Canada Marine Act

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The Canada Marine Act (French: Loi maritime du Canada), (the Act) passed in 1998 under the stewardship of David Collenette, Minister of Transport, was an act intended to modernize Canada's most important ports, and make "the system of Canadian ports competitive, efficient and commercially oriented, providing for the establishing of port authorities and the divesting of certain harbours and ports, for the commercialization of the St. Lawrence Seaway and ferry services and other matters related to maritime trade and transport and amending the and amending and repealing other Acts as a consequence."[1][2]

The Act[]

The Act designated 19 ports as economically significant.[3] Each of those ports was to have a port authority created for it. The Act made provisions to allow additional ports to have port authorities created to oversee their operation.[2] The Act downloaded the mandate to oversee the operation of 150 smaller ports to the provinces or municipalities in which they were contained.[2] Thirty-four remote ports remain under direct supervision by the Department of Transport.[2]

An exception was made for the port facilities at Churchill, Manitoba, North America's only port on the Arctic Ocean connected to the .[2] The Port of Sydney, Nova Scotia, is also not part of this system.[4] The Welland Canal, which is part of the Saint Lawrence Seaway, is regulated under the (R.S., 1985, c. F-24) which falls to the Department of Fisheries and Oceans. Port Dalhousie is subject to the Fishing and Recreational Harbours Regulations,[5] while Port Colborne falls under the Ontario Fishery Regulations.

Responsibility for the construction and operation of canals had been given to the Department of Public Works at the time of Confederation, with the canals of the United Province of Canada having been previously operated by that colony's Department of Public Works. Since 1995, the Minister of Public Works and Government Services Canada has taken care of these affairs. A vestigial reminder of the past is that the Ottawa River, which once was an important part of the economy with for example the Ottawa River timber trade, and "all canals or other cuttings for facilitating such navigation, and all dams, slides, piers, booms, embankments and other works of what kind or nature soever in the channel or waters" is wholly governed under this Ministry's An Act respecting certain works on the Ottawa River. Most of the other heritage waterways of Ontario and a few in Quebec are governed by Parks Canada under the guidance of the Minister of the Environment.

The Act is, from time to time, supplemented by Regulations and Letters Patent published in the Canada Gazette. Transport Canada maintains a helpful list of its "recent publications",[6] which documents, among other things, the land transactions of the various Port Authorities. The equivalent phrase to the English "Port Authority" is the French Administration Portuaire, so that one would google for "Administration Portuaire de Saguenay" or other Quebec emplacements. A list of board member appointments to Port Authorities can be found at the respective individual Governor in Council Appointments appointments-nominations.gc.ca webpages of each organisation.[7] The Minister of Transport alone appoints the Chair of the Board, while in consultation with the Minister, the remaining Board members are selected by "users" of the Port. A "user" is determined as specified under the legislation, and cannot include City Councillors, civil servants or directors of Port customers. Each Authority by now should have its own domain name website, at which can most likely be found copies of the Letters Patent and other legal documents.

An Act for making the system of Canadian ports competitive, efficient and commercially oriented, providing for the establishing of port authorities and the divesting of certain harbours and ports, for the commercialization of the St. Lawrence Seaway and ferry services and other matters related to maritime trade and transport and amending the Pilotage Act and amending and repealing other Acts as a consequence.

Recent transactions and news[]

  • On 18 June 2019, the Hamilton Port Authority and the Oshawa Port Authority were amalgamated
  • On 18 February 2012, Letters Patent were issued to promote the Oshawa Harbour Commission to a Port Authority.[8]
  • On 25 May 2013, the Canada Gazette published Letters Patent to announce a transaction of the Prince Rupert Port Authority[9]
  • On 16 November 2012, a project document was released about the Saguenay Port Authority intermodal container plan,[10] which will impact the village of Tadoussac, and which needed the support of Denis Lebel, MP for Roberval—Lac-Saint-Jean and Minister of Transport from May 2011. This project was planned forge a 12.5 km link from Tadoussac with the trans-Canada rail line at Saguenay.[11][needs update]
  • On 9 February 2013, the Canada Gazette published Letters Patent to announce the purchase of lands for the .[9]
  • On 25 May 2013, the Canada Gazette published Letters Patent to announce six purchases and one sale of the .[12]
  • On 2 November 2013, the Canada Gazette published Letters Patent that signified the sale of lands under control of the Thunder Bay Port Authority to Ltd.[13]
  • On January 1, 2008, the Vancouver Port Authority, Fraser River Port Authority and North Fraser Port Authority were amalgamated.[14]
  • On 16 March 2013, the Canada Gazette published Letters Patent that signified the termination of a leasehold arrangement at Goyeau Street for the Headquarters of the , and the acquisition of a replacement at Sandwich Street.[15]

CMA Port Authorities[]

CMA Port Authorities[2]
Port Authority Municipality Province # Directors[7]
Belledune, New Brunswick New Brunswick 7
Fraser River Port Authority[16] New Westminster, BC British Columbia -
Halifax Port Authority Halifax Nova Scotia 7
Hamilton-Oshawa Port Authority[3] Hamilton, Oshawa Ontario 7
Montreal Port Authority Montreal Quebec 7
Nanaimo Port Authority Nanaimo British Columbia 7
North Fraser Port Authority[16] Fraser River British Columbia -
Port Alberni British Columbia 7
Prince Rupert Port Authority Prince Rupert British Columbia 7
Quebec City Quebec 7
Saguenay Quebec 7
[17] Saint John New Brunswick 7
St. John's Newfoundland and Labrador 7
Sept-Îles Quebec 7
Thunder Bay Port Authority Thunder Bay Ontario 7
PortsToronto Toronto Ontario 9
Trois-Rivières Quebec 7
Vancouver Port Authority[16] Vancouver British Columbia -
Vancouver Fraser Port Authority Vancouver British Columbia 11
Windsor Ontario 7

References[]

  1. ^ "Canada Marine Act (1998, c. 10)". Transport Canada. 2013-12-10. Archived from the original on 2013-12-21. Retrieved 2014-01-01. An Act for making the system of Canadian ports competitive, efficient and commercially oriented, providing for the establishing of port authorities and the divesting of certain harbours and ports, for the commercialization of the St. Lawrence Seaway and ferry services and other matters related to maritime trade and transport and amending the Pilotage Act and amending and repealing other Acts as a consequence.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "The Canada Marine Act -- Creating Canada Port Authorities" (PDF). . March 1999. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-03-29. Retrieved August 1, 2013.
  3. ^ a b "Organization Profile - Hamilton Port Authority". Government of Canada. 2013-09-03. Retrieved 2014-01-01.
  4. ^ http://www.portofsydney.ca
  5. ^ laws.justice.gc.ca: "Fishing and Recreational Harbours Regulations" SOR/78-767
  6. ^ Transport Canada: "Recently in the Canada Gazette"
  7. ^ a b Governor in Council Appointments: list of "Federal Organisations by Portfolio", see "Transport"
  8. ^ Canada Gazette archive — Vol. 146, No. 7 — 18 Feb 2012: "CANADA MARINE ACT: Letters Patent issued to the Oshawa Port Authority"
  9. ^ a b Canada Gazette archives 9 February 2013, see "DEPARTMENT of TRANSPORT"
  10. ^ "gaiapresse.ca: "Projet de desserte ferroviaire au terminal maritime de Grande-Anse à Saguenay - Le rapport du BAPE est maintenant public" 16 Nov 2012". Archived from the original on 2014-01-11. Retrieved 2014-01-11.
  11. ^ Saguenay Port Authority: "What's New" page
  12. ^ Canada Gazette archives 25 May 2013, see "DEPARTMENT of TRANSPORT"
  13. ^ Canada Gazette archives 2 Nov 2013, see "DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORT"
  14. ^ "Port Metro Vancouver". Archived from the original on 2009-01-23. Retrieved 2014-01-03. In June 2006, the Federal Minister of Transport invited the Fraser River Port Authority, the North Fraser Port Authority and the Vancouver Port Authority to examine port amalgamation. The three port authorities subsequently commissioned a report on the potential benefits of an integrated port authority for the Lower Mainland. The report recommended that the three port authorities integrate to form the Vancouver Fraser Port Authority.
  15. ^ Canada Gazette archives 16 Mar 2013, see "DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORT"
  16. ^ a b c now defunct; see "Vancouver Fraser"
  17. ^ "Canada Marine Act & Letters Patent". . Archived from the original on 2013-04-17. Retrieved August 1, 2013.

See also[]

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