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Bill C-60

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An Act to establish the Canadian Food Inspection Agency and to repeal and amend other Acts as a consequence

[Assented to 20th March, 1997]

Preamble

WHEREAS the Government of Canada wishes to enhance the effectiveness and efficiency of federal inspection and related services for food and animal and plant health by consolidating them;

WHEREAS the consolidation of those services under a single food inspection agency will contribute to consumer protection and facilitate a more uniform and consistent approach to safety and quality standards and risk-based inspection systems;

WHEREAS the Government of Canada wishes to have that food inspection agency deliver those services in a cost effective manner;

WHEREAS the Government of Canada wishes to promote trade and commerce;

AND WHEREAS the Government of Canada wishes to pursue a greater degree of collaboration and consultation between federal departments and with other orders of government in this area;

NOW, THEREFORE, 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 Canadian Food Inspection Agency Act.

INTERPRETATION

Definitions

2. The definitions in this section apply in this Act.

``Agency''
« Agence »

``Agency'' means the Canadian Food Inspection Agency established by section 3.

``Minister''
« ministre »

``Minister'' means the Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food.

ESTABLISHMENT OF THE AGENCY

Establish-
ment

3. There is hereby established a body corporate called the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, which may exercise powers only as an agent of Her Majesty in right of Canada.

Minister responsible

4. (1) The Minister is responsible for and has the overall direction of 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 any Act or provision that the Agency enforces or administers by virtue of section 11, except the power to make regulations and the power to delegate under this subsection.

ORGANIZATION AND HEAD OFFICE

Appointment of Agency executives

5. The Governor in Council shall appoint a President and an Executive Vice-president of the Agency to hold office during pleasure for a term not exceeding five years, which term may be renewed for one or more further terms.

President's powers

6. (1) The President is chief executive officer of the Agency and has supervision over and direction of its work and staff. The President has the rank and all the powers of a deputy head of a Department.

Executive Vice-
president's powers

(2) The Executive Vice-president shall exercise such powers and perform such duties and functions as 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

7. The President may delegate to any person any power, duty or function conferred on the President under this Act or any other enactment.

Remunera-
tion

8. The President and Executive Vice-president shall be paid such remuneration as is fixed by the Governor in Council.

Head office

9. The head office of the Agency shall be in the National Capital Region, as described in the schedule to the National Capital Act.

ADVISORY BOARD

Appointment of members

10. (1) The Minister shall appoint an advisory board of not more than twelve members to hold office during pleasure for a term not exceeding three years, which term may be renewed for one or more further terms.

Role of advisory board

(2) The board shall advise the Minister on any matter within the responsibilities of the Agency.

Represen-
tation

(3) The Minister may appoint any person with relevant knowledge or experience to the advisory board, including persons from the agriculture, fisheries, food processing, food distribution and public health sectors, consumer groups or provincial or municipal governments.

Chairperson

(4) The Minister shall appoint one of the members as Chairperson of the advisory board.

Fees for services

(5) Each member of the advisory board shall be paid such fees for his or her services as are fixed by the Minister.

Travel and living expenses

(6) Each member of the advisory board shall be reimbursed for reasonable travel and living expenses incurred by the member in the course of performing duties under this Act while absent from his or her ordinary place of residence.

Meetings

(7) The Chairperson may determine the times and places at which the advisory board will meet.

RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE AGENCY

Administra-
tion and enforcement

11. (1) The Agency is responsible for the administration and enforcement of the Agriculture and Agri-Food Administrative Monetary Penalties Act, Canada Agricultural Products Act, Feeds Act, Fertilizers Act, Fish Inspection Act, Health of Animals Act, Meat Inspection Act, Plant Breeders' Rights Act, Plant Protection Act and Seeds Act.

Consumer Packaging and Labelling Act

(2) The Agency is responsible for the enforcement of the Consumer Packaging and Labelling Act as it relates to food, as that term is defined in section 2 of the Food and Drugs Act.

Food and Drugs Act

(3) The Agency is responsible for

    (a) the enforcement of the Food and Drugs Act as it relates to food, as defined in section 2 of that Act; and

    (b) the administration of the provisions of the Food and Drugs Act as they relate to food, as defined in section 2 of that Act, except those provisions that relate to public health, safety or nutrition.

Role of Minister of Health

(4) The Minister of Health is responsible for establishing policies and standards relating to the safety and nutritional quality of food sold in Canada and assessing the effectiveness of the Agency's activities related to food safety.

HUMAN RESOURCES

Separate employer

12. The Agency is a separate employer under the Public Service Staff Relations Act.

President's authority to appoint employees

13. (1) The President has the authority to appoint the employees of the Agency.

Terms and conditions of employment

(2) The President may set the terms and conditions of employment for employees of the Agency and assign duties to them.

Enforcement officers

(3) The President may designate any person or class of persons as inspectors, analysts, graders, veterinary inspectors or other officers for the enforcement or administration of any Act or provision that the Agency enforces or administers by virtue of section 11, in respect of any matter referred to in the designation.

POWERS OF THE AGENCY

Contracts and agreements

14. (1) The Agency may enter into contracts, memoranda of understanding and other agreements with a department or agency of the Government of Canada or the government of a province and with any other person or organization in the name of Her Majesty in right of Canada or in its own name.

International arrangements

(2) In exercising its responsibilities, the Agency may negotiate and enter into arrangements for the implementation of technical requirements for the international movement of products or other things regulated under an Act or provision that the Agency enforces or administers by virtue of section 11.

Legal proceedings

15. Actions, suits or other legal proceedings in respect of any right or obligation acquired or incurred by the Agency, whether in its own name or in the name of Her Majesty in right of Canada, may be brought or taken by or against the Agency in the name of the Agency in any court that would have jurisdiction if the Agency were not an agent of Her Majesty.

Choice of service providers

16. Notwithstanding section 9 of the Department of Public Works and Government Services Act, the Agency may, with the approval of the Governor in Council given on the recommendation of the Treasury Board, procure goods and services, including legal services, from outside the public service of Canada.

Intellectual property

17. The Agency may license, sell or otherwise make available any patent, copyright, industrial design, trade-mark or other similar property right that is vested in Her Majesty in right of Canada under any Act or provision that the Agency enforces or administers by virtue of section 11.

Interim injunction

18. The Agency may apply to a judge of a court of competent jurisdiction for an interim injunction enjoining any person from contravening an Act or provision that the Agency enforces or administers by virtue of section 11, whether or not a prosecution has been instituted in respect of that contravention.

RECALL ORDERS

Recall order

19. (1) Where the Minister believes on reasonable grounds that a product regulated under an Act or provision that the Agency enforces or administers by virtue of section 11 poses a risk to public, animal or plant health, the Minister may, by notice served on any person selling, marketing or distributing the product, order that the product be recalled or sent to a place designated by the Minister.

Contraven-
tion of recall order

(2) Any person who contravenes a recall order referred to in subsection (1) is guilty of an offence and liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding $50,000 or to a term of imprisonment not exceeding six months or to both.

Notification of order

(3) For greater certainty, a recall order is not a statutory instrument for the purposes of the Statutory Instruments Act, but no person shall be convicted of an offence under subsection (2) unless the person was notified of the order.

ESTABLISHMENT OF FEDERAL-PROVINCIAL CORPORATIONS

Federal-
provincial agreements

20. The Minister may, with the approval of the Governor in Council given on the recommendation of the Minister of Finance, enter into an agreement with one or more provincial governments for the provision of services or the carrying out of activities within the responsibilities of the Agency, in common with those governments.

Object of agreements

21. The agreement referred to in section 20 may authorize the Minister, jointly with one or more provincial governments, to have a corporation incorporated under the Canada Business Corporations Act, the Canada Corporations Act or an equivalent provincial statute, or to acquire shares or participate in any corporation, in order to implement the agreement.

CORPORATE BUSINESS PLAN AND ANNUAL REPORT

Corporate business plan

22. (1) As soon as possible after the Agency is established and at least once every five years after that, the Agency must submit a corporate business plan to the Minister for approval and the Minister must table a copy of the plan in each House of Parliament on any of the first fifteen days on which that House is sitting after the Minister approves the plan.

Contents of corporate business plan

(2) The corporate business plan must include a statement of

    (a) the Agency's objectives for the period to which the plan relates and for each year in that period;

    (b) the strategies that the Agency intends to use to achieve its objectives, including operational, financial and human resource strategies;

    (c) the Agency's expected performance over that period; and

    (d) the Agency's operating and capital budgets for each year of that period.

Updating of corporate business plan

(3) The Agency may update its corporate business plan in its annual report.

Annual report

23. (1) The President must, before September 30 of each year following the Agency's first full year of operations, submit an annual report on the operations of the Agency for the preceding year to the Minister and the Minister must table a copy of the report in each House of Parliament on any of the first fifteen days on which that House is sitting after the Minister receives the report.

Form and contents

(2) The annual report must include

    (a) the financial statements of the Agency and the Auditor General of Canada's opinion on them;

    (b) information about the Agency's performance with respect to the objectives established in the corporate business plan and a summary statement of the assessment by the Auditor General of Canada of the fairness and reliability of that information; and

    (c) any other information that the Minister or the Treasury Board may require to be included in it.