Bill C-441
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MEASURES TO PROTECT LISTED SPECIES |
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Prohibitions |
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Killing,
disturbing,
harming etc.,
listed species
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33. (1) No person shall kill, harm, disturb,
harass, capture or take an individual of a listed
extirpated, endangered or threatened species,
or attempt to do so.
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Possession,
collection
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(2) No person shall possess, collect, buy,
sell or trade an individual of a listed
extirpated, endangered or threatened species,
or any part or derivative of one.
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Damage or
destruction of
residence
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34. No person shall damage, destroy or
disturb
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Declaration of
equivalent
provisions
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35. (1) Subject to subsections (2) to (4), if
the Minister and a provincial minister agree in
writing that there are, in force by or under the
laws of the province, provisions equivalent to
sections 33, 34 and 50 and that these
provisions are being diligently enforced, the
Governor in Council may, on the
recommendation of the Minister, make an
order declaring that sections 33, 34 and 50 do
not apply in that province in relation to species
protected by the equivalent provisions.
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Publication of
agreements
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(2) Before entering into the agreement, the
Minister must make a draft of the agreement
public by including it in the public registry.
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Comments
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(3) Any person may file comments with the
Minister within sixty days after the
publication of the draft agreement.
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Publication by
the Minister
of results
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(4) After the end of the period of sixty days,
the Minister must include in the public
registry a report that summarizes how any
comments were dealt with.
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Termination
of agreement
and repeal of
order
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(5) The agreement may be terminated by
either party giving to the other at least six
months notice of termination, in which case
the Governor in Council, on the
recommendation of the Minister, must repeal
the order.
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Public registry
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(6) Orders under this section must be
included in the public registry.
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Report to
Parliament
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(7) The Minister shall include in the annual
report required by section 104 a report on the
administration and enforcement of
subsections (1) to (6).
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Emergency Orders |
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Order based
on emergency
designation or
classification
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36. (1) The responsible minister must make
an emergency order providing for the
protection of a wildlife species within thirty
days after COSEWIC designates or
reclassifies the species as endangered or
threatened on an emergency basis. The order
shall include provisions regulating or
prohibiting activities that may adversely
affect the species, its residence or its critical
habitat.
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Order based
on
designation or
classification
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(2) The responsible minister must make an
emergency order providing for the protection
of a wildlife species that COSEWIC has
designated or reclassified as endangered or
threatened if, prior to the implementation of a
recovery plan, COSEWIC determines that the
species faces imminent threats to its survival
that are not addressed by the application of
section 33 or 34. The order must include
provisions regulating or prohibiting activities
that may adversely affect the species or its
habitat and shall remain in effect until a
recovery plan for the species has been
implemented or the responsible minister
determines that adequate measures have been
implemented to remove any imminent threats
to the species or its habitat.
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Order based
on inadequate
recovery plan,
etc.
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(3) The responsible minister may make an
emergency order providing for the protection
of a wildlife species, if the responsible
minister determines that the recovery plan for
the species no longer adequately protects it or
that immediate action is required to protect the
species. The order may include provisions
regulating or prohibiting activities that may
adversely affect the species or the residences
of its individuals.
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Notification
of Minister
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(4) If the responsible minister is the
Minister of Canadian Heritage or the Minister
of Fisheries and Oceans, he or she must notify
the Minister before making an order under
subsection (3).
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Provisions for
the protection
of habitat
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(5) An emergency order must include
provisions regulating or prohibiting activities
that may adversely affect the critical habitat of
the species, if the responsible minister, based
on the advice of COSEWIC, determines that
there is an imminent threat to that habitat.
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Repeal of
subsection (1)
order
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(6) The responsible minister must repeal an
emergency order made under subsection (1)
when
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Repeal of
subsection (2)
order
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(7) The responsible minister must repeal an
emergency order made under subsection (2)
when a revised recovery plan that, in the
responsible minister's opinion, adequately
protects the species has been developed and
implemented or when he or she determines
that, under the circumstances, the order is no
longer needed.
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Non- application of the Statutory Instruments Act
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37. Sections 3, 5 and 11 of the Statutory
Instruments Act do not apply to emergency
orders, but each order must be included in the
public registry and published in the Canada
Gazette within twenty-three days after it is
made.
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Equivalent
measures
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38. A responsible minister is not required to
make an emergency order if he or she is of the
opinion that equivalent measures have been
taken to protect the wildlife species under
another Act of Parliament.
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Application of Prohibitions |
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General
exceptions
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39. (1) Sections 33 and 34, regulations
under section 45 and emergency orders do not
apply to persons who are engaging in
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Authoriza- tion of activities under other Acts
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(2) A power under an Act described in
paragraph (1)(a) may be used to authorize an
activity prohibited by or under section 33, 34,
36 or 45 only if the person exercising the
power
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Exemptions
for activities
under
recovery
plans
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(3) Sections 33 and 36 do not apply to
persons who are engaging in activities
authorized by a recovery plan and a regulation
under section 45.
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Possession
exception
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(4) The prohibition against possession in
subsection 33(2) does not prevent a person
from possessing an individual of a listed
endangered or threatened species, or any part
or derivative of one, if
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Species listed
at the request
of a provincial
minister
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40. If a wildlife species is listed at the
request of a provincial minister under
subsection 32(2), then sections 33 and 34 and
emergency orders apply in respect of that
species and its habitat only in so far as
individuals of that species and its habitat are
found on federal land in the province of that
minister.
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Recovery and Management Plans |
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Preparation of
recovery
plans
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41. (1) The responsible minister must
prepare a recovery plan that describes the
measures to be taken to protect each wildlife
species that is listed as endangered, threatened
or extirpated as a result of human activity and,
if possible, provide for its recovery. If there is
more than one responsible minister with
respect to the species, they must prepare the
recovery plan together.
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Co-operation
with other
ministers and
governments
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(2) To the extent possible, the recovery plan
must be prepared in co-operation with
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Aboriginal
land claims
agreement
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(3) If the wildlife species is found on land
that is subject to an aboriginal land claims
agreement, the recovery plan must be
prepared in accordance with any applicable
provisions of the agreement.
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Time limit
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(4) The recovery plan must be completed
within one year after listing, if the wildlife
species is listed as endangered, and within two
years after listing, if it is listed as threatened
or extirpated.
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Determi- nation of feasibility
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(5) The responsible minister, based on the
advice of COSEWIC, must determine
whether the recovery of the wildlife species is
technically and biologically possible and must
give notice in the public registry of the
determination and the reasons for it.
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Contents of
recovery plan
if recovery
feasible
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(6) If the recovery of the wildlife species is
technically and biologically possible, the
recovery plan must address the threats to the
survival of the species identified by
COSEWIC, including loss of habitat, and
must include
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Principles to
be considered
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(7) In determining the content of the
recovery plan, the responsible minister must
consider the commitment of the Government
of Canada to conserving biological diversity
and to the principle that, if there are threats of
serious or irreversible damage to the wildlife
species, cost effective measures to prevent the
reduction or loss of the species should not be
postponed for a lack of full scientific certainty.
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Contents of
recovery plan
if recovery
not feasible
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(8) If the recovery of the wildlife species is
not technically or biologically possible, the
recovery plan must include measures limited
to the prohibition of activities that directly
affect individuals of the species or their
residences.
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Consultation
on recovery
plans
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42. The recovery plan must be prepared in
consultation with any persons who the
responsible minister considers are directly
affected by or interested in the plan.
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Publication of
recovery
plans
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43. (1) Within thirty days after the recovery
plan is completed,
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Implemen- tation report
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(2) Within one hundred and twenty days
after the summary is published in the Canada
Gazette, the responsible minister must prepare
and publish in the public registry a report on
how, and within what time frames, the
Government of Canada intends to implement
the measures contained in the plan.
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Obligation of
federal
departments,
etc.
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(3) A federal government department,
agency or Crown corporation must not take or
authorize any action that will contravene a
recovery plan and must implement
obligations set out in a recovery plan that are
applicable to it.
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National
recovery
planning
agreement
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44. (1) The Minister, in co-operation with
the other responsible ministers, may enter into
an agreement with the provincial ministers to
establish a framework for national recovery
planning, including the incorporation, with
the approval of the Governor in Council, of a
not-for-profit corporation under the Canada
Corporations Act.
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Authority to
procure
incorpora- tion, etc.
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(2) A responsible minister may procure the
incorporation of the not-for-profit corporation
or be a member of the corporation.
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Regulations
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45. (1) Within one hundred and twenty days
after a recovery plan is completed or
amended, a responsible minister shall make
regulations for the purpose of implementing
regulatory measures included in the recovery
plan that he or she has prepared, including
regulations prohibiting activities that
adversely affect a species' critical habitat.
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Incorporation
by reference
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(2) The regulations may incorporate by
reference any legislation of a province, as
amended from time to time, in so far as the
regulations apply in that province. They may
also incorporate by reference other documents
as amended from time to time.
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Use of powers
under other
Acts
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46. For the purpose of implementing the
recovery plan, the responsible minister may
use any powers that he or she has under any
other Act of Parliament.
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Monitoring
implementa- tion of recovery plans
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47. A responsible minister must monitor the
implementation of each recovery plan that he
or she has prepared and must assess and report
on its implementation within five years after
the plan is included in the public registry and
in each subsequent five-year period. The
reports must be included in the public registry.
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Mandatory
amendment of
recovery plan
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48. The responsible minister must amend a
recovery plan if he or she determines that the
plan is no longer adequate to protect the
species or provide for its recovery.
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Management
plans for
vulnerable
species
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49. (1) Within three years after a wildlife
species is listed as vulnerable, the responsible
minister must prepare a management plan for
the species and its critical habitat. The plan
may apply with respect to more than one
wildlife species and must include any
measures for the conservation of the species
that the responsible minister considers
appropriate. The management plan must be
prepared in co-operation with any wildlife
management board that is established under
aboriginal land claims legislation and is
affected by the plan.
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