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Bill C-26

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C-26
First Session, Thirty-eighth Parliament,
53 Elizabeth II, 2004
HOUSE OF COMMONS OF CANADA
BILL C-26
An Act to establish the Canada Border Services Agency

first reading, November 23, 2004

THE MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY AND EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS

90294

RECOMMENDATION
Her Excellency the Governor General recommends to the House of Commons the appropriation of public revenue under the circumstances, in the manner and for the purposes set out in a measure entitled “An Act to establish the Canada Border Services Agency”.
SUMMARY
This enactment establishes the Canada Border Services Agency, which was first created by order in council on December 12, 2003. The Agency brings together the border services of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency and the Department of Citizenship and Immigration. The enactment sets out the responsibilities, mandate, powers, duties and functions of the Minister responsible for the Agency and its President. It continues the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency under the name of the Canada Revenue Agency and contains transitional provisions as well as consequential amendments to other Acts.

Also available on the Parliament of Canada Web Site at the following address:
http://www.parl.gc.ca

TABLE OF PROVISIONS
AN ACT TO ESTABLISH THE CANADA BORDER SERVICES AGENCY
SHORT TITLE
1.       Short title
INTERPRETATION
2.       Definitions
ESTABLISHMENT AND MANDATE OF THE AGENCY
3.       Agency established
4.       Head office
5.       Mandate of Agency
MINISTER
6.       Minister responsible
PRESIDENT AND EXECUTIVE VICE-PRESIDENT
7.       Appointment
8.       Role of President
9.       Delegation by President
10.       Remuneration
HUMAN RESOURCES
11.       Officers and employees
POWERS OF THE AGENCY
12.       Exercise of powers conferred on Minister
13.       Agreements
14.       Agreements to administer a tax
EXPENDITURES
15.       Appropriation Acts
TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS
Definitions
16.       Definitions
Former Agency
17.       President and Executive Vice-president
18.       Transfer of appropriations
19.       References
Canada Customs and Revenue Agency
20.       Positions
21.       Continuation of rights and property
22.       Continuation of obligations and liabilities
23.       Real property, immovables and licences
24.       Continuation of legal proceedings: Canada Revenue Agency
25.       Validity of documents: Canada Revenue Agency
26.       Continuation of evidentiary presumption: Canada Revenue Agency
27.       References
28.       References in documents and other provisions: Canada Revenue Agency
Royal Canadian Mint Act
29.        Royal Canadian Mint Act
CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS
30.       Agriculture and Agri-Food Administrative Monetary Penalties Act
31-32.       Air Travellers Security Charge Act
33.       Canada Agricultural Products Act
34-52.       Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act
53.       Canadian Food Inspection Agency Act
54-56.       Canadian International Trade Tribunal Act
57.       Department of Citizenship and Immigration Act
58.       Criminal Code
59.       Cultural Property Export and Import Act
60-85.       Customs Act
86.       Customs and Excise Offshore Application Act
87-89.       Customs Tariff
90.       Employment Insurance Act
91.       Excise Act
92-98.       Excise Act, 2001
99-110.       Excise Tax Act
111.       Family Orders and Agreements Enforcement Assistance Act
112.       Feeds Act
113.       Fertilizers Act
114-115.       Financial Administration Act
116.       Fish Inspection Act
117.       Health of Animals Act
118-119.       Immigration and Refugee Protection Act
120.       Income Tax Act
121-122.       Meat Inspection Act
123.       Plant Protection Act
124-127.       Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act
128.       Public Service Superannuation Act
129-130.       Royal Canadian Mint Act
131.       Seeds Act
132-137.       Special Import Measures Act
138-143.       Terminology Changes
COORDINATING AMENDMENTS
144.       2003, c. 22
145.       Bill C-6
146.       Bill C-22
COMING INTO FORCE
147.       Order in council

1st Session, 38th Parliament,
53 Elizabeth II, 2004
house of commons of canada
BILL C-26
An Act to establish the Canada Border Services Agency
Her Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate and House of Commons of Canada, enacts as follows:
SHORT TITLE
Short title
1. This Act may be cited as the Canada Border Services Agency Act.
INTERPRETATION
Definitions
2. The following definitions apply in this Act.
“Agency”
« Agence »
“Agency” means the Canada Border Services Agency established under subsection 3(1).
“Minister”
« ministre »
“Minister” means the Solicitor General of Canada.
“President”
« président »
“President” means the President of the Agency appointed under subsection 7(1).
“program legislation”
« législation frontalière »
“program legislation” means any other Act of Parliament or any instrument made under it, or any part of such an Act or instrument,
(a) that the Governor in Council or Parliament authorizes the Minister, the Agency, the President or an employee of the Agency to administer and enforce, including the Customs Act, the Customs Tariff, the Excise Act, the Excise Act, 2001, the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act and the Special Import Measures Act;
(b) that the Governor in Council or Parliament authorizes the Minister, the Agency, the President or an employee of the Agency to enforce, including the Agriculture and Agri-Food Administrative Monetary Penalties Act, the Canada Agricultural Products Act, the Feeds Act, the Fertilizers Act, the Fish Inspection Act, the Health of Animals Act, the Meat Inspection Act, the Plant Protection Act and the Seeds Act;
(c) under which the Minister or another minister authorizes the Agency, the President or an employee of the Agency to administer a program or carry out an activity; or
(d) under which duties or taxes collected and paid pursuant to the Customs Act are imposed.
ESTABLISHMENT AND MANDATE OF THE AGENCY
Agency established
3. (1) The Canada Border Services Agency is established as a body corporate.
Agent of Her Majesty
(2) The Agency is for all purposes an agent of Her Majesty in right of Canada.
Head office
4. The head office of the Agency is to be in the National Capital Region described in the schedule to the National Capital Act.
Mandate of Agency
5. (1) The Agency is responsible for providing integrated border services that support national security and public safety priorities and facilitate the free flow of persons and goods, including animals and plants, that meet all requirements under the program legislation, by
(a) supporting the administration or enforcement, or both, as the case may be, of the program legislation;
(b) implementing agreements between the Government of Canada or the Agency and a foreign state or a public body performing a function of government in a foreign state to carry out an activity, provide a service or administer a tax or program;
(c) implementing agreements between the Government of Canada or the Agency and the government of a province or other public body performing a function of the Government in Canada to carry out an activity, provide a service or administer a tax or program;
(d) implementing agreements or arrangements between the Agency and departments or agencies of the Government of Canada to carry out an activity, provide a service or administer a program; and
(e) providing cooperation and support, including advice and information, to other departments and agencies of the Government of Canada to assist them in developing, evaluating and implementing policies and decisions in relation to program legislation for which they have responsibility.
Support
(2) The Agency may provide support, through the provision of services, to departments and agencies for which the Minister is responsible, in accordance with agreements or arrangements entered into with those departments and agencies.
MINISTER
Minister responsible
6. (1) The Minister is responsible for the Agency.
Delegation by Minister
(2) The Minister may delegate to any person any power, duty or function conferred on the Minister under this Act or under the program legislation.
Exception
(3) Subsection (2) does not apply if an Act of Parliament other than this Act authorizes the Minister to delegate the power, duty or function to any person or authorizes any person to exercise or perform it.
Limitation
(4) Subsection (2) does not apply in respect of a power to make regulations.
PRESIDENT AND EXECUTIVE VICE-PRESIDENT
Appointment
7. (1) The Governor in Council shall appoint a President of the Agency to hold office during pleasure for a term of not more than five years, which term may be renewed for one or more further terms.
Executive Vice-president
(2) The Governor in Council may appoint an Executive Vice-president of the Agency to hold office during pleasure for a term of not more than five years, which term may be renewed for one or more further terms.
Role of President
8. (1) The President, under the direction of the Minister, has the control and management of the Agency and all matters connected with it.
Rank of deputy head
(2) The President has the rank and all the powers of a deputy head of a department.
Executive Vice-president’s powers
(3) The Executive Vice-president shall exercise the powers and perform the duties and functions that the President may assign and shall act as President if that office is vacant or if the President is absent or incapacitated.
Delegation by President
9. (1) The President may delegate to any person any power, duty or function that the President is authorized to exercise or perform under this Act or any other enactment.
Designation of officers
(2) The President may designate any person, or person within a class of persons,
(a) as an officer as defined in subsection 2(1) of the Customs Act to exercise any powers or perform any duties and functions of an officer under that Act that the President may specify; or
(b) as an inspector or a veterinary inspector or other officer for the enforcement of any Act or instrument made under it, or any part of an Act or instrument, that the Governor in Council or Parliament authorizes the Minister, the Agency, the President or an employee of the Agency to enforce, including the Agriculture and Agri-Food Administrative Monetary Penalties Act, the Canada Agricultural Products Act, the Feeds Act, the Fertilizers Act, the Fish Inspection Act, the Health of Animals Act, the Meat Inspection Act, the Plant Protection Act and the Seeds Act.
Designation power
(3) The President may exercise any power that the Minister has to designate officers under subsection 6(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.
Remuneration
10. (1) The President and the Executive Vice-president shall be paid the remuneration that is fixed by the Governor in Council.
Expenses
(2) The President and the Executive Vice-president are entitled to be paid reasonable travel and living expenses incurred by them in the course of performing their duties while absent from their ordinary place of work.
Deemed employment
(3) The President and the Executive Vice-president are deemed to be employed in the Public Service for the purposes of the Public Service Superannuation Act and to be employed in the public service of Canada for the purposes of the Government Employees Compensation Act and any regulations made under section 9 of the Aeronautics Act.
HUMAN RESOURCES
Officers and employees
11. Officers and employees necessary for the proper conduct of the work of the Agency shall be appointed in accordance with the Public Service Employment Act.
POWERS OF THE AGENCY
Exercise of powers conferred on Minister
12. (1) Subject to any direction given by the Minister, the Agency may exercise the powers, and shall perform the duties and functions, that relate to the program legislation and that are conferred on, or delegated, assigned or transferred to, the Minister under any Act or regulation.
Officers and employees
(2) An officer or employee of the Agency may exercise any power or perform any duty or function referred to in subsection (1) if the officer or employee is appointed to serve in the Agency in a capacity appropriate to the exercise of the power or the performance of the duty or function, and, in so doing, shall comply with any general or special direction given by the Minister.
Exception
(3) Subsection (1) does not include
(a) any power, duty or function of the Minister under this Act; or
(b) a power to make regulations.
Non-application of Statutory Instruments Act
(4) A direction given by the Minister under subsection (1) or (2) is not a statutory instrument for the purposes of the Statutory Instruments Act.
Agreements
13. (1) Subject to section 38 of the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act, the Agency may, with the approval of the Governor in Council, on the recommendation of the Minister and the Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, enter into an agreement with a foreign state or an international organization, for the purposes of carrying out the mandate of the Agency.
Arrangements and agreements
(2) The Agency may, for the purposes of carrying out its mandate,
(a) enter into an arrangement with a foreign state or an international organization; or
(b) enter into an agreement or arrangement with the government of a province, a department or agency of the Government of Canada or any person or organization.
Agreements to administer a tax
14. (1) The Agency may enter into or amend an agreement with a provincial or territorial government to administer a tax or other fiscal measure if the agreement is in accordance with guidelines relating to agreements of that kind established jointly by the Minister and the Minister of Finance.
Application of the Federal-Provincial Fiscal Arrangements Act
(2) Parts III and III.1 of the Federal-Provincial Fiscal Arrangements Act do not apply to an agreement entered into or amended under subsection (1).
EXPENDITURES
Appropriation Acts
15. An appropriation Act may provide that the balance of money appropriated by Parliament for the use of the Agency that remains unexpended at the end of the fiscal year, after the adjustments referred to in section 37 of the Financial Administration Act are made, lapses at the end of the following fiscal year.
TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS
Definitions
Definitions
16. The following definitions apply in sections 17 to 19 and 21 to 28.
“former agency”
« ancienne agence »
“former agency” means the portion of the public service of Canada known as the Canada Border Services Agency.
“new agency”
« nouvelle agence »
“new agency” means the Canada Border Services Agency established under subsection 3(1).
“order P.C. 2003-2064”
« décret C.P. 2003-2064 »
“order P.C. 2003-2064” means Order in Council P.C. 2003-2064 of December 12, 2003, registered as SI/2003-216.
Former Agency
President and Executive Vice-president
17. (1) The persons occupying the positions of President and Executive Vice-president of the former agency on the day on which this section comes into force become the President and Executive Vice-president of the new agency on that day and are deemed to have been appointed under section 7.
Positions
(2) Nothing in this Act is to be construed as affecting the status of an employee who, immediately before the coming into force of this section, occupied a position in the former agency, except that the employee shall, on the coming into force of this section, occupy his or her position in the new agency under the direction of the President.
Definition of “employee”
(3) In subsection (2), “employee” has the same meaning as in subsection 2(1) of the Public Service Employment Act.
Transfer of appropriations
18. (1) Any amount appropriated, for the fiscal year in which this section comes into force, by an appropriation Act based on the Estimates for that year for defraying the charges and expenses of the public service of Canada for the former agency that, on the day on which this section comes into force, is unexpended is deemed, on that day, to be an amount appropriated for defraying the charges and expenses of the public service of Canada for the new agency.
Transfer of powers, duties and functions
(2) Wherever under any Act, order, rule or regulation, or any contract, lease, licence or other document, any power, duty or function is vested in or exercisable by the President of the former agency or an employee of the former agency, the power, duty or function is vested in and shall be exercised by the President of the new agency or an employee of the new agency unless the Governor in Council by order designates a deputy minister or an officer of the public service of Canada to exercise that power or perform that duty or function.
Continuation of proceedings
(3) Any action, suit or other legal or administrative proceeding to which the former agency or its President is a party that is pending on the coming into force of this section may be continued by or against the new agency or its President in a similar manner and to the same extent as it would have been continued by or against the former agency or its President.
Deeming
(4) Decisions made by the President of the former agency are deemed to be decisions made by the President of the new agency.
Validity of documents
(5) All orders, rules, regulations, decisions, determinations and re-determinations, directions, licences, authorizations, certificates, consents, approvals, declarations, designations, permits, registrations, rates or other documents that are in force on the coming into force of this section and that are made or issued by the President of the former agency or any person under his or her authority continue in force as if they were made or issued by the President of the new agency or a person under his or her authority, as the case may be, until they expire or are repealed, replaced, rescinded or altered.
Continuation of evidentiary presumption
(6) Every affidavit sworn, or document purporting to be certified, by an employee of the former agency before the day on which this section comes into force has the same probative value as if it were sworn or certified by an employee of the new agency after that day.
References
19. (1) A reference to the former agency in any of the following is deemed to be a reference to the new agency:
(a) Schedule I to the Access to Information Act under the heading “Other Government Institutions”;
(b) the schedule to the Privacy Act;
(c) Part I of Schedule I to the Public Service Staff Relations Act;
(d) any order of the Governor in Council made under paragraph (b) of the definition “head” in section 3 of the Access to Information Act;
(e) any direction of the Governor in Council made under subsection 24(3) of the Auditor General Act;
(f) any order of the Governor in Council made under paragraph 29(e) of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service Act;
(g) any order of the Governor in Council made under paragraph (b) of the definition “head” in section 3 of the Privacy Act; and
(h) any order of the Governor in Council made under the definition “department” in subsection 2(1) of the Public Service Employment Act.
Deputy head
(2) The designation of a person as deputy head of the former agency in any of the following is deemed to be a designation of the President of the new agency as deputy head of that agency:
(a) any order of the Governor in Council made under paragraph 29(e) of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service Act; and
(b) any order of the Governor in Council made under the definition “deputy head” in subsection 2(1) of the Public Service Employment Act.
Canada Customs and Revenue Agency
Positions
20. Nothing in this Act shall be construed as affecting the status of an employee who, immediately before the coming into force of this section, occupied a position in the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency, except that the employee shall occupy that position in the Canada Revenue Agency.
Continuation of rights and property
21. (1) Subject to subsection (2), all rights and property of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency continue as the rights and property of the Canada Revenue Agency.
Transfer to new agency
(2) All rights and property of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency that are in respect of those portions of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency the control and supervision of which were transferred to the former agency by order P.C. 2003-2064 are transferred to the new agency.
Continuation of obligations and liabilities
22. (1) Subject to subsection (2), all obligations and liabilities of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency continue as obligations and liabilities of the Canada Revenue Agency.
Transfer to new agency
(2) All obligations and liabilities of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency that were incurred in respect of those portions of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency the control and supervision of which were transferred to the former agency by order P.C. 2003-2064 are transferred to the new agency.
Real property, immovables and licences
23. (1) The administration of any real property or immovable, and the administrative responsibility for any licence in respect of any real property or immovable, that was under the administration or administrative responsibility of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency immediately before the coming into force of this section and that was used for or in support of those portions of the Canada Customs and Reve­nue Agency the control and supervision of which were transferred to the former agency by order P.C. 2003-2064 are transferred to the Minister.
List
(2) As soon as practicable after the coming into force of this section, the Minister of National Revenue shall publish in the Canada Gazette a list of the real property and immovables the administration of which was transferred under subsection (1) in such a way that each is sufficiently identified.
Title
(3) Where the title of any real property or immovable was held in the name of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency immediately before the coming into force of this section and that real property or immovable was used for or in support of those portions of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency the control and supervision of which were transferred to the former agency by order P.C. 2003-2064, the title to that real property or immovable is deemed to be held in the name of Her Majesty in right of Canada.
Other real property, immovables and licences — Canada Revenue Agency
(4) The administration of any real property or immovable, and the administrative responsibility for any licence in respect of any real property or immovable, that is not referred to in subsection (1) and that was under the administration or administrative responsibility of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency immediately before the coming into force of this section continues under the administration or administrative responsibility, as the case may be, of the Canada Revenue Agency.
Continuation of legal proceedings: Canada Revenue Agency
24. (1) Subject to subsection (2), any action, suit or other legal or administrative proceeding to which the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency is a party that is pending on the coming into force of this section may be continued by or against the Canada Revenue Agency in the same manner and to the same extent as it could have been continued by or against the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency.
Continuation of legal proceedings: new agency
(2) Any action, suit or other legal or administrative proceeding to which the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency is a party that is pending on the coming into force of this section may be continued by or against the new agency in the same manner and to the same extent as it could have been continued by or against the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency in respect of those portions of the Canada Customs and Reve­nue Agency the control and supervision of which were transferred to the former agency by order P.C. 2003-2064.
Validity of documents: Canada Revenue Agency
25. (1) Subject to subsection (2), all orders, rules, regulations, decisions, determinations and re-determinations, directions, licences, authorizations, certificates, consents, approvals, declarations, designations, permits, registrations, rates or other documents that are in force on the coming into force of this section and that were made or issued by the Minister of National Revenue or by the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue or any person under their authority continue in force as if they were made or issued by the Minister of National Revenue or the Commissioner of Revenue or any person under their authority, as the case may be, until they expire or are repealed, replaced, rescinded or altered.
Validity of documents
(2) All orders, rules, regulations, decisions, determinations and re-determinations, directions, licences, authorizations, certificates, consents, approvals, declarations, designations, permits, registrations, rates or other documents that are in force on the coming into force of this section and that were made or issued by the Minister of National Revenue or by the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue or any person under their authority that are in respect of those portions of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency the control and supervision of which were transferred to the former agency by order P.C. 2003-2064 continue in force as if they were made or issued by the Minister, the President of the new agency or a person under their authority, as the case may be, until they expire or are repealed, replaced, rescinded or altered.
Continuation of evidentiary presumption: Canada Revenue Agency
26. (1) Subject to subsection (2), every affidavit sworn, or document purporting to be certified, by an employee of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency before the day on which this section comes into force has the same probative value as if it were sworn or certified by an employee of the Canada Revenue Agency after that day.
Continuation of evidentiary presumption: Canada Border Services Agency
(2) Every affidavit sworn, or document purporting to be certified, by an employee of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency before the day on which this section comes into force that was sworn or was purported to be certified in respect of those portions of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency the control and supervision of which were transferred to the former agency by order P.C. 2003-2064 has the same probative value as if it were sworn or certified by an employee of the new agency after that day.
References
27. (1) Subject to subsection (2), every reference to the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency, the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, the Deputy Commissioner of Customs and Revenue or any person under their authority in a document issued in the name of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency, the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue or the Deputy Commissioner of Customs and Revenue is to be read, unless the context otherwise requires, as a reference to the Canada Revenue Agency, the Commissioner of Revenue, the Deputy Commissioner of Revenue or a person under their authority, as the case may be.
References
(2) Every reference to the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency, the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, the Deputy Commissioner of Customs and Revenue or any person under their authority in a document issued in the name of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency, the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue or the Deputy Commissioner of Customs and Revenue is to be read in respect of those documents that relate to those portions of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency the control and supervision of which were transferred to the former agency by order P.C. 2003-2064, unless the context otherwise requires, as a reference to the new agency, the President of the new agency, the Executive Vice-president of the new agency or a person under their authority, as the case may be.
References in documents and other provisions: Canada Revenue Agency
28. (1) Subject to subsection (2), any expression referring to the Deputy Minister of National Revenue, the Department of National Revenue, the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue or the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency in any document, any instrument made under an Act of Parliament or any provision of an Act of Parliament not amended by this Act is to be read, unless the context otherwise requires, as a reference to the Commissioner of Revenue or the Canada Revenue Agency, as the case may be.
References in documents and other provisions: Canada Border Services Agency
(2) Any expression referring to the Deputy Minister of National Revenue, the Department of National Revenue, the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue or the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency in any document, any instrument made under an Act of Parliament or any provision of an Act of Parliament not amended by this Act and the document, instrument or provision is in respect of those portions of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency the control and supervision of which were transferred to the former agency by order P.C. 2003-2064 is to be read, unless the context otherwise requires, as a reference to the President of the new agency or the new agency, as the case may be.
Royal Canadian Mint Act
Royal Canadian Mint Act
29. The Minister of National Revenue is the Minister for the purposes of the Royal Canadian Mint Act until another member of the Queen’s Privy Council for Canada is designated under section 2.1 of that Act, as enacted by section 130 of this Act.
CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS
1995, c. 40
Agriculture and Agri-Food Administrative Monetary Penalties Act
30. The definition “Minister” in section 2 of the Agriculture and Agri-Food Administrative Monetary Penalties Act is replaced by the following:
“Minister”
« ministre »
“Minister” means
(a) the Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food; or
(b) with respect to a notice of violation issued in relation to the contravention of program legislation referred to in subsection 11(5) of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency Act, the Solicitor General of Canada.
2002, c. 9, s. 5
Air Travellers Security Charge Act
31. The definitions “Agency” and “Commissioner” in section 2 of the Air Travellers Security Charge Act are replaced by the following:
“Agency”
« Agence »
“Agency” means the Canada Revenue Agency continued by subsection 4(1) of the Canada Revenue Agency Act.
“Commissioner”
« commissaire »
“Commissioner” means the Commissioner of Revenue appointed under section 25 of the Canada Revenue Agency Act.
32. Subsection 83(8) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Proof of documents
(8) Every document purporting to have been executed under or in the course of the administration or enforcement of this Act over the name in writing of the Minister, the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, the Commissioner or an officer authorized to exercise the powers or perform the duties of the Minister under this Act is deemed to be a document signed, made and issued by the Minister, the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, the Commissioner or the officer, unless it has been called into question by the Minister or a person acting for the Minister or for Her Majesty.
R.S., c. 20 (4th Supp.)
Canada Agricultural Products Act
1997, c. 6, s. 39
33. Subsection 19(2) of the Canada Agricultural Products Act is replaced by the following:
Designation
(1.1) The President of the Canada Border Services Agency may designate inspectors under paragraph 9(2)(b) of the Canada Border Services Agency Act for the purposes of enforcing this Act.
Certificate to be produced
(2) Inspectors shall be given certificates in a form established by the President of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency or the President of the Canada Border Services Agency, as the case may be, attesting to their designation and, on entering any place under this Act, an inspector shall show the certificate to the person in charge of the place on request.
1999, c. 17
Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act
34. The long title of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act is replaced by the following:
An Act to continue the Canada Revenue Agency and to amend and repeal other Acts as a consequence
35. Section 1 of the Act is replaced by the following:
Short title
1. This Act may be cited as the Canada Revenue Agency Act.
2002, c. 22, s. 322
36. (1) The definition “législation fiscale et douanière” in section 2 of the French version of the Act is repealed.
(2) The definition “Agency” in section 2 of the Act is replaced by the following:
“Agency”
« Agence »
“Agency” means the Canada Revenue Agency continued by subsection 4(1).
2002, c. 22, s. 322
(3) Paragraph (a) of the definition “program legislation” in section 2 of the English version of the Act is replaced by the following:
(a) that the Governor in Council or Parliament authorizes the Minister, the Agency, the Commissioner or an employee of the Agency to administer or enforce, including the Air Travellers Security Charge Act, the Customs Act, the Excise Act, the Excise Act, 2001, the Excise Tax Act and the Income Tax Act; or
(4) Section 2 of the French version of the Act is amended by adding the following in alphabetical order:
« législation fiscale »
program legislation
« législation fiscale » Tout ou partie d’une autre loi fédérale ou de ses textes d’application :
a) dont le ministre, l’Agence, le commissaire ou un employé de l’Agence est autorisé par le Parlement ou le gouverneur en conseil à assurer ou contrôler l’application, notamment la Loi sur le droit pour la sécurité des passagers du transport aérien, la Loi sur les douanes, la Loi sur l’accise, la Loi de 2001 sur l’accise, la Loi sur la taxe d’accise et la Loi de l’impôt sur le revenu;
b) en vertu desquels le ministre ou un autre ministre autorise l’Agence, le commissaire ou un employé de l’Agence à appliquer un programme ou à exercer une activité.
37. The heading before section 4 of the Act is replaced by the following:
CONTINUATION AND MANDATE OF THE AGENCY
38. Subsection 4(1) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Continuation
4. (1) The Canada Customs and Revenue Agency is continued as a body corporate under the name of the Canada Revenue Agency.
39. Paragraph 5(1)(a) of the French version of the Act is replaced by the following:
a) de fournir l’appui nécessaire à l’application et au contrôle d’application de la législation fiscale;
40. (1) Paragraph 6(1)(a) of the Act is repealed.
(2) Subsection 6(1) of the Act is amended by striking out the word “and” at the end of paragraph (d) and by adding the following after paragraph (d):
(d.1) the collection of debts due to Her Majesty under Part V.1 of the Customs Act; and
2002, c. 22, s. 323
41. Section 7 of the Act is replaced by the following:
Designation of officers
7. The Minister may designate any person, or person within a class of persons, as an officer as defined in section 2 of the Excise Act or section 2 of the Excise Act, 2001 to exercise any powers or perform any duties and functions of an officer under those Acts that the Minister may specify.
42. Section 9 of the French version of the Act is replaced by the following:
Instructions sur l’exercice des attributions
9. Le ministre peut donner des instructions au commissaire ou à toute autre personne sur l’exercice de celles de ses attributions qui leur sont confiées soit au titre des paragraphes 8(1) ou (4), soit sous le régime de la législation fiscale.
2004, c. 16, s. 4(F)
43. Subsection 26(1) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Appointment and tenure of Deputy Commissioner
26. (1) A Deputy Commissioner of Revenue may be appointed by the Governor in Council to hold office during pleasure for a term of not more than five years, which term may be renewed for one or more further terms of not more than five years each.
44. Section 33 of the French version of the Act is replaced by the following:
Fonctions consultatives
33. Il peut conseiller le ministre sur les questions liées à l’application et au contrôle d’application, en général, de la législation fiscale.
45. Paragraphs 34(a) and (b) of the French version of the Act are replaced by the following:
a) à l’exercice des attributions soit qui leur sont conférées ou déléguées sous le régime de la législation fiscale ou d’une loi provinciale, soit qu’ils sont autorisés à exercer au nom du ministre sous le régime de la présente loi;
b) à l’application ou au contrôle d’application de la législation fiscale.
46. Section 35 of the French version of the Act is replaced by the following:
Confidentialité de certains renseignements
35. La présente loi n’a pas pour effet d’autoriser la divulgation au conseil de renseignements qui, même indirectement, révèlent l’identité de la personne, de l’organisation ou de l’entreprise commerciale à laquelle ils ont trait et qui ont été soit obtenus sous le régime de la législation fiscale ou d’une loi provinciale, soit préparés à partir de renseignements ainsi obtenus.
47. Subsection 37(1) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Authorization by Commissioner
37. (1) The Commissioner may authorize any person, subject to any terms and conditions that the Commissioner may specify, to exercise or perform on behalf of the Commissioner any power, duty or function of the Commissioner under this Act or any other Act.
48. Subsection 39(1) of the French version of the Act is replaced by the following:
Obligation de renseigner les organismes fédéraux
39. (1) Sous réserve des dispositions de la législation fiscale et de la Loi sur la protection des renseignements personnels relatives à la confidentialité, le commissaire est tenu de fournir, aux ministères et organismes fédéraux pour le compte desquels l’Agence applique un programme ou exerce une activité, l’information nécessaire à l’évaluation du programme ou de l’activité et à l’élaboration des orientations correspondantes.
49. Subsection 40(1) of the French version of the Act is replaced by the following:
Obligation de renseigner les gouvernements provinciaux
40. (1) Sous réserve des dispositions de la législation fiscale et de la Loi sur la protection des renseignements personnels relatives à la confidentialité, le commissaire est tenu de fournir aux gouvernements provinciaux pour le compte desquels l’Agence applique un programme, administre une taxe ou un impôt ou exerce une activité, l’information nécessaire à l’évaluation du programme, de la taxe, de l’impôt ou de l’activité et à l’élaboration des orientations correspondantes.
50. Subsection 60(3) of the French version of the Act is replaced by the following:
Restriction
(3) Ne constituent pas des recettes d’exploitation les taxes, impôts, droits, pénalités et intérêts perçus sous le régime de la législation fiscale ou d’une loi provinciale, ni les sommes perçues pour le compte d’un ministère, gouvernement ou organisme public.
51. Subsection 63(1) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Agreements to administer a tax
63. (1) The Agency may enter into or amend an agreement with a provincial, territorial or aboriginal government to administer a tax or other fiscal measure if the agreement is in accordance with guidelines relating to agreements of that kind established jointly by the Minister and the Minister of Finance.
52. Section 186 of the Act and the heading before it are repealed.
1997, c. 6
Canadian Food Inspection Agency Act
53. Section 11 of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency Act is amended by adding the following after subsection (4):
Role of Canada Border Services Agency
(5) The Canada Border Services Agency is responsible for the enforcement of the program legislation referred to in paragraph (b) of the definition “program legislation” in section 2 of the Canada Border Services Agency Act as that program legislation relates to the delivery of passenger and initial import inspection services performed at airports and other Canadian border points other than import service centres.
R.S., c. 47 (4th Supp.)
Canadian International Trade Tribunal Act
54. Subsection 2(1) of the Canadian International Trade Tribunal Act is amended by adding the following in alphabetical order:
“President”
« président »
“President” means the President of the Canada Border Services Agency appointed under subsection 7(1) of the Canada Border Services Agency Act.
55. Every reference to the “Commissioner of Customs and Revenue” or the “Commissioner” in the following provisions of the Act is replaced by a reference to the “President”:
(a) subsections 26(4) and (5);
(b) subsections 28(1) and (2); and
(c) paragraph 49(b).
Application
56. Subsections 2(1), 26(4) and (5) and 28(1) and (2) and paragraph 49(b) of the Canadian International Trade Tribunal Act, as amended by sections 54 and 55 of this Act, apply to goods of a NAFTA country, as defined in subsection 2(2) of that Act.
1994, c. 31
Department of Citizenship and Immigration Act
57. Section 4 of the Department of Citizenship and Immigration Act is replaced by the following:
Powers, duties and functions of Minister
4. The powers, duties and functions of the Minister extend to and include all matters over which Parliament has jurisdiction relating to citizenship and immigration and that are not by law assigned to any other department, board or agency of the Government of Canada.
R.S., c. C-46
Criminal Code
2002, c. 22, s. 324
58. (1) Paragraph (d) of the definition “peace officer” in section 2 of the Criminal Code is replaced by the following:
(d) an officer within the meaning of the Customs Act, the Excise Act or the Excise Act, 2001, or a person having the powers of such an officer, when performing any duty in the administration of any of those Acts,
2001, c. 41, s. 2(2)
(2) The definition “justice system participant” in section 2 of the Act is amended by replacing subparagraph (b)(ix) with the following:
(ix) an employee of the Canada Revenue Agency who is involved in the investigation of an offence under an Act of Parliament,
(ix.1) an employee of the Canada Border Services Agency who is involved in the investigation of an offence under an Act of Parliament,
R.S., c. C-51
Cultural Property Export and Import Act
1999, c. 17, s. 121
59. Section 5 of the Cultural Property Export and Import Act is replaced by the following:
Designation of permit officers
5. The Minister, with the approval of the Solicitor General of Canada, may designate any persons or classes of persons employed by the Canada Border Services Agency as permit officers to receive applications for export permits and to issue export permits under this Act.
R.S., c. 1 (2nd Supp.)
Customs Act
1999, c. 17, s. 123(2)
60. (1) The definition “Commissioner” in subsection 2(1) of the Customs Act is repealed.
2001, c. 25, s. 1(2)
(2) The definitions “Agency” and “Minister” in subsection 2(1) of the Act are replaced by the following:
“Agency”
« Agence »
“Agency” means the Canada Border Services Agency;
“Minister”
« ministre »
“Minister” means, except in Part V.1, the Solicitor General of Canada;
(3) Subsection 2(1) of the Act is amended by adding the following in alphabetical order:
“President”
« président »
“President” means the President of the Canada Border Services Agency appointed under subsection 7(1) of the Canada Border Services Agency Act;
2001, c. 25, s. 1(4)(F)
(4) Subsection 2(3) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Powers, duties and functions of President
(3) Any power, duty or function of the President under this Act may be exercised or performed by any person, or by any officer within a class of officers, authorized by the President to do so and, if so exercised or performed, is deemed to have been exercised or performed by the President.
(5) Section 2 of the Act is amended by adding the following after subsection (4):
Delegation by Minister
(5) The Minister may authorize a person employed by the Canada Revenue Agency, or a class of those persons, to exercise powers or perform duties of the Minister, including any judicial or quasi-judicial powers or duties of the Minister, under this Act.
Delegation by Minister of National Revenue
(6) The Minister of National Revenue may authorize a person employed by the Canada Revenue Agency or the Agency, or a class of those persons, to exercise powers or perform duties of that Minister, including any judicial or quasi-judicial powers or duties of that Minister, under this Act.
2001, c. 25, s. 3
61. Subsection 3.3(1) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Waiver of penalty or interest
3.3 (1) Except with respect to the collection of any debt due to Her Majesty under Part V.1, the Minister or any officer designated by the President for the purposes of this section may at any time waive or cancel all or any portion of any penalty or interest otherwise payable by a person under this Act.
1992, c. 28, s. 2(1)
62. Subsection 3.4(1) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Additional security
3.4 (1) Where security has been given to the Minister by a person under a provision of this Act and the Minister or any officer (in this section referred to as a “designated officer”) designated by the President for the purposes of this section determines that the security that has been given is no longer adequate, the Minister or a designated officer may, by notice served personally or by registered or certified mail, require additional security to be given by or on behalf of the person within such reasonable time as may be stipulated in the notice.
1992, c. 28, s. 5(1)
63. Subsection 32(7) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Authorization to account
(7) The Minister or an officer designated by the President for the purposes of this subsection may authorize any person not resident in Canada to account for goods under this section, in such circumstances and under such conditions as may be prescribed, in lieu of the importer or owner of those goods.
1992, c. 28, s. 7(1)
64. Section 33.2 of the Act is replaced by the following:
Notice requiring accounting
33.2 The Minister or any officer designated by the President for the purposes of this section may, by notice served personally or by registered or certified mail, require any person to account, within such reasonable time as may be stipulated in the notice, in the manner described in paragraph 32(1)(a), for any goods as may be designated in the notice.
1992, c. 28, s. 7(1)
65. Section 33.5 of the Act is replaced by the following:
Notice requiring payment
33.5 The Minister or any officer designated by the President for the purposes of this section may, by notice served personally or by registered or certified mail, require any person to pay any amount owing as duties, within such reasonable time as may be stipulated in the notice, on any goods as may be designated in the notice.
1992, c. 28, s. 7(1)
66. Subsection 33.7(1) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Extension of time
33.7 (1) The Minister or any officer designated by the President for the purposes of this section may at any time extend in writing the time prescribed by the regulations made under this Part for the accounting of goods or the payment of any amount owing as duties.
1993, c. 44, s. 83
67. The portion of subsection 35.02(2) of the Act before paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:
Notice requiring marking or compliance
(2) The Minister or any officer designated by the President for the purposes of this section may, by notice served personally or by registered mail, require any person
2001, c. 25, s. 32
68. The portion of subsection 42(2) of the Act before paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:
Inspections
(2) An officer, or an officer within a class of officers, designated by the President for the purposes of this section, may at all reasonable times, for any purpose related to the administration or enforcement of this Act,
2001, c. 25, s. 33
69. Section 42.01 of the Act is replaced by the following:
Methods of verification
42.01 An officer, or an officer within a class of officers, designated by the President for the purposes of this section may conduct a verification of origin (other than a verification of origin referred to in section 42.1), verification of tariff classification or verification of value for duty in respect of imported goods in the manner that is prescribed and may for that purpose at all reasonable times enter any prescribed premises.
1997, c. 14, s. 38
70. The portion of subsection 42.1(1) of the Act before paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:
Methods of verification
42.1 (1) Any officer, or any officer within a class of officers, designated by the President for the purposes of this section, or any person, or any person within a class of persons, designated by the President to act on behalf of such an officer, may, subject to the prescribed conditions,
2001, c. 25, s. 36
71. The portion of subsection 43.1(1) of the Act before paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:
Advance rulings
43.1 (1) Any officer, or any officer within a class of officers, designated by the President for the purposes of this section shall, before goods are imported, on application by any member of a prescribed class that is made within the prescribed time, in the prescribed manner and in the prescribed form containing the prescribed information, give an advance ruling with respect to
2001, c. 25, s. 39(1)
72. Subsection 57.01(1) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Marking determination
57.01 (1) Any officer, or any officer within a class of officers, designated by the President for the purposes of this section may, at or before the time goods imported from a NAFTA country are accounted for under subsection 32(1), (3) or (5), in the prescribed manner and subject to the prescribed conditions, make a determination as to whether the goods have been marked in the manner referred to in section 35.01.
1997, c. 36, s. 166
73. Subsection 58(1) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Determination by officer
58. (1) Any officer, or any officer within a class of officers, designated by the President for the purposes of this section, may determine the origin, tariff classification and value for duty of imported goods at or before the time they are accounted for under subsection 32(1), (3) or (5).
2001, c. 25, s. 41(1)
74. The portion of subsection 59(1) of the Act before paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:
Re-determina- tion or further re-determination
59. (1) An officer, or any officer within a class of officers, designated by the President for the purposes of this section may
75. Section 97.21 of the Act is amended by adding the following in alphabetical order:
“Commissioner”
« commissaire »
“Commissioner” means the Commissioner of Revenue appointed under section 25 of the Canada Revenue Agency Act.
“Minister”
« ministre »
“Minister” means the Minister of National Revenue.
76. The Act is amended by adding the following after section 97.21:
Ancillary Powers
Ancillary powers
97.211 (1) The Minister may, for the purposes of administering or enforcing this Part, exercise any of the following powers that are necessary for the collection of debts due to Her Majesty under this Part:
(a) the powers provided for in paragraphs (a) and (b) of the definition “prescribed” in subsection 2(1) as well as those provided for in subsections 3.3(1) and (2), 43(1) and 115(1); and
(b) any other powers that are conferred under any provision of this Act that is specified by the Governor in Council on the recommendation of the Minister and the Solicitor General of Canada.
Publication
(2) An order made for the purpose of subsection (1) must be published in Part II of the Canada Gazette as soon as practicable after it is made.
2001, c. 25, s. 58(1)
77. Subsection 97.22(3) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Amounts demanded
(3) Any amount of money demanded under paragraph 133(1)(c) or (1.1)(b) and any interest payable under subsection 133(7), from and after the time notice is served under subsection 131(2), is a debt due to Her Majesty in right of Canada from the person who requested the decision and the person shall pay the amount so demanded or, if the person appeals the decision of the Solicitor General of Canada under section 135, give security satisfactory to that Minister.
2001, c. 25, s. 58(1)
78. (1) Subsection 97.34(2) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Appeal to Federal Court
(2) If a person has appealed a decision of the Solicitor General of Canada to the Federal Court under section 97.23 or 135, the Minister must not take any action described in subsection (1) to collect the amount in controversy before the date of the decision of the Court or the day on which the person discontinues the appeal.
2001, c. 25, s. 58(1); 2002, c. 8, s. 193
(2) Subsections 97.34(4) and (5) of the Act are replaced by the following:
Effect of appeal
(4) If a person has made a request under section 60 or 129 or has appealed under section 67 or 68 and the person agrees in writing with the Solicitor General of Canada to delay proceedings on the request or appeal, as the case may be, until judgment has been given in another action before the Federal Court, the Canadian International Trade Tribunal or the Supreme Court of Canada, in which action the issue is the same or substantially the same as that raised in the request or appeal of the person, the Minister may take any of the actions described in subsection (1) for the purpose of collecting the amount payable, or a part of the amount payable, determined in a manner consistent with the decision or judgment in the other action at any time after the Solicitor General of Canada notifies the person in writing that
(a) the decision of the Canadian International Trade Tribunal or Federal Court in that action has been mailed to the Solicitor General of Canada;
(b) judgment has been pronounced by the Federal Court of Appeal in that action; or
(c) judgment has been delivered by the Supreme Court of Canada in that action.
Effect of taking security
(5) The Minister must not, for the purpose of collecting an amount payable, or a part of an amount payable, under this Act, take any of the actions described in subsection (1) if a person has given security to the Solicitor General of Canada when requesting or appealing from a decision of that Minister or the President.
2001, c. 25, s. 58(1)
79. Subsection 97.5(3) of the Act is replaced by the following:
How application made
(3) The application must be made by delivering or mailing the application and a copy of the notice of objection to the Chief of Appeals in a Tax Services Office or Taxation Centre of the Canada Revenue Agency.
2001, c. 25, s. 61
80. (1) Paragraph (a) of the definition “customs information” in subsection 107(1) of the Act is replaced by the following:
(a) relates to one or more persons and is obtained by or on behalf of
(i) the Minister for the purposes of this Act or the Customs Tariff, or
(ii) the Minister of National Revenue for the purposes of the collection of debts due to Her Majesty under Part V.1;
2001, c. 25, s. 61, c. 41, s. 121
(2) Subsection 107(3) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Authorized use of customs information by official
(3) An official may use customs information
(a) for the purposes of administering or enforcing this Act, the Customs Tariff, the Excise Act, 2001, the Special Imports Measures Act or Part 2 of the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act or for any purpose set out in subsection (4), (5) or (7);
(b) for the purposes of exercising the powers or performing the duties and functions of the Solicitor General of Canada under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, including establishing a person’s identity or determining their inadmissibility; or
(c) for the purposes of any Act or instrument made under it, or any part of such an Act or instrument, that the Governor in Council or Parliament authorizes the Minister, the Agency, the President or an employee of the Agency to enforce, including the Agriculture and Agri-Food Administrative Monetary Penalties Act, the Canada Agricultural Prod­ucts Act, the Feeds Act, the Fertilizers Act, the Fish Inspection Act, the Health of Animals Act, the Meat Inspection Act, the Plant Protection Act and the Seeds Act.
2001, c. 25, s. 61, c. 41, s. 121
(3) Paragraphs 107(4)(c) and (d) of the Act are replaced by the following:
(c) may reasonably be regarded as necessary solely for a purpose relating to the administration or enforcement of this Act, the Customs Tariff, the Excise Act, the Excise Act, 2001, the Excise Tax Act, the Export and Import Permits Act, the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, the Special Import Measures Act or Part 2 of the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act by an official of the Agency;
(c.1) may reasonably be regarded as necessary solely for a purpose relating to the enforcement of the Agriculture and Agri-Food Administrative Monetary Penalties Act, the Canada Agricultural Products Act, the Feeds Act, the Fertilizers Act, the Fish Inspection Act, the Health of Animals Act, the Meat Inspection Act, the Plant Protection Act and the Seeds Act by an official of the Agency;
(c.2) may reasonably be regarded as necessary solely for a purpose relating to the administration or enforcement of Part V.1 by an official or a class of officials of the Canada Revenue Agency designated by the Minister of National Revenue;
(d) may reasonably be regarded as necessary solely for a purpose relating to the administration or enforcement of this Act, the Excise Act, the Excise Act, 2001 or the Export and Import Permits Act by a member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police;
(4) Subsection 107(5) of the Act is amended by adding the following after paragraph (g):
(g.1) an official of the Canada Revenue Agency solely for a purpose relating to the administration or enforcement of the Canada Pension Plan, the Employment Insurance Act, the Excise Act, the Excise Act, 2001, the Excise Tax Act or the Income Tax Act;
(5) Subsection 107(5) of the Act is amended by adding the following after paragraph (j):
(j.1) an official of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency for the purpose of administering or enforcing any Act referred to in section 11 of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency Act if the information relates to the import, export or in-transit movement of goods into or out of Canada;
2001, c. 25, s. 61
(6) The portion of subsection 107(12) of the Act before paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:
Appeal from order to disclose customs information
(12) An order or direction that is made in the course of or in connection with any legal proceeding and that requires an official to give or produce evidence relating to customs information may, by notice served on all interested parties, be immediately appealed by the Minister or the Minister of National Revenue, as the case may be, or by the person against whom the order or direction is made
2001, c. 25, s. 68
81. The portion of subsection 127.1(1) of the Act before paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:
Corrective measures
127.1 (1) The Minister, or any officer des­ignated by the President for the purposes of this section, may cancel a seizure made under section 110, cancel or reduce a penalty assessed under section 109.3 or an amount demanded under section 124 or refund an amount received under any of sections 117 to 119 within thirty days after the seizure, assessment or demand, if
2001, c. 25, s. 80
82. Section 149.1 of the Act is replaced by the following:
Proof of no appeal
149.1 An affidavit of an officer, sworn before a commissioner or other person authorized to take affidavits, setting out that the officer has charge of the appropriate records and has knowledge of the practice of the Agency or the Canada Revenue Agency, as the case may be, and that an examination of the records shows that a notice of assessment under Part V.1 was mailed or otherwise sent to a person under this Act and that, after careful examination and search of the records, the officer has been unable to find that a notice of objection or of appeal from the assessment was received within the time allowed for the notice, is evidence of the statements contained in the affidavit.
1998, c. 7, s. 1
83. Subsection 163.4(1) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Designation by President
163.4 (1) The President may designate any officer for the purposes of this Part and shall provide the officer with a certificate of designation.
84. Every reference to the “Minister” in the following provisions of the Act is replaced by a reference to the “Solicitor General of Canada”:
(a) subsection 97.22(2);
(b) section 97.23; and
(b) section 97.27.
85. Every reference to “Commissioner” or “Commissioner’s” in the following provisions of the Act is replaced by a reference to “President” or “President’s”, respectively:
(a) the heading before section 60;
(b) subsections 60(3) to (5);
(c) subsections 60.1(1) and (3) to (5);
(d) subsections 60.2(1) and (2);
(e) subsections 61(1) and (2);
(f) subsection 67(1);
(g) subsection 67.1(3);
(h) subsection 68(1);
(i) subsection 69(2);
(j) subsection 70(1);
(k) subsections 97.34(3);
(l) subsection 114(2);
(m) section 128;
(n) subsection 130(1);
(o) section 137; and
(p) subsection 141(1).
R.S., c. C-53
Customs and Excise Offshore Application Act
1999, c. 17, s. 129(1)
86. (1) Subsection 4(1) of the Customs and Excise Offshore Application Act is replaced by the following:
Information and documentation
4. (1) The President of the Canada Border Services Agency may require from any person, within any reasonable time that the President stipulates, the production of any book, record, writing or other document or any information that the President considers necessary for ascertaining whether any of sections 5 to 10 apply in any particular case.
1999, c. 17, s. 129(2)(E)
(2) Subsection 4(2) of the English version of the Act is replaced by the following:
Offence
(2) Every person who fails to comply with a requirement of the President under subsection (1) is guilty of an offence punishable on summary conviction.
1997, c. 36
Customs Tariff
1999, c. 17, s. 130
87. The portion of subsection 68(3) of the Act before paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:
Non-application to goods in transit
(3) The President of the Canada Border Services Agency may relieve goods from payment of a surtax imposed by an order under subsection (1) if the President is of the opinion that
88. Paragraph 108(c) of the Act is replaced by the following:
(c) in respect of goods of tariff item No. 9993.00.00, when the goods are destroyed in the manner that the Solicitor General of Canada directs or the destruction is certified by a customs officer or another person designated by the President of the Canada Border Services Agency;
89. Every reference to the “ministre du Revenu national” in the following provisions of the French version of the Act is replaced by a reference to the “solliciteur général du Canada”:
(a) paragraph 102(b);
(b) paragraph 111(a);
(c) paragraph 113(3)(c); and
(d) section 119.
1996, c. 23
Employment Insurance Act
1999, c. 17, s. 133
90. Subsection 102(13) of the Employment Insurance Act is replaced by the following:
Proof of documents
(13) Every document appearing to be an order, direction, demand, notice, certificate, requirement, decision, assessment, discharge of mortgage, release of hypothec or other document executed under, or in the course of the administration or enforcement of, this Part over the name in writing of the Minister, the Deputy Minister of National Revenue, the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, the Commissioner of Revenue or an officer authorized to exercise the powers or perform the duties of the Minister under this Part, is deemed to be a document signed, made and issued by the Minister, the Deputy Minister, the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, the Commissioner of Revenue or the officer unless it has been called into question by the Minister or by a person acting for the Minister or for Her Majesty.
R.S., c. E-14
Excise Act
R.S., c. 1 (2nd Supp.), s. 213(2) (Sch. II, item 5(F)); 1999, c. 17, s. 139(5)
91. The definitions “collector” and “Commissioner” in section 2 of the Excise Act are replaced by the following:
“collector”
« receveur »
“collector” means every officer of excise who is appointed to collect the duties imposed by this Act in any defined district or excise division;
“Commissioner”
« commissaire »
“Commissioner” means the Commissioner of Revenue appointed under section 25 of the Canada Revenue Agency Act;
2002, c. 22
Excise Act, 2001
92. The definitions “Agency”, “Commissioner” and “officer” in section 2 of the Excise Act, 2001 are replaced by the following:
“Agency”
« Agence »
“Agency” means the Canada Revenue Agency continued by subsection 4(1) of the Canada Revenue Agency Act.
“Commissioner”
« commissaire »
“Commissioner” means the Commissioner of Revenue appointed under section 25 of the Canada Revenue Agency Act.
“officer”
« préposé »
“officer” means, except in sections 167, 226 and 296,
(a) a person who is appointed or employed in the administration or enforcement of this Act,
(b) a member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police or a member of a police force designated under subsection 10(1); and
(c) with respect to imported goods that have not been released under the Customs Act, an officer as defined in subsection 2(1) of that Act.
93. Section 9 of the Act is amended by adding the following after subsection (2):
Authorization
(3) The Solicitor General of Canada may authorize a designated officer or agent, or a class of officers or agents, to exercise powers and perform duties of that Minister under section 68.
94. (1) Subsection 68(1) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Availability and sampling of imported DA and SDA
68. (1) Any person who imports a product that is reported under the Customs Act as being denatured alcohol or specially denatured alcohol shall make the product available for sampling and the product is required to be sampled by the Solicitor General of Canada before it is released under that Act.
(2) Subsections 68(3) and (4) of the Act are replaced by the following:
Minister may waive
(3) The Solicitor General of Canada may at any time waive the requirement to sample an imported product under subsection (1).
Fees
(4) The Solicitor General of Canada may fix fees to be paid by the importer of the product but those fees must not exceed an amount determined by that Minister to be the costs to Her Majesty in respect of the sampling and testing.
95. (1) Subsection 188(6) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Limitation on refunding overpayments
(6) An overpayment of duty payable for a fiscal month of a person and interest on the overpayment shall not be applied under paragraph (4)(b) or refunded under paragraph (4)(c) unless the person has, before the day on which notice of the assessment is sent to the person, filed all returns or other records that the person was required to file with
(a) the Minister under this Act, the Excise Act, the Excise Tax Act and the Income Tax Act; or
(b) the Solicitor General of Canada under the Customs Act.
(2) Subparagraph 188(7)(b)(ii) of the Act is replaced by the following:
(ii) the person has, before the day on which notice of the assessment is sent to him or her, filed all returns or other records that the person was required to file
(A) with the Minister under this Act, the Excise Act, the Excise Tax Act and the Income Tax Act, or
(B) with the Solicitor General of Canada under the Customs Act.
96. Subsection 189(4) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Restriction
(4) A refund shall not be paid until the person has filed with the Minister or the Solicitor General of Canada, all returns or other records that are required to be filed under this Act, the Customs Act, the Excise Act, the Excise Tax Act and the Income Tax Act.
97. The definition “confidential information” in subsection 211(1) of the Act is amended by striking out the word “or” at the end of paragraph (a) and by replacing paragraph (b) with the following:
(a.1) obtained by or on behalf of the Solicitor General of Canada for the purposes of section 68; or
(b) prepared from information referred to in paragraph (a) or (a.1).
98. Subsection 301(8) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Proof of documents
(8) Every document purporting to have been executed under or in the course of the administration or enforcement of this Act over the name in writing of the Minister, the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, the Commissioner or an officer authorized to exercise the powers or perform the duties of the Minister under this Act is deemed to be a document signed, made and issued by the Minister, the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, the Commissioner or the officer, unless it has been called into question by the Minister or a person acting for the Minister or for Her Majesty.
Proof of documents: Canada Border Services Agency
(8.1) Every document purporting to have been executed under or in the course of the administration or enforcement of this Act over the name in writing of the Solicitor General of Canada, the President of the Canada Border Services Agency or an officer authorized to exercise the powers or perform the duties of that Minister under this Act is deemed to be a document signed, made and issued by that Minister, the President or the officer, unless it has been called into question by that Minister or a person acting for that Minister or for Her Majesty.
R.S., c. E-15
Excise Tax Act
1999, c. 17, s. 145(3)
99. The definitions “Agency” and “Commissioner” in subsection 2(1) of the Excise Tax Act are replaced by the following:
“Agency”
« Agence »
“Agency” means the Canada Revenue Agency continued by subsection 4(1) of the Canada Revenue Agency Act;
“Commissioner”
« commissaire »
“Commissioner” means the Commissioner of Revenue appointed under section 25 of the Canada Revenue Agency Act;
100. Subsection 59(2) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Delegation of powers
(2) The Minister may authorize a designated officer or agent, or officer or agent of a designated class of officers or agents, to exercise powers or perform duties of the Minister, including judicial or quasi-judicial powers or duties, under this Act.
R.S., c. 7 (2nd Supp.), s. 34(1); 1995, c. 41, s. 114; 2002, c. 22, s. 381(2)
101. Subsections 70(2) to (4) of the Act are replaced by the following:
Specific sum
(2) The Minister may, under regulations of the Governor in Council, pay a specific sum in lieu of a drawback under subsection (1) in any case where a specific sum in lieu of a drawback of duties is granted under section 117 of the Customs Tariff.
Drawback on imported goods
(2.1) On application, the Solicitor General of Canada may, under section 113 of the Customs Tariff, grant a drawback of the tax imposed under Part III and paid on or in respect of goods imported into Canada.
Application for drawback
(3) An application for a drawback under subsection (1) shall be made in the prescribed form and contain the prescribed information and shall be filed with the Minister within such time and in such manner as the Governor in Council may, by regulation, prescribe.
Evidence
(4) No drawback shall be granted under subsection (1) unless the person applying for the drawback provides such evidence in support of the application as the Minister may require.
R.S., c. 7 (2nd Supp.), s. 50(1); 1999, c. 17, par. 156(e)
102. (1) Subsections 105(6) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Proof of documents
(5.1) An affidavit of an officer of the Canada Border Services Agency, sworn before a commissioner or other person authorized to take affidavits, setting out
(a) that the officer has charge of the appropriate records, and
(b) that a document annexed to the affidavit is a document or a true copy of a document, or a print-out of an electronic document, made by or on behalf of the Solicitor General of Canada or a person exercising the powers of that Minister or by or on behalf of a person,
is evidence of the nature and contents of the document.
Proof of no objection
(6) An affidavit of an officer of the Agency or the Canada Border Services Agency, sworn before a commissioner or other person authorized to take affidavits, setting out
(a) that the officer has charge of the appropriate records,
(b) that the officer has knowledge of the practice of the Agency or the Canada Border Services Agency, as the case may be,
(c) that an examination of the records shows that a notice of determination or a notice of assessment was sent to a person on a named day pursuant to this Act, and
(d) that after careful examination of the records the officer was unable to find that a notice of objection to the determination or assessment was received within the time limited for it,
is evidence of the statements contained in the affidavit.
R.S., c. 7(2nd Supp.), s. 50(1); 1999, c. 17, par. 156(e)
(2) Subsection 105(9) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Presumption
(9) Where evidence is offered under this section by an affidavit from which it appears that the person making the affidavit is an officer of the Agency or the Canada Border Services Agency, as the case may be, it is not necessary to prove his or her signature or that the person is such an officer, nor is it necessary to prove the signature or official character of the person before whom the affidavit was sworn.
2001, c. 17, s. 235
103. Subsection 106.1(1) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Presumption
106.1 (1) Every document purporting to be an order, direction, notice, certificate, requirement, decision, determination, assessment, discharge of mortgage or acquittance of a hypothecary claim or other document and purporting to have been executed under, or in the course of the administration or enforcement of, this Act or the regulations over the name in writing of the Minister, the Deputy Minister of National Revenue, the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, the Commissioner or an officer authorized by the Minister to exercise his or her powers or perform his or her duties or functions under this Act is deemed to be a document signed, made and issued by the Minister, Deputy Minister, Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, the Commissioner or the officer, unless called into question by the Minister or by some person acting for the Minister or Her Majesty.
Presumption
(1.1) Every document purporting to be an order, a direction, a notice, a certificate, a requirement, a decision, a determination, an assessment, a discharge of mortgage or an acquittance of a hypothecary claim or other document and purporting to have been executed under, or in the course of the administration or enforcement of, this Act or the regulations over the name in writing of the Solicitor General of Canada, the President of the Canada Border Services Agency or an officer authorized by that Minister to exercise his or her powers or perform his or her duties or functions under this Act is deemed to be a document signed, made and issued by that Minister, the President or the officer, unless called into question by that Minister or by some person acting for that Minister or Her Majesty.
1999, c. 17, s. 152(2)
104. The definitions “Agency” and “Commissioner” in subsection 123(1) of the Act are replaced by the following:
“Agency”
« Agence »
“Agency” means the Canada Revenue Agency continued by subsection 4(1) of the Canada Revenue Agency Act;
“Commissioner”
« commissaire »
“Commissioner” means the Commissioner of Revenue appointed under section 25 of the Canada Revenue Agency Act;
1993, c. 27, s. 8(1)
105. (1) Paragraph 215.1(2)(b) of the Act is replaced by the following:
(b) the Solicitor General of Canada has, under any of sections 73, 74 and 76 of the Customs Act, granted an abatement or refund of all or part of the duties paid on the goods,
1993, c. 27, s. 8(1)
(2) Paragraph 215.1(3)(b) of the Act is replaced by the following:
(b) if the goods had been subject to duties under the Customs Act, the Solicitor General of Canada would, because of any of the circumstances described in paragraph 73(a) or (b) or 74(1)(a), (b) or (c) or subsection 76(1) of that Act, have granted, under section 73, 74 or 76 of that Act, an abatement or refund of all or part of the duties paid on the goods,
1997, c. 10, s. 41.1(1); 1999, c. 17, par. 155(d)
106. Subsection 216(5) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Application of Part IX and Tax Court of Canada Act
(5) The provisions of this Part and of the Tax Court of Canada Act that apply to an appeal taken under section 302 apply, with such modifications as the circumstances require, to an appeal taken under subsection 67(1) of the Customs Act from a decision of the President of the Canada Border Services Agency made under section 60 or 61 of that Act in a determination of the tax status of goods as if the decision of the President were a confirmation of an assessment or a reassessment made by the Minister under subsection 301(3) or (4) as a consequence of a notice of objection filed under subsection 301(1.1) by the person to whom the President is required to give notice under section 60 or 61 of the Customs Act, as the case may be, of the decision.
1990, c. 45, s. 12(1); 1999, c. 17, s. 154, par. 156(j)
107. Subsections 335(6) to (8) of the Act are replaced by the following:
Proof of documents
(5.1) An affidavit of an officer of the Canada Border Services Agency, sworn before a commissioner or other person authorized to take affidavits, setting out that the officer has charge of the appropriate records and that a document annexed to the affidavit is a document or a true copy of a document, or a printout of an electronic document, made by or on behalf of the Solicitor General of Canada or a person exercising the powers of that Minister or by or on behalf of a person, is evidence of the nature and contents of the document.
Proof of no appeal
(6) An affidavit of an officer of the Agency or the Canada Border Services Agency, sworn before a commissioner or other person authorized to take affidavits, setting out that the officer has charge of the appropriate records and has knowledge of the practice of the Agency or the Canada Border Services Agency, as the case may be, and that an examination of the records shows that a notice of assessment was mailed or otherwise sent to a person on a particular day under this Part and that, after careful examination and search of the records, the officer has been unable to find that a notice of objection or of appeal from the assessment, as the case may be, was received within the time allowed, is evidence of the statements contained in the affidavit.
Presumption
(7) Where evidence is offered under this section by an affidavit from which it appears that the person making the affidavit is an officer of the Agency or the Canada Border Services Agency, as the case may be, it is not necessary to prove the signature of the person or that the person is such an officer, nor is it necessary to prove the signature or official character of the person before whom the affidavit was sworn.
Proof of documents
(8) Every document purporting to have been executed under or in the course of the administration or enforcement of this Part over the name in writing of the Minister, the Deputy Minister of National Revenue, the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, the Commissioner or an officer authorized to exercise the powers or perform the duties of the Minister under this Part, shall be deemed to be a document signed, made and issued by the Minister, the Deputy Minister, the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, the Commissioner or the officer, unless it has been called in question by the Minister or a person acting for the Minister or for Her Majesty in right of Canada.
Proof of documents
(8.1) Every document purporting to have been executed under or in the course of the administration or enforcement of this Part over the name in writing of the Solicitor General of Canada or the President of the Canada Border Services Agency, or an officer authorized to exercise the powers or perform the duties of that Minister under this Part, shall be deemed to be a document signed, made and issued by that Minister, the President or the officer, unless it has been called in question by that Minister or a person acting for that Minister or for Her Majesty in right of Canada.
1992, c. 28, s. 41(1)
108. Section 1 of Part X of Schedule VI to the Act is replaced by the following:
1. A supply made by Canada Post Corporation of a service under an agreement made with the Solicitor General of Canada under subsection 147.1(3) of the Customs Act.
1997, c. 10, s. 254
109. Section 4 of Part I of Schedule X to the Act is replaced by the following:
4. Arms, military stores and munitions of war brought into a participating province by the Government of Canada in replacement of or in anticipation or actual exchange for similar goods loaned to or exchanged or to be exchanged with the governments of a foreign country designated by the Governor in Council under heading No. 98.10 of Schedule I to the Customs Tariff, under such regulations as the Solicitor General of Canada may make for purposes of heading No. 98.11 of that Act.
1997, c. 10, s. 254
110. Section 6 of Part I of Schedule X to the Act is replaced by the following:
6. Property, (other than advertising matter, tobacco or an alcoholic beverage) that is a casual donation sent by a person in a non-participating province to a person in a participating province, or brought into a particular participating province by a person who is not resident in the participating provinces as a gift to a person in that participating province, where the fair market value of the property does not exceed $60, under such regulations as the Solicitor General of Canada may make for purposes of heading No. 98.16 of Schedule I to the Customs Tariff.
R.S., c. 4 (2nd Supp.)
Family Orders and Agreements Enforcement Assistance Act
1999, c. 31, s. 9(F)
111. Section 15 of the Family Orders and Agreements Enforcement Assistance Act is replaced by the following:
Information banks that may be searched
15. The information banks that may be searched under this Part are the information banks designated by the regulations from among the information banks controlled by the Department of Human Resources Development, the Canada Revenue Agency and the Canada Employment Insurance Commission.
R.S., c. F-9
Feeds Act
1997, c. 6, s. 46
112. Subsection 6(2) of the Feeds Act is replaced by the following:
Designation
(1.1) The President of the Canada Border Services Agency may designate inspectors under paragraph 9(2)(b) of the Canada Border Services Agency Act for the purposes of enforcing this Act.
Certificate to be produced
(2) Inspectors shall be given certificates in a form established by the President of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency or the President of the Canada Border Services Agency, as the case may be, attesting to their designation and, on entering any place under subsection 7(1), an inspector shall, if so required, produce the certificate to the person in charge of that place.
R.S., c. F-10
Fertilizers Act
1997, c. 6, s. 49
113. Subsection 6(2) of the Fertilizers Act is replaced by the following:
Designation
(1.1) The President of the Canada Border Services Agency may designate inspectors under paragraph 9(2)(b) of the Canada Border Services Agency Act for the purposes of enforcing this Act.
Certificate to be produced
(2) Inspectors shall be given certificates in a form established by the President of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency or the President of the Canada Border Services Agency, as the case may be, attesting to their designation and, on entering any place under subsection 7(1), an inspector shall, if so required, produce the certificate to the person in charge of that place.
R.S., c. F-11
Financial Administration Act
SOR/2003-431
114. Schedule I.1 to the Financial Administration Act is amended by striking out, in column I, the reference to
Canada Border Services Agency
Agence des services frontaliers du Canada
and the corresponding reference in column II to the Appropriate Minister for that Agency.
115. Schedule II to the Act is amended by adding the following in alphabetical order:
Canada Border Services Agency
Agence des services frontaliers du Canada
R.S., c. F-12
Fish Inspection Act
1997, c. 6, s. 60
116. Subsection 17(2) of the Fish Inspection Act is replaced by the following:
Designation
(1.1) The President of the Canada Border Services Agency may designate inspectors under paragraph 9(2)(b) of the Canada Border Services Agency Act for the purposes of enforcing this Act.
Certificate to be produced
(2) Inspectors shall be given certificates in a form established by the President of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency or the President of the Canada Border Services Agency, as the case may be, attesting to their designation and, on entering any place under subsection 4(1), an inspector shall, if so required, produce the certificate to the person in charge of that place.
1990, c. 21
Health of Animals Act
1997, c. 6, s. 68
117. Subsection 32(2) of the Health of Animals Act is replaced by the following:
Designation
(1.1) The President of the Canada Border Services Agency may designate inspectors under paragraph 9(2)(b) of the Canada Border Services Agency Act for the purposes of enforcing this Act.
Certificate to be produced
(2) Inspectors, officers and veterinary inspectors shall be given certificates in a form established by the President of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency or the President of the Canada Border Services Agency, as the case may be, attesting to their designation and, on entering any place under this Act, an inspector, officer or veterinary inspector shall show the certificate to the person in charge of the place if the person requests proof of the designation.
2001, c. 27
Immigration and Refugee Protection Act
118. Section 4 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act is replaced by the following:
Minister of Citizenship and Immigration
4. (1) Subject to subsection (2), the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration is responsible for the administration of this Act.
Solicitor General of Canada
(2) The Minister as defined in section 2 of the Canada Border Services Agency Act is responsible for the administration of this Act as it relates to
(a) examinations at ports of entry;
(b) the enforcement of this Act, including arrest, detention and removal;
(c) the establishment of policies respecting the enforcement of this Act and inadmissibility on grounds of security, organized criminality or violating human or international rights; or
(d) determinations under any of subsections 34(2), 35(2) and 37(2).
Specification
(3) Subject to subsections (1) and (2), the Governor in Council may specify
(a) which Minister referred to in subsections (1) and (2) shall be the Minister for the purposes of any provision of this Act; and
(b) that both Ministers may be the Minister for the purposes of any provision of this Act and the circumstances under which each Minister shall be the Minister.
Publication
(4) Any order made under subsection (3) must be published in Part II of the Canada Gazette.
2004, c. 15, s. 72
119. (1) Paragraphs 150.1(1)(a) and (b) of the Act are replaced by the following:
(a) the collection, retention, use, disclosure and disposal of information for the purposes of this Act or for the purposes of program legislation as defined in section 2 of the Canada Border Services Agency Act; and
(b) the disclosure of information for the purposes of national security, the defence of Canada or the conduct of international affairs, including the implementation of an agreement or arrangement entered into under section 5 of the Department of Citizenship and Immigration Act or section 13 of the Canada Border Services Agency Act.
2004, c. 15, s. 72
(2) Subsection 150.1(2) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Conditions
(2) Regulations made under subsection (1) may include conditions under which the collection, retention, use, disposal and disclosure may be made.
R.S., c. 1 (5th Supp.)
Income Tax Act
120. Subsection 244(13) of the Income Tax Act is replaced by the following:
Proof of documents
(13) Every document purporting to have been executed under, or in the course of the administration or enforcement of, this Act over the name in writing of the Minister, the Deputy Minister of National Revenue, the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, the Commissioner of Revenue or an officer authorized to exercise a power or perform a duty of the Minister under this Act is deemed to have been signed, made and issued by the Minister, the Deputy Minister, the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, the Commissioner of Revenue or the officer unless it has been called in question by the Minister or by a person acting for the Minister or Her Majesty.
R.S., c. 25 (1st Supp.)
Meat Inspection Act
1997, c. 6, s. 72
121. The definition “inspector” in subsection 2(1) of the Meat Inspection Act is replaced by the following:
“inspector”
« inspecteur »
“inspector” means a person designated as an inspector pursuant to subsection 12(1) or (1.1);
1997, c. 6, s. 73
122. Subsection 12(2) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Designation
(1.1) The President of the Canada Border Services Agency may designate inspectors under paragraph 9(2)(b) of the Canada Border Services Agency Act for the purposes of enforcing this Act.
Certificate to be produced
(2) Inspectors shall be given certificates in a form established by the President of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency or the President of the Canada Border Services Agency, as the case may be, attesting to their designation and, on entering any place or vehicle referred to in subsection 13(1), an inspector shall, if so required, produce the certificate to the person in charge of that place or vehicle.
1990, c. 22
Plant Protection Act
1997, c. 6, s. 82
123. Subsection 21(2) of the Plant Protection Act is replaced by the following:
Designation
(1.1) The President of the Canada Border Services Agency may designate inspectors under paragraph 9(2)(b) of the Canada Border Services Agency Act for the purposes of enforcing this Act.
Certificate to be produced
(2) Inspectors shall be given certificates in a form established by the President of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency or the President of the Canada Border Services Agency, as the case may be, attesting to their designation and, on entering any place under this Act, an inspector shall show the certificate to the person in charge of the place if the person requests proof of the inspector’s designation.
2000, c. 17; 2001, c. 41, s. 48
Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act
124. (1) The definition “Commissioner” in section 2 of the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act is repealed.
(2) The definition “Minister” in section 2 of the Act is replaced by the following:
“Minister”
« ministre »
“Minister” means, in relation to sections 25 to 39, the Solicitor General of Canada and, in relation to any other provision of this Act, the member of the Queen’s Privy Council for Canada who is designated by the Governor in Council as the Minister for the purposes of that provision.
(3) Section 2 of the Act is amended by adding the following definition in alphabetical order:
“President”
« président »
“President” means the President of the Canada Border Services Agency appointed under subsection 7(1) of the Canada Border Services Agency Act.
125. Paragraph 38(1)(a) of the Act is replaced by the following:
(a) information set out in reports made under subsection 12(1) in respect of currency or monetary instruments imported into Canada from that state will be provided to a department, institution or agency of that state that has powers and duties similar to those of the Canada Border Services Agency in respect of the reporting of currency or monetary instruments; and
126. (1) Paragraph 55(3)(b) of the Act is replaced by the following:
(b) the Canada Revenue Agency, if the Centre also determines that the information is relevant to an offence of evading or attempting to evade paying taxes or duties imposed under an Act of Parliament administered by the Minister of National Revenue;
(b.1) the Canada Border Services Agency, if the Centre also determines that the information is relevant to an offence of evading or attempting to evade paying taxes or duties imposed under an Act of Parliament administered by the Agency; and
2001, c. 41, s. 123(1)
(2) Paragraph 55(3)(d) of the Act is replaced by the following:
(d) the Canada Border Services Agency, if the Centre also determines that the information would promote the objective set out in paragraph 3(1)(i) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act and is relevant to determining whether a person is a person described in sections 34 to 42 of that Act or to an offence under any of sections 117 to 119, 126 or 127 of that Act.
(3) Section 55 of the Act is amended by adding the following after subsection (3):
Exception
(3.1) Paragraph (3)(b) or (b.1) does not apply in respect of an offence relating to taxes or duties imposed under a prescribed Act or a prescribed portion of an Act.
127. Every reference to “Commissioner” or “Commissioner’s” in the following provisions of the Act is replaced by a reference to “President” or “President’s”, respectively:
(a) section 20;
(b) subsection 26(1);
(c) section 31;
(d) subsections 32(3) and (4);
(e) subsection 35(1); and
(f) subsection 39(2).
R.S., c. P-36
Public Service Superannuation Act
128. Part I of Schedule I to the Public Service Superannuation Act is amended by adding the following in alphabetical order:
Canada Border Services Agency
Agence des services frontaliers du Canada
R.S., c. R-9
Royal Canadian Mint Act
129. The definition “Minister” in section 2 of the Royal Canadian Mint Act is repealed.
130. The Act is amended by adding the following after section 2:
DESIGNATION OF MINISTER
Power of Governor in Council
2.1 The Governor in Council may designate a member of the Queen’s Privy Council for Canada to be the Minister for the purposes of this Act.
R.S., c. S-8
Seeds Act
1997, c. 6, s. 88
131. Subsection 5(2) of the Seeds Act is replaced by the following:
Designation
(1.1) The President of the Canada Border Services Agency may designate inspectors under paragraph 9(2)(b) of the Canada Border Services Agency Act for the purposes of enforcing this Act.
Certificate to be produced
(2) Inspectors shall be given certificates in a form established by the President of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency or the President of the Canada Border Services Agency, as the case may be, attesting to their designation and, on entering any place under subsection 6(1), an inspector shall show the certificate to the person in charge of the place if the person requests proof of the inspector’s designation.
R.S., c. S-15
Special Import Measures Act
1999, c. 17, s. 180(2)
132. (1) The definition “Commissioner” in subsection 2(1) of the Special Import Measures Act is repealed.
(2) The definition “Minister” in subsection 2(1) of the Act is replaced by the following:
“Minister”
« ministre »
“Minister” means the Solicitor General of Canada;
(3) Subsection 2(1) of the Act is amended by adding the following in alphabetical order:
“President”
« président »
“President” means the President of the Canada Border Services Agency appointed under subsection 7(1) of the Canada Border Services Agency Act;
1999, c. 17, s. 182
133. Section 94 of the Act is replaced by the following:
Ruling binding
94. A ruling given by the Tribunal on the question of who is the importer in Canada of any goods imported or to be imported into Canada is binding on the President, and on every person employed by the Canada Border Services Agency in the administration or enforcement of this Act, with respect to the particular goods in relation to which the ruling is given, unless the Tribunal is fraudulently misled or, in the case only of goods to be imported into Canada, material facts that are not available to the President at the time the Tribunal gives its ruling come to the President’s attention after it is given.
134. Every reference to “Commissioner” or “Commissioner’s” in the following provisions of the Act is replaced by a reference to “President” or “President’s”, respectively:
(a) subparagraph (b)(iii) of the definition “properly documented” in subsection 2(1);
(b) the definition “undertaking” or “undertakings” in subsection 2(1);
(c) subsections 2(7.3), (7.4) and (9);
(d) paragraph 4(2)(a);
(e) paragraph 5(b);
(f) paragraphs 6(b) and (c);
(g) subsection 7(1);
(h) subsections 8(1) to (2), (5) and (6);
(i) the portion of subsection 9.2(1) before paragraph (a);
(j) the portion of subsection 9.21(1) before paragraph (a);
(k) the portion of section 9.3 before paragraph (a);
(l) section 10;
(m) subsections 12(2) and (3);
(n) subsections 13.2(1), (3) and (4);
(o) paragraph 15(d);
(p) paragraphs 16(1)(a) to (c);
(q) paragraph 16(2)(b);
(r) sections 17 to 20;
(s) subsections 25(1) and (2);
(t) subsection 29(1);
(u) subsection 30.2(2);
(v) subsections 30.3(1) and (2);
(w) subsection 30.4(2);
(x) subsections 31(1) and (6) to (8);
(y) subsections 31.1(1) to (4);
(z) sections 32 to 39;
(z.1) sections 41 to 41.2;
(z.2) the portion of subsection 43(2) before paragraph (a);
(z.3) the portion of section 46 after paragraph (b);
(z.4) subsection 47(3);
(z.5) sections 49 and 50;
(z.6) sections 51 to 52;
(z.7) section 53;
(z.8) section 53.1;
(z.9) subsection 55(1);
(z.10) the heading before section 56;
(z.11) section 57;
(z.12) subsections 58(1.1) and (2);
(z.13) subsections 59(1) to (3.1) and (4);
(z.14) the portion of subsection 60(2) before paragraph (a);
(z.15) subsection 61(1);
(z.16) paragraph 62(1)(b);
(z.17) subsections 76.01(1) and (6);
(z.18) subsections 76.02(1) and (5);
(z.19) subsections 76.03(3) and (6) to (11);
(z.20) section 76.1;
(z.21) the definition “appropriate authority” in subsection 77.01(1);
(z.22) paragraphs (a), (b) and (d) to (f.1) of the definition “definitive decision” in subsection 77.01(1);
(z.23) the definition “appropriate authority” in subsection 77.1(1);
(z.24) paragraphs (a), (b) and (d) to (f.1) of the definition “definitive decision” in subsection 77.1(1);
(z.25) the portion of subsection 78(1) after paragraph (b);
(z.26) subsections 78(3) to (5);
(z.27) subsection 81(1);
(z.28) sections 83 and 83.1;
(z.29) paragraph 84(2)(b);
(z.30) the portion of subsection 84(3) before paragraph (a);
(z.31) subsection 84(3.1);
(z.32) sections 85 to 89;
(z.33) paragraphs 91(1)(c) to (g);
(z.34) paragraph 91(3)(b);
(z.35) sections 95 and 96;
(z.36) subsections 96.1(1) to (3) and (6);
(z.37) subsection 96.11(1);
(z.38) section 96.2;
(z.39) paragraphs 96.4(1)(a) and (b); and
(z.40) paragraphs 97(1)(k.3) and (k.4).
135. Every reference to “Commissioner” in the following provisions of the English version of the Act is replaced by a reference to “President”:
(a) the definition “prescribed” in subsection 2(1);
(b) subsection 77.011(4);
(c) subparagraph 77.012(1)(a)(ii);
(d) subsection 77.013(3);
(e) subsection 77.11(3)
(f) subparagraph 77.12(1)(a)(ii);
(g) subsection 77.13(2);
(h) the heading before section 78;
(i) paragraph 78(1)(a);
(j) subsection 78(2);
(k) subsections 79(1) and (2); and
(l) paragraph 84(1)(b).
136. Every reference to “commissaire” in the following provisions of the French version of the Act is replaced by a reference to “président”:
(a) subsection 13.2(2);
(b) subsection 56(1.01);
(c) subsection 56(1.1);
(d) subsection 77.021(2); and
(e) subsection 77.21(2).
Application
137. The provisions of the Special Import Measures Act, as enacted or amended by sections 132 to 136 and paragraph 145(2)(i) of this Act, apply to goods of a NAFTA country, as defined in subsection 2(1) of that Act.
Terminology Changes
138. Every reference to the “Canada Customs and Revenue Agency” in the following provisions is replaced by a reference to the “Canada Revenue Agency”:
(a) Schedule I to the Access to Information Act;
(b) the schedule to the Auditor General Act;
(c) in the Canada Pension Plan,
(i) subsection 25(12),
(ii) the portion of subsection 26.1(1) before paragraph (a),
(iii) subsection 27.2(2),
(iv) subsection 41(6),
(v) subsection 103(3),
(vi) paragraph 104.03(2)(a), and
(vii) subsection 104.03(3);
(d) paragraph 72(c) of the Canada Petroleum Resources Act;
(e) subsection 462.48(14) of the Criminal Code;
(f) subsection 33(2) of the Cultural Property Export and Import Act;
(g) in the Employment Insurance Act,
(i) paragraph 69(3)(f),
(ii) subsection 88(12),
(iii) the portion of subsection 90(1) before paragraph (a),
(iv) subsection 93(2),
(v) subsection 102(1),
(vi) subsections 102(5) to (11),
(vii) subsection 102(18),
(viii) section 122, and
(ix) paragraph 131(1)(a);
(h) paragraph (a) of the definition “holiday” in section 2 of the Excise Act;
(i) paragraph (c) of the definition “information bank director” in section 2 of the Family Orders and Agreements Enforcement Assistance Act;
(j) section 11 of the Farm Income Protection Act;
(k) in the Financial Administration Act,
(i) subsection 41(2), and
(ii) Schedule II;
(l) paragraph 3(2)(g) of the Importation of Intoxicating Liquors Act;
(m) in the Income Tax Act,
(i) subsection 165(2),
(ii) subsection 166.1(3),
(iii) subsection 231.4(1),
(iv) subsection 231.5(1),
(v) paragraph 237.1(5)(c),
(vi) subsection 244(1),
(vii) subsections 244(5) to (11), and
(viii) subsection 244(19);
(n) Schedule III to the Payments in Lieu of Taxes Act;
(o) paragraph 33.03(2)(a) of the Old Age Security Act;
(p) the schedule to the Privacy Act under the heading “Other Government Institutions”;
(q) in the Public Service Staff Relations Act,
(i) paragraph (m) of the definition “employee” in subsection 2(1),
(ii) paragraph (c) of the definition “managerial or confidential position” in subsection 2(1), and
(iii) Part II of Schedule I; and
(r) Part I of Schedule I to the Public Service Superannuation Act.
139. Every reference to the “Canada Customs and Revenue Agency” in the following provisions is replaced by a reference to the “Canada Border Services Agency”:
(a) paragraph 4.81(4)(b) of the Aeronautics Act;
(b) section 44 of the Copyright Act;
(c) section 42.1 of the Firearms Act; and
(d) paragraph 38(1)(b) of the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act.
140. Every reference to the “Commissioner of Customs and Revenue” in the following provisions is replaced by a reference to the “Commissioner of Revenue”:
(a) in the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act,
(i) the definition “Commissioner” in section 2, and
(ii) section 25;
(b) the portion of subsection 462.48(3) of the Criminal Code before paragraph (c);
(c) subsection 97(1) of the Employment Insurance Act;
(d) section 63 of the Energy Administration Act;
(e) in the Income Tax Act,
(i) subsection 166.2(3),
(ii) subsections 170(1) and (2),
(iii) subsection 220(1), and
(iv) subsections 232(5) to (7); and
(f) in the Petroleum and Gas Revenue Act,
(i) subsection 19(2),
(ii) subsections 22(2) and (3), and
(iii) subsection 29(1).
141. Every reference to the “Commissioner of Customs and Revenue” in the following provisions of the Customs Tariff is replaced by a reference to the “President of the Canada Border Services Agency”:
(a) subsections 134(1) and (2); and
(b) the List of Tariff Provisions set out in the schedule.
142. Every reference to the “Minister of National Revenue” in the following provisions is replaced by a reference to the “Solicitor General of Canada”:
(a) in the Aeronautics Act,
(i) paragraph 4.81(3)(b), and
(ii) paragraph 4.81(4)(b);
(b) subsection 40(1.1) of the Canada Post Act;
(c) in the Coasting Trade Act,
(i) subsection 2(3),
(ii) subsection 4(1),
(iii) section 5, and
(iv) subsections 6(1) and (3);
(d) the definition “Minister” in section 44.1 of the Copyright Act;
(e) in the Customs Tariff,
(i) section 9,
(ii) subsection 16(2.1),
(iii) subsection 18(2),
(iv) subsection 19(2),
(v) section 88,
(vi) paragraph 89(3)(d),
(vii) subsection 89(4),
(viii) subsections 90(1) and (2),
(ix) section 91,
(x) section 93,
(xi) subsection 95(4),
(xii) the portion of section 99 before paragraph (a),
(xiii) section 100,
(xiv) paragraph 101(3)(b),
(xv) paragraph 102(a),
(xvi) subsection 105(2),
(xvii) subsections 106(1) and (3) to (5),
(xviii) the portion of section 108 before paragraph (a),
(xix) subparagraph 108(f)(ii),
(xx) paragraph 109(c),
(xxi) section 112,
(xxii) paragraph 113(3)(a),
(xxiii) the portion of subsection 113(4) before paragraph (a),
(xxiv) subsection 115(1),
(xxv) section 117,
(xxvi) paragraph 118(1)(b),
(xxvii) paragraph 118(4)(a),
(xxviii) section 125,
(xxix) subsection 126(1),
(xxx) sections 129 and 130,
(xxxi) section 133,
(xxxii) subsections 134(1) and (2), and
(xxxiii) the List of Tariff Provisions set out in the schedule;
(f) section 52 of the Firearms Act;
(g) subsection 16(1) of the Department of Industry Act;
(h) in the Canada Shipping Act,
(i) section 472, and
(ii) paragraph 596(2)(b);
(i) section 25 of the Statistics Act;
(j) the definition “Minister” in section 52 of the Trade Marks Act; and
(k) section 24 of the Visiting Forces Act.
143. The reference to the “Minister of National Revenue” in paragraph (a) of the definition “prescribed” in subsection 2(1) of the English version of the Customs Tariff is replaced by a reference to the “Solicitor General of Canada”.
COORDINATING AMENDMENTS
2003, c. 22
144. (1) If the definition “employee” in subsection 2(1) of the Public Service Labour Relations Act, as enacted by section 2 of the Public Service Modernization Act, comes into force before section 1 of this Act comes into force, then, on the day on which section 1 of this Act comes into force, subparagraph 138(q)(i) of this Act is repealed.
2003, c. 22
(2) If the definition “managerial or confidential position” in subsection 2(1) of the Public Service Labour Relations Act, as enacted by section 2 of the Public Service Modernization Act, comes into force before section 1 of this Act comes into force, then, on the day on which section 1 of this Act comes into force, subparagraph 138(q)(ii) of this Act is repealed.
2003, c. 22
(3) If section 11 of the Public Service Modernization Act comes into force before section 1 of this Act comes into force, then, on the day on which section 1 of this Act comes into force, subparagraph 138(q)(iii) of this Act is repealed.
2003, c. 22
(4) On the later of the coming into force of section 11 of the Public Service Modernization Act and the coming into force of section 1 of this Act,
(a) the reference in Schedule V to the Financial Administration Act to the “Canada Customs and Revenue Agency” is replaced by a reference to the “Canada Revenue Agency”; and
(b) Schedule V to the Financial Administration Act is amended by adding the following in alphabetical order:
Canada Border Services Agency
Agence des services frontaliers du Canada
2003, c. 22
(5) If section 1 of this Act comes into force before subsection 49(1) of the Public Service Modernization Act, then, on the day on which section 1 of this Act comes into force, that subsection is replaced by the following:
Legal officers
49. (1) For the purposes of the new Act, including any application under section 58 of the new Act, an employee who, on or after the day on which the definition “managerial or confidential position” in subsection 2(1) of that Act comes into force, is employed as a legal officer in the Department of Justice or the Canada Revenue Agency is deemed not to be included in any unit determined, in accordance with the former Act, to constitute a unit of employees appropriate for collective bargaining.
2003, c. 22
(6) If section 1 of this Act comes into force before section 95 of the Public Service Modernization Act, then, on the day on which section 1 of this Act comes into force, that section and the heading before it are replaced by the following:
Canada Revenue Agency Act
95. Paragraph 16(2)(c) of the English version of the Canada Revenue Agency Act is replaced by the following:
(c) is employed on a full-time basis in the federal public administration or the public service of a province or territory.
2003, c. 22
(7) On the later of the coming into force of section 224 of the Public Service Modernization Act and the coming into force of section 1 of this Act, subsection 10(3) of the English version of this Act is replaced by the following:
Deemed employment
(3) The President and the Executive Vice-president are deemed to be employed in the public service for the purposes of the Public Service Superannuation Act and to be employed in the federal public administration for the purposes of the Government Employees Compensation Act and any regulations made under section 9 of the Aeronautics Act.
2003, c. 22
(8) On the later of the coming into force of section 224 of the Public Service Modernization Act and the coming into force of section 1 of this Act, a reference to the “public service of Canada” in the following provisions of the English version of this Act is replaced by a reference to “federal public administration”:
(a) the definition “former agency” in section 16; and
(b) subsections 18(1) and (2).
2003, c. 22
(9) If section 1 of this Act comes into force before section 224 of the Public Service Modernization Act, then, on the day on which section 1 of this Act comes into force, paragraph 224(k) of that Act is replaced by the following:
(k) sections 21 and 66 of the Canada Revenue Agency Act;
2003, c. 22
(10) If section 1 of this Act comes into force before section 229 of the Public Service Modernization Act, then, on the day on which section 1 of this Act comes into force, that section and the heading before it are replaced by the following:
Canada Revenue Agency Act
229. Subsection 55(1) of the Canada Revenue Agency Act is replaced by the following:
Mobility to departments
55. (1) For the purpose of deployments or appointments made, or advertised internal appointment processes, under the Public Service Employment Act, employees of the Agency must be treated as if they were employees within the meaning of the Public Service Employment Act and had the rights of recourse provided by that Act.
Bill C-6
145. (1) Subsections (2) and (3) apply if Bill C-6, introduced in the 1st Session of the 38th Parliament and entitled the Department of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Act (in this section, the “other Act”), receives royal assent.
(2) On the later of the coming into force of section 1 of this Act and section 1 of the other Act, every reference to the “Solicitor General of Canada” in the following provisions is replaced by a reference to the “Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness”:
(a) the definition “Minister” in section 2 of this Act;
(b) paragraph (b) of the definition “Minister” in section 2 of the Agriculture and Agri-Food Administrative Monetary Penalties Act, as enacted by section 30 of this Act;
(c) section 5 of the Cultural Property Import and Export Act, as enacted by section 59 of this Act;
(d) in the Customs Act,
(i) the definition “Minister” in subsection 2(1), as enacted by subsection 60(2) of this Act,
(ii) subsection 97.211(1), as enacted by section 76 of this Act,
(iii) subsection 97.22(3), as enacted by section 77 of this Act,
(iv) subsection 97.34(2), as enacted by subsection 78(1) of this Act,
(v) subsections 97.34(4) and (5), as enacted by subsection 78(2) of this Act,
(vi) paragraph 107(3)(b), as enacted by subsection 80(2) of this Act, and
(vii) subsection 97.22(2) and sections 97.23 and 97.27, as amended by section 84 of this Act;
(e) in the Customs Tariff,
(i) paragraph 108(c), as enacted by section 88 of this Act, and
(ii) the provisions referred to in section 89 of this Act, as amended by that section;
(f) in the Excise Act, 2001,
(i) subsection 9(3), as enacted by section 93 of this Act,
(ii) subsection 68(1), as enacted by subsection 94(1) of this Act,
(iii) subsections 68(3) and (4), as enacted by subsection 94(2) of this Act,
(iv) paragraph 188(6)(b), as enacted by subsection 95(1),
(v) subparagraph 188(7)(b)(ii), as enacted by subsection 95(2) of this Act,
(vi) subsection 189(4), as enacted by section 96 of this Act,
(vii) paragraph (a.1) of the definition “confidential information” in subsection 211(1), as enacted by section 97 of this Act, and
(viii) subsection 301(8.1), as enacted by section 98 of this Act;
(g) in the Excise Tax Act,
(i) subsection 70(2.1) as enacted by section 101 of this Act,
(ii) subsection 105(5.1), as enacted by subsection 102(1) of this Act,
(iii) subsection 106.1(1.1), as enacted by section 103 of this Act,
(iv) paragraph 215.1(2)(b), as enacted by subsection 105(1) of this Act,
(v) paragraph 215.1(3)(b), as enacted by subsection 105(2) of this Act,
(vi) subsections 335(5.1) and (8.1), as enacted by section 107 of this Act,
(vii) section 1 of Part X of Schedule VI, as enacted by section 108 of this Act,
(viii) section 4 of Part I of Schedule X, as enacted by section 109 of this Act, and
(ix) section 6 of Part I of Schedule X, as enacted by section 110 of this Act;
(h) the definition “Minister” in section 2 of the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act, as enacted by subsection 124(2) of this Act;
(i) the definition “Minister” in subsection 2(1) of the Special Import Measures Act, as enacted by subsection 132(2) of this Act; and
(j) the provisions referred to in section 142 of this Act, as amended by that section.
(3) On the later of the coming into force of section 1 of this Act and section 1 of the other Act, the reference to the “Solicitor General of Canada” in paragraph (a) of the definition “prescribed” in subsection 2(1) of the English version of the Customs Tariff, as amended by section 143 of this Act, is replaced by a reference to the “Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness”.
(4) On the later of the coming into force of section 1 of this Act and section 1 of the other Act, every reference to the “solliciteur général du Canada” in the French version of the provisions referred to in section 89 is replaced by a reference to “ministre de la Sécurité publique et de la Protection civile”.
(5) If it comes into force after section 114 of this Act, paragraph 34(1)(m) of the other Act is repealed on its coming into force.
Bill C-22
146. If Bill C-22, introduced in the 1st Session of the 38th Parliament and entitled the Department of Social Development Act (in this section, the “other Act”), receives royal assent, then, on the later of the coming into force of section 1 of this Act and section 2 of the other Act, section 15 of the Family Orders and Agreements Enforcement Assistance Act is replaced by the following:
Information banks that may be searched
15. The information banks that may be searched under this Part are the information banks designated by the regulations from among the information banks controlled by the Department of Social Development, the Canada Revenue Agency and the Canada Employment Insurance Commission.
COMING INTO FORCE
Order in council
147. This Act, except for sections 144 to 146, comes into force on a day to be fixed by order of the Governor in Council.
Published under authority of the Speaker of the House of Commons
Available from:
Publishing and Depository Services
Public Works and Government Services Canada




Explanatory Notes
Agriculture and Agri-Food Administrative Monetary Penalties Act
Clause 30: Existing text of the definition:
“Minister” means the Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food;
Air Travellers Security Charge Act
Clause 31: Existing text of the definitions:
“Agency” means the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency established by subsection 4(1) of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act.
“Commissioner” means the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue appointed under section 25 of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act.
Clause 32: Existing text of subsection 83(8):
(8) Every document purporting to have been executed under or in the course of the administration or enforcement of this Act over the name in writing of the Minister, the Commissioner or an officer authorized to exercise the powers or perform the duties of the Minister under this Act is deemed to be a document signed, made and issued by the Minister, the Commissioner or the officer, unless it has been called into question by the Minister or a person acting for the Minister or for Her Majesty.
Canada Agricultural Products Act
Clause 33: Existing text of subsection 19(2):
(2) Inspectors shall be given certificates in a form established by the President of the Agency attesting to their designation and, on entering any place under this Act, an inspector shall show the certificate to the person in charge of the place on request.
Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act
Clause 34: Existing text of the long title:
An Act to establish the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency and to amend and repeal other Acts as a consequence
Clause 35: Existing text of section 1:
1. This Act may be cited as the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act.
Clause 36: (1) to (3) Existing text of the definitions:
“Agency” means the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency established by subsection 4(1).
“program legislation” means any other Act of Parliament or any instrument made under it, or any part of such an Act or instrument
(a) that the Governor in Council or Parliament authorizes the Minister, the Agency, the Commissioner or an employee of the Agency to administer or enforce, including the Customs Act, Customs Tariff, Excise Act, Excise Tax Act, Income Tax Act and Special Import Measures Act; or
(b) under which the Minister or another minister authorizes the Agency, the Commissioner or an employee of the Agency to administer a program or carry out an activity.
(4) New.
Clause 37: Existing text of the heading:
ESTABLISHMENT AND MANDATE OF THE AGENCY
Clause 38: Existing text of subsection 4(1):
4. (1) There is hereby established a body corporate to be called the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency.
Clause 39: Relevant portion of subsection 5(1):
5. (1) The Agency is responsible for
(a) supporting the administration and enforcement of the program legislation;
Clause 40: (1) and (2) Relevant portion of subsection 6(1):
6. (1) The powers, duties and functions of the Minister extend to and include all matters over which Parliament has jurisdiction, not by law assigned to any department, board or agency of the Government of Canada other than the Agency, relating to
(a) duties of customs and matters incident thereto;
Clause 41: Existing text of section 7:
7. The Minister may designate any person, or person within a class of persons, as an officer as defined in subsection 2(1) of the Customs Act or in section 2 of the Excise Act to exercise any powers or perform any duties and functions of an officer under those Acts that the Minister may specify.
Clause 42: Existing text of section 9:
9. The Minister may direct the Commissioner or any other person in the exercise of a power or the performance of a duty or function of the Minister that the Commissioner or the person is authorized to exercise or perform under subsection 8(1) or (4) or under the program legislation.
Clause 43: Existing text of subsection 26(1):
26. (1) A Deputy Commissioner of Customs and Revenue may be appointed by the Governor in Council to hold office during pleasure for a term of not more than five years, which term may be renewed for one or more further terms of not more than five years each.
Clause 44: Existing text of section 33:
33. The Board may advise the Minister on matters that relate to the general administration and enforcement of the program legislation.
Clause 45: Existing text of section 34:
34. The Board may not direct the Commissioner or any other person
(a) in the exercise of a power or the performance of a duty or function conferred or delegated under the program legislation or the laws of a province or authorized to be exercised or performed on the Minister’s behalf under this Act; or
(b) on the administration and enforcement of the program legislation.
Clause 46: Existing text of section 35:
35. Nothing in this Act authorizes the disclosure to the Board of information
(a) that directly or indirectly reveals the identity of the person, organization or business to which it relates; and
(b) that is obtained under the program legislation or the laws of a province or that is prepared from information so obtained.
Clause 47: Existing text of subsection 37(1):
37. (1) The Commissioner may authorize any person, subject to any terms and conditions that the Commissioner may specify, to exercise or perform on behalf of the Commissioner any power, duty or function of the Commissioner under this Act.
Clause 48: Existing text of subsection 39(1):
39. (1) Subject to any confidentiality provisions in the program legislation or in the Privacy Act, the Commissioner must provide a federal department or agency on whose behalf the Agency administers a program or carries out an activity with the information necessary to evaluate the program or activity and formulate policies related to it.
Clause 49: Existing text of subsection 40(1):
40. (1) Subject to any confidentiality provisions in the program legislation or in the Privacy Act, the Commissioner must provide the government of a province on whose behalf the Agency administers a tax or program or carries out an activity with the information necessary to evaluate the tax, program or activity and formulate policies related to it.
Clause 50: Existing text of subsection 60(3):
(3) The revenues referred to in subsection (2) do not include taxes, duties, penalties or interest collected under the program legislation or the laws of a province or amounts collected for any department, government or public body.
Clause 51: Existing text of subsection 63(1):
63. (1) The Agency may enter into or amend an agreement with the government of a province to administer a provincial tax or other fiscal measure, if the tax or measure meets the guidelines established by federal and provincial ministers responsible for finance and the Agency follows the procedures established jointly by the Minister and the Minister of Finance.
Clause 52: Existing text of section 186:
186. Any expression referring to the Deputy Minister of National Revenue or the Department of National Revenue in any document, any instrument made under an Act of Parliament, or any provision of an Act of Parliament not amended by this Act must, unless the context otherwise requires, be read as a reference to the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue or the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency, respectively.
Canadian Food Inspection Agency Act
Clause 53: New.
Canadian International Trade Tribunal Act
Clause 54: New.
Department of Citizenship and Immigration Act
Clause 57: Existing text of section 4:
4. The powers, duties and functions of the Minister extend to and include all matters over which Parliament has jurisdiction relating to citizenship and immigration.
Criminal Code
Clause 58: (1) Relevant portion of the definition:
“peace officer” includes
...
(d) an officer or a person having the powers of a customs or excise officer when performing any duty in the administration of the Customs Act, the Excise Act or the Excise Act, 2001,
(2) Relevant portion of the definition:
“justice system participant” means
...
(b) a person who plays a role in the administration of criminal justice, including
...
(ix) an employee of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency who is involved in the investigation of an offence under an Act of Parliament,
Cultural Property Export and Import Act
Clause 59: Existing text of section 5:
5. The Minister, with the approval of the Minister of National Revenue, may designate any persons or classes of persons employed by the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency as permit officers to receive applications for export permits and to issue export permits under this Act.
Customs Act
Clause 60: (1) and (2) Existing text of the definitions:
“Agency” means the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency;
“Commissioner” means the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, appointed under section 25 of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act;
“Minister” means the Minister of National Revenue;
(3) New.
(4) Existing text of subsection 2(3):
(3) Any power, duty or function of the Commissioner under this Act may be exercised or performed by any person, or by any officer within a class of officers, authorized by the Commissioner to do so and, if so exercised or performed, is deemed to have been exercised or performed by the Commissioner.
(5) New.
Clause 61: Existing text of subsection 3.3(1):
3.3 (1) The Minister or any officer designated by the Minister for the purposes of this section may at any time waive or cancel all or any portion of any penalty or interest otherwise payable by a person under this Act.
Clause 62: Existing text of subsection 3.4(1):
3.4 (1) Where security has been given to the Minister by a person under a provision of this Act and the Minister or any officer (in this section referred to as a “designated officer”) designated by the Minister for the purposes of this section determines that the security that has been given is no longer adequate, the Minister or a designated officer may, by notice served personally or by registered or certified mail, require additional security to be given by or on behalf of the person within such reasonable time as may be stipulated in the notice.
Clause 63: Existing text of subsection 32(7):
(7) The Minister or an officer designated by the Minister for the purposes of this subsection may authorize any person not resident in Canada to account for goods under this section, in such circumstances and under such conditions as may be prescribed, in lieu of the importer or owner thereof.
Clause 64: Existing text of section 33.2:
33.2 The Minister or any officer designated by the Minister for the purposes of this section may, by notice served personally or by registered or certified mail, require any person to account, within such reasonable time as may be stipulated in the notice, in the manner described in paragraph 32(1)(a), for any goods as may be designated in the notice.
Clause 65: Existing text of section 33.5:
33.5 The Minister or any officer designated by the Minister for the purposes of this section may, by notice served personally or by registered or certified mail, require any person to pay any amount owing as duties, within such reasonable time as may be stipulated in the notice, on any goods as may be designated in the notice.
Clause 66: Existing text of subsection 33.7(1):
33.7 (1) The Minister or any officer designated by the Minister for the purposes of this section may at any time extend in writing the time prescribed by the regulations made under this Part for the accounting of goods or the payment of any amount owing as duties.
Clause 67: Relevant portion of subsection 35.02(2):
(2) The Minister or any officer designated by the Minister for the purposes of this section may, by notice served personally or by registered mail, require any person
Clause 68: Relevant portion of subsection 42(2):
(2) An officer, or an officer within a class of officers, designated by the Minister for the purposes of this section, may at all reasonable times, for any purpose related to the administration or enforcement of this Act.
Clause 69: Existing text of section 42.01:
42.01 An officer, or an officer within a class of officers, designated by the Minister for the purposes of this section may conduct a verification of origin (other than a verification of origin referred to in section 42.1), verification of tariff classification or verification of value for duty in respect of imported goods in the manner that is prescribed and may for that purpose at all reasonable times enter any prescribed premises.
Clause 70: Relevant portion of subsection 42.1(1):
42.1 (1) Any officer, or any officer within a class of officers, designated by the Minister for the purposes of this section, or any person, or any person within a class of persons, designated by the Minister to act on behalf of such an officer, may, subject to the prescribed conditions,
Clause 71: Relevant portion of subsection 43.1(1):
43.1 (1) Any officer, or any officer within a class of officers, designated by the Minister for the purposes of this section shall, before goods are imported, on application by any member of a prescribed class that is made within the prescribed time, in the prescribed manner and in the prescribed form containing the prescribed information, give an advance ruling with respect to
Clause 72: Existing text of subsection 57.01(1):
57.01 (1) Any officer, or any officer within a class of officers, designated by the Minister for the purposes of this section may, at or before the time goods imported from a NAFTA country are accounted for under subsection 32(1), (3) or (5), in the prescribed manner and subject to the prescribed conditions, make a determination as to whether the goods have been marked in the manner referred to in section 35.01.
Clause 73: Existing text of subsection 58(1):
58. (1) Any officer, or any officer within a class of officers, designated by the Minister for the purposes of this section, may determine the origin, tariff classification and value for duty of imported goods at or before the time they are accounted for under subsection 32(1), (3) or (5).
Clause 74: Relevant portion of subsection 59(1):
59. (1) An officer, or any officer within a class of officers, designated by the Minister for the purposes of this section may
Clause 75: New.
Clause 76: New.
Clause 77: Existing text of subsection 97.22(3):
(3) Any amount of money demanded under paragraph 133(1)(c) or (1.1)(b) and any interest payable under subsection 133(7), from and after the time notice is served under subsection 131(2), is a debt due to Her Majesty in right of Canada from the person who requested the decision and the person shall pay the amount so demanded or, if the person appeals the decision of the Minister under section 135, give security satisfactory to the Minister.
Clause 78: (1) Existing text of subsection 97.34(2):
(2) If a person has appealed a decision of the Minister to the Federal Court under section 97.23 or 135, the Minister must not take any action described in subsection (1) to collect the amount in controversy before the date of the decision of the Court or the day on which the person discontinues the appeal.
(2) Existing text of subsections 97.34(4) and (5):
(4) If a person has made a request under section 60 or 129 or has appealed under section 67 or 68 and the person agrees in writing with the Minister to delay proceedings on the request or appeal, as the case may be, until judgment has been given in another action before the Federal Court, the Canadian International Trade Tribunal or the Supreme Court of Canada, in which action the issue is the same or substantially the same as that raised in the request or appeal of the person, the Minister may take any of the actions described in subsection (1) for the purpose of collecting the amount payable, or a part of the amount payable, determined in a manner consistent with the decision or judgment in the other action at any time after the Minister notifies the person in writing that
(a) the decision of the Canadian International Trade Tribunal or Federal Court in that action has been mailed to the Minister;
(b) judgment has been pronounced by the Federal Court of Appeal in that action; or
(c) judgment has been delivered by the Supreme Court of Canada in that action.
(5) The Minister must not, for the purpose of collecting an amount payable, or a part of an amount payable, under this Act, take any of the actions described in subsection (1) if a person has given security to the Minister when requesting or appealing from a decision of the Commissioner or Minister.
Clause 79: Existing text of subsection 97.5(3):
(3) The application must be made by delivering or mailing the application and a copy of the notice of objection to the Chief of Appeals in a Tax Services Office or Taxation Centre of the Agency.
Clause 80: (1) Relevant portion of the definition:
“customs information” means information of any kind and in any form that
(a) relates to one or more persons and is obtained by or on behalf of the Minister for the purposes of this Act or the Customs Tariff; or
(2) Existing text of subsection 107(3):
(3) An official may use customs information for the purposes of administering or enforcing this Act, the Customs Tariff, the Special Imports Measures Act or Part 2 of the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act or for any purpose set out in subsection (4), (5) or (7).
(3) Relevant portion of subsection 107(4):
(4) An official may provide, allow to be provided or provide access to customs information if the information
...
(c) may reasonably be regarded as necessary solely for a purpose relating to the administration or enforcement of this Act, the Canada Pension Plan, the Customs Tariff, the Employment Insurance Act, the Excise Act, the Excise Tax Act, the Export and Import Permits Act, the Income Tax Act, the Special Import Measures Act or Part 2 of the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act by an official of the Agency;
(d) may reasonably be regarded as necessary solely for a purpose relating to the administration or enforcement of this Act, the Excise Act or the Export and Import Permits Act by a member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police;
(4) and (5) Relevant portion of subsection 107(5):
(5) An official may provide, allow to be provided or provide access to customs information to the following persons:
(6) Relevant portion of subsection 107(12):
(12) An order or direction that is made in the course of or in connection with any legal proceeding and that requires an official to give or produce evidence relating to customs information may, by notice served on all interested parties, be immediately appealed by the Minister or by the person against whom the order or direction is made
Clause 81: Relevant portion of subsection 127.1(1):
127.1 (1) The Minister, or any officer designated by the Minister for the purposes of this section, may cancel a seizure made under section 110, cancel or reduce a penalty assessed under section 109.3 or an amount demanded under section 124 or refund an amount received under any of sections 117 to 119 within thirty days after the seizure, assessment or demand, if
Clause 82: Existing text of section 149.1:
149.1 An affidavit of an officer, sworn before a commissioner or other person authorized to take affidavits, setting out that the officer has charge of the appropriate records and has knowledge of the practice of the Agency and that an examination of the records shows that a notice of assessment under Part V.1 was mailed or otherwise sent to a person under this Act and that, after careful examination and search of the records, the officer has been unable to find that a notice of objection or of appeal from the assessment was received within the time allowed for the notice, is evidence of the statements contained in the affidavit.
Clause 83: Existing text of subsection 163.4(1):
163.4 (1) The Minister may designate any officer for the purposes of this Part and shall furnish the officer with a certificate of designation.
Customs and Excise Offshore Application Act
Clause 86: (1) and (2) Existing text of subsections 4(1) and (2):
4. (1) The Commissioner of Customs and Revenue may require from any person, within any reasonable time that the Commissioner stipulates, the production of any book, record, writing or other document or any information that the Commissioner deems necessary for ascertaining whether any of sections 5 to 10 apply in any particular case.
(2) Every person who fails to comply with a requirement of the Commissioner under subsection (1) is guilty of an offence punishable on summary conviction.
Customs Tariff
Clause 87: Relevant portion of subsection 68(3):
(3) The Commissioner of Customs and Revenue may relieve goods from payment of a surtax imposed by an order under subsection (1) if the Commissioner is of the opinion that
Clause 88: Relevant portion of section 108:
108. The Minister of National Revenue shall refund or cancel any security given
...
(c) in respect of goods of tariff item No. 9993.00.00, when the goods are destroyed in the manner that the Minister of National Revenue directs or the destruction is certified by a customs officer or another person designated by that Minister.
Employment Insurance Act
Clause 90: Existing text of subsection 102(13):
(13) Every document appearing to be an order, direction, demand, notice, certificate, requirement, decision, assessment, discharge of mortgage, release of hypothec or other document executed under, or in the course of the administration or enforcement of, this Part over the name in writing of the Minister, the Deputy Minister of National Revenue, the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue or an officer authorized to exercise the powers or perform the duties of the Minister under this Part, is deemed to be a document signed, made and issued by the Minister, the Deputy Minister, the Commissioner or the officer unless it has been called into question by the Minister or by a person acting for the Minister or for Her Majesty.
Excise Act
Clause 91: Existing text of the definitions:
“collector” means every officer of customs and excise who is appointed to collect the duties imposed by this Act in any defined district or excise division;
“Commissioner” means the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, appointed under section 25 of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act;
Excise Act, 2001
Clause 92: Existing text of the definitions:
“Agency” means the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency established under subsection 4(1) of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act.
“Commissioner” means the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, appointed under section 25 of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act.
“officer”, except in sections 167, 226 and 296, means a person who is appointed or employed in the administration or enforcement of this Act, a member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police or a member of a police force designated under subsection 10(1).
Clause 93: New.
Clause 94: (1) Existing text of subsection 68(1):
68. (1) Any person who imports a product that is reported under the Customs Act as being denatured alcohol or specially denatured alcohol shall make the product available for sampling and the product is required to be sampled by the Minister before it is released under that Act.
(2) Existing text of subsections 68(3) and (4):
(3) The Minister may at any time waive the requirement to sample an imported product under subsection (1).
(4) The Minister may fix fees to be paid by the importer of the product but those fees must not exceed an amount determined by the Minister to be the costs to Her Majesty in respect of the sampling and testing.
Clause 95: (1) Existing text of subsection 188(6):
(6) An overpayment of duty payable for a fiscal month of a person and interest on the overpayment shall not be applied under paragraph (4)(b) or refunded under paragraph (4)(c) unless the person has, before the day on which notice of the assessment is sent to the person, filed all returns or other records that the person was required to file with the Minister under this Act, the Customs Act, the Excise Act, the Excise Tax Act and the Income Tax Act.
(2) Relevant portion of subsection 188(7):
(7) A refund or a part of the refund that was not applied under subsection (3) and interest on the refund under paragraphs (5)(b) and (c)
...
(b) shall not be refunded under paragraph (5)(c) unless
...
(ii) the person has filed all returns or other records that the person was required to file with the Minister under this Act, the Customs Act, the Excise Act, the Excise Tax Act and the Income Tax Act before the day on which notice of the assessment is sent to the person.
Clause 96: Existing text of subsection 189(4):
(4) A refund shall not be paid until the person has filed with the Minister all returns or other records that are required to be filed under this Act, the Customs Act, the Excise Act, the Excise Tax Act and the Income Tax Act.
Clause 97: Existing text of the definition:
“confidential information” means information of any kind and in any form that relates to one or more persons and that is
(a) obtained by or on behalf of the Minister for the purposes of this Act; or
(b) prepared from information referred to in paragraph (a).
It excludes information that does not directly or indirectly reveal the identity of the person to whom it relates.
Clause 98: Existing text of subsection 301(8):
(8) Every document purporting to have been executed under or in the course of the administration or enforcement of this Act over the name in writing of the Minister, the Commissioner or an officer authorized to exercise the powers or perform the duties of the Minister under this Act is deemed to be a document signed, made and issued by the Minister, the Commissioner or the officer, unless it has been called into question by the Minister or a person acting for the Minister or for Her Majesty.
Excise Tax Act
Clause 99: Existing text of the definitions:
“Agency” means the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency established by subsection 4(1) of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act;
“Commissioner” means the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, appointed under section 25 of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act;
Clause 100: Existing text of subsection 59(2):
(2) The Minister may authorize a designated officer or officer of a designated class of officers to exercise powers or perform duties of the Minister, including judicial or quasi-judicial powers or duties, under this Act.
Clause 101: Existing text of subsections 70(2) to (4):
(2) The Minister may, under regulations of the Governor in Council, pay a specific sum in lieu of a drawback under subsection (1) in any case where a specific sum in lieu of a drawback of duties is granted under section 102.1 of the Customs Tariff.
(2.1) On application, the Minister may, under section 100 of the Customs Tariff, grant a drawback of the taxes imposed by Parts III, IV and VI and paid on or in respect of goods imported into Canada.
(3) An application for a drawback under this section shall be made in the prescribed form and contain the prescribed information and shall be filed with the Minister within such time and in such manner as the Governor in Council may, by regulation, prescribe.
(4) No drawback shall be granted under this section unless the person applying therefor provides such evidence in support of the application as the Minister may require.
Clause 102: (1) Existing text of subsection 105(6):
(6) An affidavit of an officer of the Agency, sworn before a commissioner or other person authorized to take affidavits, setting out
(a) that the officer has charge of the appropriate records,
(b) that the officer has knowledge of the practice of the Agency,
(c) that an examination of the records shows that a notice of determination or a notice of assessment was sent to a person on a named day pursuant to this Act, and
(d) that after careful examination of the records the officer was unable to find that a notice of objection to the determination or assessment was received within the time limited therefor,
is evidence of the statements contained therein.
(2) Existing text of subsection 105(9):
(9) Where evidence is offered under this section by an affidavit from which it appears that the person making the affidavit is an officer of the Agency, it is not necessary to prove his signature or that the person is such an officer nor is it necessary to prove the signature or official character of the person before whom the affidavit was sworn.
Clause 103: Existing text of subsection 106.1(1):
106.1 (1) Every document purporting to be an order, direction, notice, certificate, requirement, decision, determination, assessment, discharge of mortgage or acquittance of a hypothecary claim or other document and purporting to have been executed under, or in the course of the administration or enforcement of, this Act or the regulations over the name in writing of the Minister, the Deputy Minister of National Revenue, the Commissioner or an officer authorized by the Minister to exercise his powers or perform his duties or functions under this Act is deemed to be a document signed, made and issued by the Minister, Deputy Minister, Commissioner or officer, unless called into question by the Minister or by some person acting for the Minister or Her Majesty.
Clause 104: Existing text of the definitions:
“Agency” means the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency established by subsection 4(1) of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act;
“Commissioner” means the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, appointed under section 25 of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act;
Clause 105: (1) Relevant portion of subsection 215.1(2):
(2) Where
...
(b) the Minister has, under any of sections 73, 74 and 76 of the Customs Act, granted an abatement or refund of the whole or part of the duties paid on the goods,
(2) Relevant portion of subsection 215.1(3):
(3) Where
...
(b) if the goods had been subject to duties under the Customs Act, the Minister would, because of any of the circumstances described in paragraph 73(a) or (b) or 74(1)(a), (b) or (c) or subsection 76(1) of that Act, have granted, under section 73, 74 or 76 of that Act, an abatement or refund of the whole or part of the duties paid on the goods,
Clause 106: Existing text of subsection 216(5):
(5) The provisions of this Part and of the Tax Court of Canada Act that apply to an appeal taken under section 302 apply, with such modifications as the circumstances require, to an appeal taken under subsection 67(1) of the Customs Act from a decision of the Commissioner made under section 63 or 64 of that Act in a determination of the tax status of goods as if the decision of the Commissioner were a confirmation of an assessment or a reassessment made by the Minister under subsection 301(3) or (4) as a consequence of a notice of objection filed under subsection 301(1.1) by the person to whom the Commissioner is required to give notice under section 63 or 64 of the Customs Act, as the case may be, of the decision.
Clause 107: Existing text of subsections 335(6) to (8):
(6) An affidavit of an officer of the Agency, sworn before a commissioner or other person authorized to take affidavits, setting out that the officer has charge of the appropriate records and has knowledge of the practice of the Agency and that an examination of the records shows that a notice of assessment was mailed or otherwise sent to a person on a particular day under this Part and that, after careful examination and search of the records, the officer has been unable to find that a notice of objection or of appeal from the assessment, as the case may be, was received within the time allowed therefor, is evidence of the statements contained therein.
(7) Where evidence is offered under this section by an affidavit from which it appears that the person making the affidavit is an officer of the Agency, it is not necessary to prove the signature of the person or that the person is such an officer, nor is it necessary to prove the signature or official character of the person before whom the affidavit was sworn.
(8) Every document purporting to have been executed under or in the course of the administration or enforcement of this Part over the name in writing of the Minister, the Deputy Minister of National Revenue, the Commissioner or an officer authorized to exercise the powers or perform the duties of the Minister under this Part, shall be deemed to be a document signed, made and issued by the Minister, the Deputy Minister, the Commissioner or the officer, unless it has been called in question by the Minister or a person acting for the Minister or for Her Majesty in right of Canada.
Clause 108: Existing text of section 1:
1. A supply made by Canada Post Corporation of a service under an agreement made with the Minister under subsection 147.1(3) of the Customs Act.
Clause 109: Existing text of section 4:
4. Arms, military stores and munitions of war brought into a participating province by the Government of Canada in replacement of or in anticipation or actual exchange for similar goods loaned to or exchanged or to be exchanged with the governments of a foreign country designated by the Governor in Council under heading No. 98.10 of Schedule I to the Customs Tariff, under such regulations as the Minister may make for purposes of heading No. 98.11 of that Act.
Clause 110: Existing text of section 6:
6. Property, (other than advertising matter, tobacco or an alcoholic beverage) that is a casual donation sent by a person in a non-participating province to a person in a participating province, or brought into a particular participating province by a person who is not resident in the participating provinces as a gift to a person in that participating province, where the fair market value of the property does not exceed $60, under such regulations as the Minister may make for purposes of heading No. 98.16 of Schedule I to the Customs Tariff.
Family Orders and Agreements Enforcement Assistance Act
Clause 111: Existing text of section 15:
15. The information banks that may be searched under this Part are the information banks designated by the regulations from among the information banks controlled by the Department of Human Resources Development, the Department of National Revenue and the Canada Employment Insurance Commission.
Feeds Act
Clause 112: Existing text of subsection 6(2):
(2) Inspectors shall be given certificates in a form established by the President of that Agency attesting to their designation and, on entering any place under subsection 7(1), an inspector shall, if so required, produce the certificate to the person in charge of that place.
Fertilizers Act
Clause 113: Existing text of subsection 6(2):
(2) Inspectors shall be given certificates in a form established by the President of that Agency attesting to their designation and, on entering any place under subsection 7(1), an inspector shall, if so required, produce the certificate to the person in charge of that place.
Financial Administration Act
Clause 115: New.
Fish Inspection Act
Clause 116: Existing text of subsection 17(2):
(2) Inspectors shall be given certificates in a form established by the President of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency attesting to their designation and, on entering any place under subsection 4(1), an inspector shall, if so required, produce the certificate to the person in charge of that place.
Health of Animals Act
Clause 117: Existing text of subsection 32(2):
(2) Inspectors, officers and veterinary inspectors shall be given certificates in a form established by the President of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency attesting to their designation and, on entering any place under this Act, an inspector, officer or veterinary inspector shall show the certificate to the person in charge of the place if the person requests proof of the designation.
Immigration and Refugee Protection Act
Clause 118: Existing text of section 4:
4. The Minister responsible for the administration of this Act is the member of the Queen’s Privy Council designated as such by the Governor in Council.
Clause 119: (1) Relevant portion of subsection 150.1(1):
150.1 (1) The regulations may provide for any matter relating to
(a) the collection, retention, disposal and disclosure of information for the purposes of this Act; and
(2) Existing text of subsection 150.1(2):
(2) Regulations made under subsection (1) may include conditions under which the collection, retention, disposal and disclosure may be made.
Income Tax Act
Clause 120: Existing text of subsection 244(13):
(13) Every document purporting to have been executed under, or in the course of the administration or enforcement of, this Act over the name in writing of the Minister, the Deputy Minister of National Revenue, the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue or an officer authorized to exercise a power or perform a duty of the Minister under this Act is deemed to have been signed, made and issued by the Minister, the Deputy Minister, the Commissioner or the officer unless it has been called in question by the Minister or by a person acting for the Minister or Her Majesty.
Meat Inspection Act
Clause 121: Existing text of the definition:
“inspector” means a person designated as an inspector pursuant to subsection 12(1);
Clause 122: Existing text of subsection 12(2):
(2) Inspectors shall be given certificates in a form established by the President of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency attesting to their designation and, on entering any place or vehicle referred to in subsection 13(1), an inspector shall, if so required, produce the certificate to the person in charge of that place or vehicle.
Plant Protection Act
Clause 123: Existing text of subsection 21(2):
(2) Inspectors shall be given certificates in a form established by the President of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency attesting to their designation and, on entering any place under this Act, an inspector shall show the certificate to the person in charge of the place if the person requests proof of the inspector’s designation.
Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act
Clause 124: (1) and (2) Existing text of the definitions:
“Commissioner” has the same meaning as in section 2 of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act.
“Minister” means, in relation to sections 25 to 39, the Minister of National Revenue and, in relation to any other provision of this Act, the member of the Queen’s Privy Council for Canada who is designated by the Governor in Council as the Minister for the purposes of that provision.
(3) New.
Clause 125: Relevant portion of subsection 38(1):
38. (1) The Minister, with the consent of the Minister designated for the purpose of section 42, may enter into an agreement or arrangement in writing with the government of a foreign state, or an institution or agency of that state, that has reporting requirements similar to those set out in this Part, whereby
(a) information set out in reports made under subsection 12(1) in respect of currency or monetary instruments imported into Canada from that state will be provided to a department, institution or agency of that state that has powers and duties similar to those of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency; and
Clause 126: (1) and (2) Relevant portion of subsection 55(3):
(3) If the Centre, on the basis of its analysis and assessment under paragraph 54(c), has reasonable grounds to suspect that designated information would be relevant to investigating or prosecuting a money laundering offence or a terrorist activity financing offence, the Centre shall disclose the information to
...
(b) the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency, if the Centre also determines that the information is relevant to an offence of evading or attempting to evade paying taxes or duties imposed under an Act of Parliament administered by the Minister of National Revenue; and
...
(d) the Department of Citizenship and Immigration, if the Centre also determines that the information would promote the objective set out in paragraph 3(1)(i) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act and is relevant to determining whether a person is a person described in sections 34 to 42 of that Act or to an offence under any of sections 117 to 119, 126 or 127 of that Act.
(3) New.
Public Service Superannuation Act
Clause 128: New.
Royal Canadian Mint Act
Clause 129: Existing text of the definition:
“Minister” means the Minister of Public Works and Government Services;
Clause 130: New.
Seeds Act
Clause 131: Existing text of subsection 5(2):
(2) Inspectors shall be given certificates in a form established by the President of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency attesting to their designation and, on entering any place under subsection 6(1), an inspector shall show the certificate to the person in charge of the place if the person requests proof of the inspector’s designation.
Special Import Measures Act
Clause 132: (1) and (2) Existing text of the definitions:
“Commissioner” means the Commissioner of Customs and Revenue, appointed under section 25 of the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Act;
“Minister” means the Minister of National Revenue;
(3) New.
Clause 133: Existing text of section 94:
94. A ruling given by the Tribunal on the question of who is the importer in Canada of any goods imported or to be imported into Canada is binding on the Commissioner, and on every person employed by the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency in the administration or enforcement of this Act, with respect to the particular goods in relation to which the ruling is given, unless the Tribunal is fraudulently misled or, in the case only of goods to be imported into Canada, material facts that are not available to the Commissioner at the time the Tribunal gives its ruling come to the Commissioner’s attention after it is given.


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