Revocation of a Statutory Instrument

For the first 15 years of its existence, the Committee had statutory power to scrutinize delegated legislation, but no power to revoke a subordinate law. The Special Committee on Statutory Instruments did not propose a general disallowance procedure,49 and no such procedure was provided for in the Statutory Instruments Act. As a result, the Committee’s requests to government departments and other authorities to amend or revoke regulations which it felt were ultra vires (beyond legal authority) often produced little or no results. The only recourse the Committee had to discuss these regulations publicly was to present reports to the House and move a motion for concurrence in them.50

In 1985, the Committee approached the Special Committee on the Reform of the House of Commons with recommendations regarding the disallowance of statutory instruments.51 The Committee proposed, among other matters, that all subordinate legislation not subject to a statutory affirmative procedure could be the focus of a disallowance resolution from either House, and that the executive be barred from remaking any statutory instrument so disallowed for a period of six months from its disallowance. Subsequently, in its Third Report to the House, the Special Committee recommended that “the House of Commons adopt a mandatory procedure for affirming or disallowing delegated legislation and regulations made pursuant to an act of Parliament”.52 In its response to the recommendation, the government proposed an alternative, the power to revoke by order of the House.53 This was agreed to by the House in 1986 by means of amendments to the Standing Orders.54 The government then made a policy commitment to “consider itself bound by any such report of the Committee” and would therefore follow through with the revocation.55

The decision to make the disallowance procedure subject to an order of the House of Commons had two important consequences. The first was that the Senate had no say in the matter, and the second was that it applied only to statutory instruments made by the Governor in Council or by a Minister of the Crown. This was because the procedure relied on resolutions and orders, which are not by their nature binding on those outside the House.56 Regulations made by bodies with regulatory authority delegated by Parliament (such as the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, the National Energy Board, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Canadian Transportation Agency and the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission) were therefore not subject to disallowance.

The Standing Orders continued in effect, except for some minor wording changes,57 until 2003. In June 2003, Bill C-205, An Act to amend the Statutory Instruments Act (disallowance procedure for regulations) received Royal Assent.58 The Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs recommended changes to the Standing Orders to reflect the requirements of the Bill, which were adopted on November 5, 2003.59

The changes to the Statutory Instruments Act contained in Bill C-205 remedied the shortcomings identified in 1986 by the Standing Joint Committee for the Scrutiny of Regulations. It provided for a disallowance procedure that applied in both the House and the Senate60 and made all regulations, not just those made by the Governor in Council or by Ministers of the Crown, subject to disallowance. The changes to the Statutory Instruments Act give the regulation-making authority 30 days to repeal a disallowed regulation. There is now a statutory obligation imposed on the regulation maker to act on the recommendations, if adopted by both Houses.61

Report of the Committee

Should the Committee conclude that a regulation or some other statutory instrument is not in keeping with the intentions of an act as passed by Parliament, it may present a report to the House on the matter. Such a report is in a standardized format and must contain a resolution that all or any portion of the regulation be revoked.62 Naturally, the resolution must affect a regulation under the government’s authority.63 One report is needed for each regulation that the Committee is seeking to revoke by order of the House, but only one such report may be presented to the House in any given sitting of the House.64 Furthermore, at least 30 days prior to adopting the report in the Committee, the Committee (in practice, the Joint Chair) is required to inform both the Minister and the agency concerned that it intends to consider the report.65

When this kind of report is presented, the Member (normally the Joint Chair) presenting it must first indicate that the report contains a resolution. The Member then identifies the regulation or portion thereof for which revocation is being sought and indicates that the relevant text is included in the report. Finally, the Member indicates that the notification requirements have been met.66

Once such a report has been presented to the House, the Clerk of the House places the resolution on the Notice Paper, in the name of the Member who has presented the report, whether that Member is the Joint Chair of the Committee or not. The Standing Orders prohibit any notice of motion for concurrence in the report itself from being placed on the Notice Paper.67

Concurrence in the Resolution

The November 2003 amendments enabled the Standing Joint Committee to present a report to the House containing only a resolution that all or any portion of a regulation be revoked. The resolution itself (not a motion for concurrence in the Committee report) is placed on the Notice Paper and is deemed adopted, unless a Minister gives notice of a motion to the effect that the resolution not be adopted. If such notice is given, a specific debate will take place, under the terms enumerated in Standing Orders 126, 127 and 128.68

Automatic Adoption

If, on the 15th sitting day after the report was first presented to the House,69 no motion standing in the name of a Minister seeking that the resolution not be adopted has appeared on the Order Paper, the resolution is deemed to have been moved and adopted, at the ordinary hour of daily adjournment, and the authority authorized to make the regulation (usually the Governor in Council) must revoke the offending regulation within 30 days following the adoption of the resolution.70 If the House adjourns prior to the ordinary hour of daily adjournment on that 15th sitting day, the resolution is still deemed adopted.71

Consideration of the Motion to the Effect that the Resolution Not Be Adopted

If requested by a Minister, the motion to the effect that the resolution not be adopted is set down for consideration. The request must be made in writing at least 48 hours prior to the 15th sitting day after the report is presented to the House.72 Once this requirement has been met, notice of the debate is immediately placed on the Order Paper.73 The motion is automatically slated for consideration at 1:00 p.m. on the first Wednesday following the expiry of the 48-hour written notice for consideration.74

Although only one report may be presented in a sitting and only one motion to the effect that the resolution contained in the report not be adopted may be placed on the Order Paper, the presentation of several reports on successive days can result in more than one non-concurrence motion being considered on the same Wednesday. The sequence for consideration is determined by a Minister of the Crown and all motions are grouped for debate but voted on seriatim.75

Whether one or several such motions to the effect that a resolution not be adopted are called on a particular Wednesday, only one hour, between 1:00 p.m. and 2:00 p.m., is made available for their consideration, and they are the only items of business that can be taken up.76 Members participating in the debate may speak only once and for a maximum of 10 minutes,77 and there is no question-and-comment period following these 10-minute speeches.78 Points of order on the procedural admissibility of any Standing Joint Committee report may be raised only after the Speaker has proposed all motions to the House. If a report is thereafter found to be irreceivable, both the resolution based on the report and the corresponding notice of motion are deemed withdrawn.79

Unless the motion or motions have been disposed of before 2:00 p.m. the Speaker is obliged to interrupt the proceedings and put all questions necessary to dispose of the motions before the House.80 If requested, recorded divisions are automatically deferred until the ordinary hour of daily adjournment, at which time the bells sound for no longer than 15 minutes.81 The Standing Orders related to the ordinary hour of daily adjournment are suspended until all questions have been decided.82 When deliberations on a motion or motions for non-concurrence are completed before 2:00 p.m., the Speaker suspends the sitting until that time.83

If the motion moved by the Minister is adopted by the House (that is, if the House agrees with the Minister that the regulation or portion thereof should not be revoked), the resolution is deemed withdrawn from the Order Paper. If, however, the motion moved by the Minister is defeated (that is, if the House agrees with the Committee that the regulation or portion thereof should be revoked), the resolution is deemed to have been moved and adopted by the House.84 The resolution no longer stands on the Order Paper and the authority that is authorized to make the regulation (usually the Governor in Council) must revoke the offending regulation within 30 days of the adoption of the resolution.

The provisions of the Standing Orders relating to revocation have rarely been invoked, either before or after the change in rules that took place in November 2003. From the adoption of the original text in 1986 to June 2017, only 11 reports of the Standing Joint Committee have recommended revocation.85 A debate took place in three instances only, which resulted, in every case, in the report being referred back to the Committee for further consideration.86

The House, and more particularly, members of the Standing Joint Committee, have continued, however, to monitor and suggest improvements respecting the study of delegated legislation.87