the interest of the committee's time and also to respect the points being made by the member, the next few amendments, all dealing with additional sections, up to 3.5, I would suggest are valid concerns. You've heard that from other members, including myself. Respectfully to Mr Winfield as well, it would be more appropriate in my view-because this TSSA deals with seven acts and the designated administrative authority, Bill 54, is probably the place which you've been told by staff is going to be in a draft form in the fall.

I would support much, including, as one of your later amendments addresses, the Ombudsman's role. One of them is the Provincial Auditor's role in these designated authorities, as well as the lobbyist registration, all of which, by the way, were in the doctor's report, the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, as well as the one we're dealing with now. They are at a higher order dealing with any designated administrative authority group, not just the ones dealt with in Bill 42.

What I'm saying is this: We can spend a lot of time on the same discussion on each one of them. I believe they have merit. I would be encouraged to forward those to this review of Bill 54, which we have staff's assurance is being done, and I'm saying that on the record here. That would, in my view, be the appropriate place, and the debate we're having here is value added to the public safety discussion we're having.

Ms Churley: I would suggest then that we vote on the particular amendment I just moved, because I certainly have something very specific to say about my following amendments that you've just addressed. Perhaps we should vote on this one so I can get to the next one, so I can respond to what you said, unless there are any more questions.

The Chair: Additional debate on section 3.2?

Ms Churley: A recorded vote, please.

AYES

Churley.

NAYS

Clark, Lalonde, Mushinski, O'Toole, Ouellette.

The Chair: The amendment is defeated.

Section 3.3?

Ms Churley: I guess I have to move these one at a time and discuss them.

I move that the bill be amended by adding the following section:

"Application of other acts

"3.3 Each designated administrative authority shall be deemed to be an institution as defined in the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act."

The Chair: Comments?

Ms Churley: I am going to take this opportunity. I know I have to read all of these others into the record, but I'll speak to them all at once, as Mr O'Toole did.

You will note that the next one is the lobbying one, the next one is the Provincial Auditor, and the next one is the Ombudsman.

Ms Mushinski: They all have to be read into the record.

Ms Churley: The reason why I really particularly want us to pass these today is that I would almost like to suggest that it was an oversight that it wasn't included in the first place. When you're transferring something as essential and important as this particular kind of public service over to a private agency, accountability to the public is of the absolute utmost importance.

A couple of people have alluded to the situation in Walkerton and the confusion around who's responsible to whom when you've got public labs. We have the situation where the second public lab, which did the tests in April and May, and their most recent tests, said that they didn't have to give the results to anybody but their client; they're a private lab. I'm sure that under the present circumstances and many investigations, that will be looked at, and regulations are being brought in. But we cannot have a bill before us that transfers completely all of the safety acts under this ministry to the private sector and not have the accountability to the public and to the government built in. I just think it's absurd and that we would all want to include those in this act today. I think that would give many people a great deal of comfort.

We did hear Dr Winfield express that we have to be very careful with these things. When we transfer things that have been traditionally done by government, to the private sector, and it's happening more and more, accountability is of the utmost importance.

He also said, and you'll see it in his report, that this is not the first time that this kind of transfer has happened in other jurisdictions, but it's the only jurisdiction in his study that actually-I believe he cited New Zealand, England, France; I'm not sure, but I think those were the ones-did something similar, but in fact did build in this accountability structure. So I would urge the committee to at least support these particular amendments today.

Mr Clark: I stand by my earlier comments. We're at loggerheads; I understand that. I'm simply stating that these issues are more appropriately, in my opinion, dealt with after the review with the other act.

The Chair: Additional comments? Debate?

Ms Churley: Recorded vote.

AYES

Churley, Lalonde.

NAYS

Clark, Mushinski, O'Toole, Ouellette.

The Chair: The amendment does not carry.

On 3.3(2), and they have to be read in.

Ms Churley: I move that section 3.3 of the bill be amended by adding the following section:

"Lobbying

"(2) Each designated administrative authority shall be deemed to be a public office holder and an organization that employs an in-house lobbyist, as those terms are defined in the Lobbyists Registration Act, 1998."

No discussion, just a recorded vote, unless other people support it.

The Chair: Any debate on this motion? Recorded vote then.

AYES

Churley, Lalonde.

NAYS

Clark, Mushinski, O'Toole, Ouellette.

The Chair: The motion is defeated.

Section 3.4, please.

Ms Churley: I move that the bill be amended by adding the following section:

"Audit

"3.4 The accounts and financial transactions of each designated administrative authority shall be audited annually by the Provincial Auditor."

A recorded vote.

AYES

Churley, Lalonde.

NAYS

Clark, Mushinski, O'Toole, Ouellette.

The Chair: The motion is defeated.

Section 3.5 please.

1730

Ms Churley: I move that the bill be amended by adding the following section:

"Ombudsman

"3.5 The functions of the Ombudsman shall include investigating any decision or recommendation made or any act done or omitted in the course of the administration of a designated administrative authority and affecting any person or body of persons in his, her or its personal capacity."

A recorded vote, please.

The Chair: Discussion? No.

AYES

Churley, Lalonde.

NAYS

Clark, Mushinski, O'Toole, Ouellette.

The Chair: The motion is defeated.

Shall sections 4 through to 16, inclusive, carry?

Ms Churley: Recorded, please.

AYES

Clark, Lalonde, Mushinski, O'Toole, Ouellette.

NAYS

Churley.

The Chair: Section 17, A government amendment:

Mr O'Toole: I move that subsection 17(1) of the bill be struck out and the following substituted:

"Inspection without warrant

"(1) An inspector may at any reasonable time, without a warrant, enter any lands or premises where the inspector has reason to believe, in good faith, any of the things, parts of things or classes of things to which this act, the regulations or a minister's order apply are used, operated, installed, made, manufactured, repaired, renovated or offered for sale and carry out an inspection for the purpose of determining in the public interest whether,

"(a) this act, the regulations or a minister's order are being complied with; or

"(b) a hazardous condition exists."

The Chair: Discussion? Mr O'Toole, do you wish to make comments?

Mr O'Toole: No.

The Chair: All in favour of the amendment on the floor? Opposed?

Will section 17, as amended, carry? All in favour? Opposed? Carried.

Will sections 18 through 20, inclusive, carry? All in favour? Opposed? These sections are carried.

On section 21, a government amendment:

Mr O'Toole: I move that subsection 21(5) of the bill be amended by striking out "under subsection (1) or (2)" and substituting "under subsection (2)."

The Chair: Discussion on the amendment? All in favour of the amendment? Opposed? Carried.

Shall section 21, as amended, carry? All in favour? Opposed? Section 21, as amended, is carried.

Shall sections 22 through to 36, inclusive, carry? All in favour? Opposed? Carried.

Section 37: Two opposition amendments.

Mr Lalonde: I move that subsection 37(1) of the Technical Standards and Safety Act, 1999, be amended,

(a) by striking out "$25,000" and substituting $50,000"; and

(b) by striking out "$100,000" and substituting $1,000,000."

The Chair: Discussion, Mr Lalonde?

Mr Lalonde: No discussion.

The Chair: Mr Ouellette?

Mr Ouellette: Seeing that in subsequent follow-up, repeat offences are possible, I would be supportive of the amendment put forward.

The Chair: Any other discussion on this?

Mr O'Toole: As a clarification, being PA, I'm just wondering if I could ask legal counsel, is there discretion by the board or TSSA or is the money we're stating here an upper limit? Or is it an absolute that they enforce that amount?

Ms Levine: This is prosecution, so it would be up to the judge.

Mr O'Toole: Oh, the courts.

Ms Levine: It's up to the courts.

Ms Golden: It's a maximum.

Mr O'Toole: It is a maximum, but they could assign any subordinated amount to that?

Ms Golden: Yes.

The Chair: Any additional debate?

Ms Mushinski: Recorded vote, please.

The Chair: We have an amendment on the floor.

AYES

Churley, Clark, Lalonde, Mushinski, O'Toole, Ouellette.

The Chair: The amendment is carried.

Amendment, subsection 37(3), Mr Lalonde.

Mr Lalonde: I move that subsection 37(3) of the Technical Standards and Safety Act, 1999, be amended by striking out "$25,000" and substituting "$50,000."

The Chair: Any discussion on this amendment?

Ms Churley: It's the same situation where it's up to $50,000, but it's the discretion of a court?

Mr Lalonde: Not more than $50,000 instead of not more than $25,000.

Mr Ouellette: Once again, in light of allowing for follow-up and repeat offenders, I think that's a necessary move.

The Chair: Any other discussion? If not, we have an amendment on the floor. All in favour? Opposed? Carried.

Shall section 37, as amended, carry? All in favour? Opposed? The section is carried.

Shall sections 38 through to 48, inclusive, carry? All in favour? Opposed? Carried.

Shall the long title carry? All in favour? Carried.

Shall the bill, as amended, carry?

Ms Churley: May I have a recorded vote, please.

AYES

Clark, Lalonde, Mushinski, O'Toole, Ouellette.

NAYS

Churley.

The Chair: Shall I report the bill, as amended, to the House? All in favour? Opposed? Carried. Ordered that the Chair report Bill 42, as amended, to the House.

We've got a couple of other things just before you go.

The following items need to be rescheduled: The review of the Clerk of the House, the review of the Sergeant at Arms and the review of the televising of the legislative proceedings. These were supposed to be on the 18th. Does the committee wish these items to be scheduled for June 8?

Ms Churley: It's just a sit-down to discuss the routines and procedures?

The Chair: As I understand, they do a report and it's sometimes an annual thing.

Mr Ouellette: I would recommend that the subcommittee meet and discuss what is necessary to proceed with that matter.

The Chair: You're going to have make another motion on that one. This was already approved and we were to do it on the 18th, except that we got bogged down that day. So it is approved. It's more on what date. If we can go ahead and schedule for June 8.

Mr Clark: Does it have to come before the committee or can the subcommittee deal with it, procedurally?

The Chair: The subcommittee recommends they come before the full committee. So everybody is in favour of June 8? OK.

The other thing is, the Ombudsman is planning to table his annual report on the morning of June 15. His assistant has called to ask if Mr Lewis could be scheduled at the afternoon meeting of the committee to discuss that report, which will be on June 15. Is the committee in favour of that?

Ms Churley: When would the committee be meeting to discuss that?

The Chair: On the 15th, the same day, at 3:30. Is everybody happy with that? OK. Thank you very much. The meeting is adjourned.

The committee adjourned at 1741.