Bill C-35
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Inspection of Cargo |
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Notification
of Minister
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216. The master of a vessel shall notify the
Minister in the form and manner specified by
the Minister
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Boarding a
vessel
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217. On the request of an interested person,
the Minister may board a vessel at any
reasonable time for the purpose of inspecting
the condition and stowage of its cargo.
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Boarding a
vessel or
entering
premises
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218. On the request of an interested person,
the Minister may at any reasonable time board
a vessel or enter any premises or other place to
inspect any goods that the person claims were
damaged while they were a vessel's cargo.
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Powers and
restrictions
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219. Subsections 214(2) to (6) (inspections)
apply, with any modifications that the
circumstances require, to inspections carried
out under section 217 or 218.
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Minister may
adjudicate
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220. The Minister may, on the written
request of the interested parties, adjudicate
any dispute between them with respect to the
condition of a vessel's cargo. The Minister's
decision is binding on the parties.
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Clearance |
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No departure
without
clearance
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221. Subject to the regulations, no vessel
shall depart from a port in Canada unless
clearance has been granted.
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Granting
clearance
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222. The person who is authorized to grant
clearance of a vessel at a port in Canada is not
to grant it unless satisfied that the master has
all of the documents required under this Act
for the clearance.
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Voyage with a Person on Board without Their Consent |
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Prohibition
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223. No master shall proceed on a voyage
with a person on board who is exercising
powers or performing duties relating to the
administration or enforcement of a relevant
provision unless the person consents.
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Whistle-blowing |
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Reasonable
grounds
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224. (1) An individual who has reasonable
grounds to believe that a person or vessel has
contravened or intends to contravene a
relevant provision may notify the Minister of
the particulars of the matter and may request
that their identity be kept confidential with
respect to the notification.
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Confiden- tiality
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(2) The Minister must keep confidential the
identity of an individual who has notified the
Minister under subsection (1) and to whom the
Minister has provided an assurance of
confidentiality.
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Inspection
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225. (1) On being notified under subsection
224(1), the Minister is to determine whether
an inspection should be carried out by a
marine safety inspector.
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Costs
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(2) If a marine safety inspector determines
that the individual who notified the Minister
did not have reasonable grounds to believe
that a person or vessel had contravened or had
intended to contravene a relevant provision,
the individual is liable to pay the costs of the
inspection.
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Prohibition
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226. (1) No employer shall dismiss,
suspend, demote, discipline, harass or
otherwise disadvantage an employee, or deny
an employee a benefit of employment, by
reason that
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Saving
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(2) Nothing in this section impairs any right
of an employee either at law or under an
employment contract or collective agreement.
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Definitions
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(3) In this section, ``employee'' includes an
independent contractor and ``employer'' has a
corresponding meaning.
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Investigations |
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Investigations
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227. (1) The Minister may appoint any
person to investigate shipping casualties or an
alleged contravention of a relevant provision.
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Limitation
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(2) A person appointed under subsection (1)
may not make findings as to the causes and
contributing factors of shipping casualties that
have been or are being investigated by the
Canadian Transportation Accident
Investigation and Safety Board or that that
Board has informed the Minister they propose
to investigate.
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Search and
seizure
without
warrant
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228. (1) If the conditions for obtaining a
warrant under section 487 of the Criminal
Code exist in respect of the contravention of
a relevant provision but by reason of exigent
circumstances it would not be feasible to
obtain one, a marine safety inspector may
exercise the powers of search and seizure
provided in that section without a warrant.
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Living
quarters
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(2) A marine safety inspector may not
search living quarters without a warrant unless
the inspector first obtains the consent of the
occupant.
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Additional
powers
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(3) In the course of a search under
subsection (1) or section 487 of the Criminal
Code, a marine safety inspector has all the
powers referred to in subsection 214(4)
(inspections).
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Analysis and Examination |
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Submission
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229. (1) A marine safety inspector may
submit to a person designated by the Minister,
for analysis or examination, anything seized
or any sample taken under this Part.
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Certificate or
report
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(2) A person who has made an analysis or
examination may issue a certificate or report
that sets out the results of the analysis or
examination.
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Certificate
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(3) Subject to subsections (4) and (5), the
certificate or report is admissible in evidence
in any proceeding related to the contravention
of a relevant provision and, in the absence of
any evidence to the contrary, is proof of the
statements contained in the certificate or
report without proof of the signature or the
official character of the person appearing to
have signed it.
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Attendance of
analyst
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(4) The party against whom the certificate
or report is produced may, with leave of the
court, require for the purposes of
cross-examination the attendance of the
person who issued it.
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Notice
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(5) The certificate or report may be
admitted in evidence only if the party who
intends to produce it has given to the party
against whom it is intended to be produced
reasonable notice of that intention, together
with a copy of the certificate or report.
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Detention of Vessels |
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Optional
detention
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230. (1) If a marine safety inspector
believes on reasonable grounds that a
contravention of a relevant provision has been
committed by or in respect of a vessel or that
the vessel is not seaworthy, the inspector may
make a detention order in respect of the vessel.
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Mandatory
detention -
unsafe vessels
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(2) The inspector must make a detention
order if the contravention is a contravention of
section 109 (too many passengers) or the
inspector also believes on reasonable grounds
that the vessel is unsafe, that it is unfit to carry
passengers or crew members or that its
machinery or equipment is defective in any
way so as to expose persons on board to
serious danger.
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Mandatory
detention -
foreign
vessels
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(3) If an information has been laid, an
indictment has been preferred or a notice of
violation has been issued or an assurance of
compliance has been entered into under
section 237 in respect of a contravention of a
relevant provision that is alleged to have been
committed by or in respect of a foreign vessel,
a marine safety inspector shall make a
detention order in respect of the vessel.
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Order to be in
writing
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(4) A detention order made under this
section must be in writing and be addressed to
every person empowered to grant clearance in
respect of the vessel.
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Detention
order to be
served on
master
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(5) Notice of a detention order made under
this section in respect of a vessel must be
served on the master
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Contents of
notice
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(6) The notice must
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Foreign state
to be notified
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(7) If a vessel in respect of which a detention
order is made under this section is registered
in a foreign state, that state is to be notified that
the order was made.
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Rescission of
orders
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(8) A marine safety inspector must
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Duty of
persons
empowered to
give clearance
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(9) No person to whom a detention order
made under this section is addressed shall,
after notice of the order is received by them,
grant clearance to the vessel in respect of
which the order was made unless they have
been notified that the order has been rescinded
under subsection (8).
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Movement of
vessel
prohibited
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(10) Subject to section 232, no person shall
move a vessel that is subject to a detention
order made under this section.
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Liability for
expenses
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(11) The authorized representative of a
vessel that is detained under this section is
liable for all expenses incurred in respect of
the detained vessel.
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Return of
security
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(12) The Minister, after proceedings in
respect of which security was deposited are
concluded,
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Interference
with service
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231. No person shall interfere with the
service of a notice of a detention order.
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Direction to
move a
detained
vessel
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232. The Minister may
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Sale of Vessels |
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Distress on
vessel for
sums ordered
to be paid
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233. A court, justice of the peace or
provincial court judge that orders the
authorized representative of a vessel to pay
any fine, crew member's wages or other sum
of money may, if payment is not made in
accordance with the order, order the seizure
and sale of the vessel or its machinery or
equipment.
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Abandoned
vessels
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234. (1) The Minister may sell a vessel that
is deemed abandoned under the regulations
and may, by bill of sale, give the purchaser a
valid title to it free from any mortgage or other
claim on the vessel that exists at the time of the
sale.
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Vessel may be
seized and
sold if fine or
penalty not
paid
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(2) At any time after a fine is imposed under
a relevant provision against, or a certificate
registered under subsection 243(2)
(registration in Federal Court) in respect of, a
vessel or its authorized representative, the
Minister may, while the fine or debt remains
unpaid, seize the vessel and, after giving
notice to the authorized representative, sell it
and, by bill of sale, give the purchaser a valid
title to the vessel free from any mortgage or
other claim on the vessel that exists at the time
of the sale.
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Proceeds of
sale
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(3) Any surplus remaining from the
proceeds of a sale is to be distributed in
accordance with the regulations after
satisfying the following claims in the
following order:
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If proceeds
insufficient
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(4) If the proceeds of sale of a vessel are
insufficient to satisfy the claims described in
subsection (3), the Minister may proceed
against the authorized representative for the
balance owing.
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