Report of the Standing Joint Committee on
Regulations and other Statutory Instruments, Document tabled in the Senate and
House of Commons, July 17, 1980
Probably no parliamentary committee works
harder and gets less publicity than the Standing Joint Committee on Regulations
and Other Statutory Instruments. Unlike other committees its workload is
unrelated to the parliamentary timetable since the government continues to make
regulations and orders-in-council whether Parliament is sitting or not. Most of
these regulations are studied by the committee and its staff to make sure they
are in keeping with criteria established for the scrutiny of delegated
legislation. From time to time the Committee draws the attention of the House
to a regulation which violates one or more of its criteria. On two occasions
the Committee has presented extensive reports on the whole issue of
parliamentary scrutiny of subordinate legislation. The first was presented in
February 1977. This report covers much of the same ground and while it is perhaps
repetitive for experts in the area it does give an overall view of the issues
involved. This will be useful to the many new parliamentarians elected since
the publication of the last report.
There are also some notable differences compared
to the 1977 report. This report emphasizes that delegated legislation is not
abnormal or confined to matter of detail. It is the ordinary and indispensable
way of making the bulk of the non common law of the land. Starting from this
premise the report argues convincingly that procedures for making and
controlling subordinate law must be regularized and brought into harmony with
constitutional practices. The report gives more attention to questions that
were merely touched upon in 1977 such as the need to scrutinize the merits of
statutory instruments in addition to their form and legality. The report
argues, at some length, that disallowance of subordinate legislation that has
already been made and the affirmation of draft subordinate laws (commonly
called negative and affirmative vote procedures) be established as regular and
invariable parts of the Canadian system of subordinate law. The rules of both
the Senate and the House of Commons should be amended to facilitate these
procedures.
The Committee also expanded on certain
issues fundamental to the problem of scrutinizing delegated legislation. It
supported an Economic Council of Canada idea for a sixty-day notice and comment
procedure for all new regulations which have a significant impact in terms of
cost or impact on the distribution of income and are susceptible to
cost-benefit analyses. In fact the Committee would extend the use of notice and
comment to all new regulations. The Committee noted certain drafting practices
which it claimed are inimicable to parliamentary scrutiny. This is ironic
because Canada has a deservedly high reputation in the Commonwealth for the
clarity of its parliamentary drafting and its advances in the skill or art of
drafting. Nevertheless it was apparent to the Committee that:
clarity of drafting and the relative ease
with which a Canadian statute can be read have not been achieved without a
price. Far too many statutes contain little or no indication of legislative
policy and are neutral documents the object of which is merely to confer powers
on the executive to act in certain vaguely defined fields. Moreover, these
powers are granted in very broad terms so that little or no detail is given as
to the content or type of delegated legislation that can be made.
As far as its own procedures are concerned
the Committee concluded that in future it will report instruments to the House
not merely to illustrate or draw attention to specific orders-in-council but
also to instances where Ministers, Departments or Agencies have failed to
honour an undertaking to amend or revoke a statutory instrument as requested by
the Committee. Similarly promises by Departments to refrain from certain
actions in the future will be scrutinized more carefully by the Committee.
The report contains many other interesting
observations and recommendations. It concludes with an appendix showing the
disposition of recommendations made in its landmark 1977 report. Unfortunately
only a small percentage of those recommendations have been acted upon and not necessarily
the most important ones. It remains to be seen if this report will fare any
better.
The Editor