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Supreme Court of Canada rules on National Regulator

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    Supreme Court of Canada rules on National Regulator

    OTTAWA — The federal government's ambitious plan to set up a single national securities regulator has been dealt a severe blow by the Supreme Court of Canada, which ruled Thursday that Ottawa's proposed legislation is unconstitutional.


    In a ruling that is bound to disappoint Ottawa, Ontario, and several business groups, the Supreme Court held that oversight for the investment industry fits squarely within the "property and civil rights" powers that are assigned to the provinces by the Constitution Act of 1867.


    Ottawa had tried to claim control over the securities business by invoking its regulatory power over trade and commerce, but the Supreme Court ruled that the federal government's plan overstepped the constitutional boundaries that case law has erected over time to prevent Ottawa from overusing that power.


    In the unanimous decision, which was released by the court and is therefore not attributed to any specific judge as author, the court says Ottawa's planned approach would dive too deeply into the day-to-day operations of the securities industry, which are contractual in nature and therefore fit squarely within the provincial power over property and civil rights.


    Yet the ruling does suggest that it would be possible for both levels of government to seek "common ground" and share oversight of securities, with the provinces able to look after the day-to-day aspects of the industry and the federal government able to keep an eye on systemic risk.


    "While the proposed act must be found ultra vires (beyond) Parliament's general trade and commerce power, a co-operative approach that permits a scheme that recognizes the essentially provincial nature of securities regulation while allowing Parliament to deal with genuinely national concerns remains available," the court's written 64-page written ruling states.


    Finance Minister Jim Flaherty introduced the Proposed Canada Securities Act in May 2010. The federal government's plan called for the provinces to voluntarily join a scheme that would gradually transfer regulation of securities to a single national regulator from the current patchwork of 13 provincial and territorial securities commissions.


    The federal proposal is too heavy handed and upsets the existing constitutional balance that exists in the division of powers, the court said.


    "Co-operation is the animating force. The federalism principle upon which Canada's constitutional framework rests demands nothing less."


    The court's reasoning strictly adheres to previous court rulings and treats the question before the court as a legal problem, not a policy one. It applied a five-step test from a 1989 decision called General Motors that sets out the boundaries for the federal government's trade and commerce power. The essence of the test is to determine whether the federal government seeks to oversee something that would be beyond the ability of the provinces to regulate on their own.


    For generations, previous court rulings have confirmed that securities oversight was a provincial competence under the "property and civil rights" provisions of the Constitution.


    Indeed, provincial courts of appeal in Alberta and Quebec have previously concluded that Ottawa's planned legislation is constitutionally out of bounds. Alberta's Court of Appeal last March ruled 5-0 that Ottawa lacked the power to regulate securities, while Quebec's court in early April rejected Ottawa's plan in a 4-1 ruling.


    In a decision that reiterates long-held constitutional boundaries, the nine Supreme Court judges unanimously confirmed that Ottawa's legislations fails the constitutional test.


    Financial Post


    dhasselback@nationalpost.com

    © Copyright (c) Postmedia News


    Read more: http://www.canada.com/Supreme Court rejects national securities regulator plan/5898220/story.html#ixzz1hHD3KPjG


    Makes the C18 legislation on the CWB look truly like good consitutional policy! Great to see a shift back to rational logic by the SCC!

    #2
    The SCC made the right decision. Alberta should be able to allow all the crooked dealers and agents to operate as they have been doing since Alberta became a province. That is what makes Alberta a leader. Swindlers and card-sharks are welcome in this province...why allow any outside regulator in to spoil things?

    Comment


      #3
      One word Bre-X! What a fiasco, fraud,
      fraud, fraud, it is what the Albertie
      economy is based on. That and Oilies a
      course. Fraud soooooooo big and complex,
      that the mounties could/wouldn't
      investigate it, nuff said........

      Comment


        #4
        So why do you think this is a good thing
        Tom. I would think that one regulator
        would be more efficient than 13. I would
        think things like this are exactly what
        should be under the feds control. I admit
        I don't know much about it though.

        Comment


          #5
          WheatKing,

          Local control is more often better regulation and respects our freedoms.

          From a consitutional perspective the SCOC had no choice... unless they were to strike down sections 91 and 92... over riding them with 'peace order and good government'.

          Always improvements can be made... better communication and leadership from both federal and provincial governments will best monitor and find the regulatory balance that serves us better!

          Comment


            #6
            WheatKing;

            "The federal proposal is too heavy handed and upsets the existing constitutional balance that exists in the division of powers, the court said.


            "Co-operation is the animating force. The federalism principle upon which Canada's constitutional framework rests demands nothing less."


            Change the consitution... then more central control. BUT WHY???

            What makes us think folks are smarter in Ottawa 2000 miles away?

            Comment

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