:
I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 136 of the Standing Committee on Transport, Infrastructure and Communities.
Before we begin the meeting, I want to remind all in-person participants to read the best practices guidelines on the cards on the table. These measures are in place to protect the health and safety of all participants.
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted by the committee on Monday, September 18, 2023, the committee is resuming its study on regulation of recreational boating on Canada's waterways.
All witnesses have completed the required connection tests in advance of the meeting.
Colleagues, I'd now like to welcome our witnesses here with us today and joining us online.
We have Dr. Colin Rennie, professor, University of Ottawa, who is appearing as an individual. Welcome to you, sir.
We have Dr. Jesse Vermaire, associate professor, Carleton University, who is appearing as an individual. Welcome.
From Canadian Power and Sail Squadrons, we have John Gullick, manager, government and special programmes, by video conference. Welcome to you, sir.
[Translation]
We also have André Bélanger and Coralie Massey‑Cantin from the Fondation Rivières.
Welcome.
[English]
Finally, from MacDonald Turkey Point Marina, Inc., we have Brad Thomson, general manager, who is joining us by video conference. Welcome to you, sir.
We're going to begin with opening remarks today.
[Translation]
Ms. Massey‑Cantin or Mr. Bélanger, you have the floor for five minutes.
:
Thank you for inviting us to speak to the committee.
For over 20 years, the Fondation Rivières has been dedicated to protecting the natural aspect of rivers, water quality and access to riverbanks. We believe in encouraging the growth of the respectful use of waterways. The more people use waterways and love rivers, the more people will want to protect them.
We recently completed a consultation process for a sustainable cohabitation model on the Richelieu River. We think that this should give you food for thought. This process was carried out with Covabar, the watershed organization responsible for protecting the river. It brought together 20 municipalities; four regional county municipalities, or RCMs; tourism business associations; environmental organizations; user representatives; Canot Kayak Québec; and Nautisme Québec. Everyone was around the table.
We listed 71 public and private river access points. You won't be surprised to hear that 70% of them were reserved or designated for recreational boating. This makes sense, since the Richelieu River is a major waterway between Canada and the United States. For a long time, it was used exclusively or almost exclusively by pleasure boaters, who still monopolize the entire body of water. This is no longer the case. The consultation process brought to light the desire of residents and elected officials to develop access for other types of use. These uses include canoeing, kayaking, paddle boarding, swimming, scuba diving—a popular activity in the Richelieu River—and fishing.
This enthusiasm for outdoor activities reflects a major trend. It goes hand in hand with public concern for environmental protection. In addition to being a navigable waterway, the Richelieu River ranks second in Quebec, after the Ottawa River, when it comes to the number of fish species. It's a rich area for biodiversity.
The consultation process also revealed that, to protect the river, only 30 of its 240 kilometres would require regulations. We would need to protect about 30 kilometres in areas where usage conflicts arise. In some places, this would mean prohibiting certain forms of navigation, limiting speed or maintaining a healthy distance from the shoreline. We could also develop navigation corridors. For example, where necessary, we could have one area reserved for divers and another for swimmers.
In principle, these are simple solutions. As you can see, they don't amount to much. Make a navigation corridor, install buoys, and so on. This would resolve a variety of issues. In practice, the solution is bound to be complicated. The current regulatory process is flawed, complex, outdated and needlessly cumbersome.
Transport Canada's premise is that education will resolve usage conflicts. That isn't true. Conflicts arise because certain uses aren't compatible. We need to set up protected areas for swimmers and areas where paddle boarders won't be knocked over by excessive waves or grazed by motorboats. We need to have the right use in the right place. That's the first premise.
The second premise is that usage conflicts don't arise with people of good will, but with offenders, meaning the people who don't want to listen to reason, who believe that the body of water belongs to them and who don't listen to recommendations.
We can talk about dialogue or education, but we can't educate people who don't want to be educated. Yet Transport Canada's whole approach to education is based on the premise that, if we educate, it will work. When we completed the consultation process concerning the Richelieu River, we found that a consensus emerged in favour of some type of regulations in certain areas. Unfortunately, we'll need to start the education process all over again. We'll do it because we have to. However, it's pointless and it bogs down the decision‑making process.
Moreover, the regulations don't provide the flexibility needed to find solutions adapted to the area's support capacity and to community aspirations. The solution lies in striking the right balance among multiple parameters, such as speed, number of boats, type of boat and permitted areas. However, this doesn't take environmental criteria into account at all. It doesn't protect the health of bodies of water.
In an attachment to our brief, which will be sent to the committee, we provided a short literature review outlining the potential impact of unregulated navigation on turbidity, or water clarity, on shoreline erosion and on the destruction of endemic aquatic grass beds.
To put it simply, grass beds are like aquatic grasslands populated with fragile and rare plants. When they are crushed by boat propellers, these plants take a long time to grow back. In some cases, they just don't grow back.
Other witnesses have spoken at length about the problem of wake boats. The science is clear on this. Wake boats produce a water column that is five to seven metres deep. This water column whips up sediment and destroys aquatic life. Waves made by ships that travel less than 300 metres from the shoreline accelerate erosion significantly. We did a simulation, and on the Richelieu River, there are very few places that are less than five metres deep.
We also consulted marina owners, and they were all in favour of regulations that would be reasonable, nuanced and adapted to the realities of the environment. Education alone does not create a sustainable model for co‑operation.
We have two recommendations for Transport Canada: deploy national navigation standards in partnership with Environment and Climate Change Canada, and adapt the process to take environmental considerations into account.
Now that we know about the problems caused by wake boats, what are we waiting for to set standards?
:
Thank you to the committee for this opportunity to speak to you today.
At the outset, I want to note that I did speak to this committee a couple of years ago, as some of you may remember, on the topic of the impact of commercial shipping on shoreline erosion. At that time, I summarized a study on the St. Lawrence River that I was conducting. I reviewed the physics of large-ship wake waves in narrow channels, new measurement technologies, nature-based shoreline protection strategies and current research needs. Here, in collaboration with my colleague Professor Jesse Vermaire from Carleton, I'll discuss wakes produced by pleasure craft.
The likelihood of a boat wake contributing to bank erosion depends on the power of the waves; the water surface elevation with respect to the bank; and bank characteristics that determine bank stability, such as bank angle, sediment grain size, cohesion, consolidation, pore pressure and vegetation. It's not only large ships that may induce shoreline erosion; smaller pleasure craft can also generate relatively large waves. Wake boats, as an example, are specifically designed with a deep draft to induce a large wake for recreational purposes, such as water-skiing.
While pleasure craft are generally too small to generate a large primary drawdown wave, which is what I discussed on the St. Lawrence, the subsequent V-shaped Kelvin wake wave can be large enough to erode shoreline bank sediments. This has been documented in some previous studies. For example, as reference, Bauer et al., 2002, estimated erosion rates of between 0.01 millimetres and 0.22 millimetres per boat passage. That's a small amount per passage, but the cumulative effects of thousands of passages could be substantial.
We believe there is a need to identify where zero-wake zones and speed limits are required to reduce shoreline erosion and ecological impacts associated with recreational watercraft use.
Pleasure craft boat wake has been implicated as a possible contributor to shoreline erosion on the Rideau Canal waterway. As part of a larger NSERC-funded study in collaboration with Parks Canada, we've been working on measuring boat wake waves and turbidity associated with various pleasure craft in the Rideau River. We have a study site near Eccolands Park, just south of Ottawa.
The experimental design involves running various individual boats at set speeds and distances back and forth past an eroding river shoreline cutbank. I will focus here on three boat types—an 18-foot bass boat, a 22-foot wake boat and a 29-foot small cruiser, as you would typically see on the Rideau. The boat speeds we used were slow, medium and fast for each type of boat. The distances from shore were 30 metres, 60 metres and 100 metres.
We collected various data with several instruments, but here I'll focus on water level and turbidity collected with an RBRduo instrument at 2 hertz. We placed this instrument six metres from shore to measure the waves and the turbidity. I also took repeat measurements of the bank over a couple of years using a survey-grade GPS to monitor recession of the bank.
As each boat passed and the wake wave train impacted the riverbank, sediments were entrained, resulting in increased turbidity. We processed the water level data to extract what's called the “significant wave height”, which is the average of the top one-third of the waves in the wake train. We also processed the turbidity to see how much the increment in turbidity was during that passage of the boat.
We have a number of preliminary observations.
First, wake waves from pleasure craft dissipate as they propagate. Thus, waves impacting the riverbank are larger if generated near the shore than if generated farther from shore. This is even on a small waterway like the Rideau. We could see a difference based on how far away the boat was.
Each boat produced a maximum significant wave height when run at medium speed. This is because at medium speed, the boat is not planing, and thus pushes more water and displaces more water. For the three boats that I'm talking about here, the medium speed was on the order of 20 kilometres per hour.
Maximum significant wave heights produced by the small cruiser and the wake boat were similar, on the order of 15 centimetres. This was larger than those produced by the bass boat, which was on the order five centimetres.
The turbidity increment increased almost linearly with the significant wave height, which suggests that shoreline erosion will be a function of wave height.
Lastly, I did measure a recession of the bank over a year's time. It was 10 centimetres at the bank top and about half a metre at the bank bottom, suggesting that the bank is getting steeper over time.
Thank you.
:
Thank you for inviting me and allowing me to present at this committee.
I'm an associate professor of environmental science and geography at Carleton University. I have expertise in aquatic ecosystems, near-shore environments and how human activities can change near-shore environments.
As stated by my colleague Professor Colin Rennie, we've been collaborating on a research project. Colin discussed the experimental work we've been doing. Today I'll talk about some observational work on boat passes on the Rideau River that we've also just done. This is part of a larger NSERC-funded project.
In the summer of 2023, we carried out observations on boat passes at two sites on the Rideau River. The first was the W.A. Taylor conservation area at 3250 River Road in Ottawa, and the second was at Eccolands Park, again on River Road. Both sites are popular for boating because they have marinas or public boat launches that are available and free to use.
All of our observations on boat passes were made during the day—typically between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.—and in weather considered good for boating. We weren't out when it was a rainy day, for example. That's what these observations were based on.
Our first observation, based on access to information data, was that recreational boating is very popular in Ontario. This is data from during the pandemic. On average, 18,400 new pleasure craft licences have been issued each year in Ontario from 2019 onward.
On the Rideau waterway, as is likely elsewhere, the number of recreational boat passes per hour was very site-specific and depended greatly on the weather and the day of the week—whether it was a weekend or a holiday, for example.
The Rideau system is popular for travelling longer distances. However, with the exception of cabin cruisers, most boats stayed within one section of the river and didn't transit the lock stations. Over 57 hours, we observed 838 boat passes. That's approximately 15 boat passes per hour, on average. Boat passes reached a maximum of 72 per hour during the August civic holiday long weekend. That also coincided with a fishing tournament near the site.
The most common boat types we observed were personal watercraft. Smaller motorboats were 21% of all boat passes, followed by fishing boats, such as small aluminum boats, at 18%. Cabin cruisers and yachts made up 14% of all boat passes. Bowriders and decked boats were 13%, and pontoon boats were 8.5%. Water sport boats as a combined category—water-skiing, wakeboarding or wakesurfing boats—accounted for 13.5% of all boat passes. Wakesurfing boats were fairly rare, accounting for only 2% of all boat passes we observed.
We also noted that no water sport activities were observed in posted no-wake zones on the canal at our sites close to marinas, suggesting that recreational boaters are respecting the posted no-wake zones near marinas.
Similar to the experimental work Colin mentioned, our observational study shows that cabin cruisers and wakesurfing boats produced the greatest wave heights on the Rideau Canal. The purpose of this observational work was to compare experimental work with the real-world situation of how boats are passing through and using the canal.
We're also currently investigating how recreational boating is influencing the underwater soundscape. Because I'm also an ecologist, I'm interested in that. There's very little data on that for fresh water. While we need to collect more data and analyze it, it's very clear that recreational boating is the dominant anthropogenic noise in the underwater soundscape in the Rideau waterway.
Thank you.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and members of the committee.
My name is Brad Thomson. I'm the general manager of MacDonald Turkey Point Marina. I've been in the boating industry for 34 years full time, after eight years of part-time work, starting at age 11.
I'm here today regarding funding cuts to CanBoat's flare disposal program. CanBoat was formerly called the Canadian Power Squadron.
The disposal of expired flares is a very concerning public safety issue. MacDonald Turkey Point Marina alone has sold 438 flares this year, and we currently have over 500 expired flares in our possession. Customers bring these flares into our store or leave them at our door, and we've even found them in and around our garbage containers.
Expired flares are hazardous goods that require special handling and disposal services. Not only are these expired flares a safety risk to our marina staff and the disposal service we use, but they're also an extreme hazard to the environment, including lakes, landfills and wildlife.
Federal regulations require boaters to carry Transport Canada-approved flares on their boats. The flares are valid for four years from the date of manufacture that's indicated on the flares. Considering the number of recreational boats across our country, the result is an extremely large quantity of expiring flares on a regular basis, with no cost-effective or regulated way to dispose of them.
On November 9, 2021, the Transport Canada policy of acceptance of electronic visual distress signals in lieu of pyrotechnic distress signals on pleasure craft came into force. I'm uncertain how many boaters are aware of electronic signals as an alternative to flares, because Transport Canada's “Safe Boating Guide” is dated July 2019, so it's almost five years old. That's over two years before the policy came into effect.
On behalf of the boaters and marine operators of Canada, we would like to see federal funding reinstated to CanBoat for its flare disposal problem and also see Transport Canada update its safe boating guidelines, both online and in print, to advise boaters of the use of alternative electronic signals.
I'm also here today representing MacDonald Turkey Point Marina regarding Transport Canada and the Canadian Navigable Waters Act, which has impacted our rights to control the waterways within the marina.
MacDonald Turkey Point Marina has been under current ownership since January 31, 2005, with the marina itself dating back to the 1950s. It was through the hard work of man and machine in the 1950s that the waterways were dug out to create the marina. MacDonald Turkey Point Marina owns the bed of the waterways within the marina, as indicated in the following quotes taken from a Transport Canada letter dated February 6, 2020:
The letter provides the official position of Transport Canada and supersedes all previous correspondence....
The Government of Canada does not own the bed of the channels that form part of the Turkey Point Marina.
The Canadian Navigable Waters Act applies to the channels within the property known as the Turkey Point Marina.
The Canadian Navigable Waters Act prevents the marina from having any control over its waterway. As a result of the Transport Canada letter, the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, in a letter dated March 4, 2024, has taken the following position, as quoted from that letter:
The Ministry is of the opinion that Turkey Point Marina may not restrict the public's right to fish in navigable waters, regardless of the ownership of the bed....
Fishermen impede navigation in our channel rather than promote it. They can be a hindrance and a danger to navigation within our waterways. On any given Saturday or Sunday during the summer, we can have upwards of 1,200 boats within our busy waterways.
We also have an issue with troublesome former customers who have “no trespassing” orders issued against them to stay off the marina property. With right of access to our waterways, they can still disturb our customers.
It's nearly impossible to enforce these orders through local conservation officers and the Ontario Provincial Police due to the waterway access. MacDonald Turkey Point Marina would like Transport Canada to review the marina's control over its waterways.
Our industry is also dealing with the burden of the luxury tax that has cost our industry millions due to reduction in boat sales, job losses and business closures. Also, considering the volume of gas we sell at the marina gas bar, the carbon tax is an additional expense to our customers.
On behalf of all our customers and all those in the industry, we are asking that the government reconsider these taxes.
Thank you for you time and attention to these details.
:
I'll try not to repeat Brad's comments too much about flare disposal, but hat's really what I'm here to talk about.
We are requesting that Transport Canada please provide funding for the safety education and flare disposal program to Canadian Power and Sail Squadrons, which was previously administered through CPS-ECP and is now called CanBoat/NautiSavoir across Canada in both official languages. There is no other Canada-wide program, and there are only a few local disposal options left.
As members of the boating industry, we are keenly aware of how many boaters are carrying both the pyrotechnic distress flares required by Transport Canada regulations as well as older flares that are now expired and potentially dangerous.
Pyrotechnic distress flares require proper disposal. In recent years, many disposal options through municipal waste management and other government agencies, like police and fire departments, have now been discontinued. Many people do not know how to dispose of their expired flares and therefore do so inappropriately.
The Transport Canada-funded Canadian Power and Sail Squadron's CanBoat distress flare collection and disposal program has been very successful. It was national in scope, in both English and French, and has collected over 200,000 of any brand of flare that boaters brought to a CPS-ECP CanBoat flare disposal event. Those events have been taking place since 2000. They were staffed by trained CanBoat volunteers and operated in concert with CIL Orion Explosives, which properly handles the actual disposal and funds 40% of the cost of that disposal.
Funding of these events under the boating safety contribution program was not renewed after 2022. Just FYI, the cost of disposing of an average recreational flare is about $2.50, and then shipping will add another $1.00 to $1.50 to that amount, so you can see how much it actually costs to dispose of these things.
We know that it's dangerous for municipal workers to find these discarded in household garbage. Environmentally, it's very dangerous, as well as illegal, for individuals to fire off flares unless there is a legitimate emergency. You can understand the environmental effect because, these flares, when they start to weep.... I mean, what you're talking about is an explosive, plain and simple. We had instances, which have been reported, in which workers actually had flares go off in their hands.
Again, for the sake of the safety of Canadian boaters nationwide, we ask that you please provide the funding to Canadian Power and Sail Squadrons—CanBoat/NautiSavoir—for this unique program. I say this respectfully as John Gullick.
:
For the boating industry, the Canadian Navigable Waters Act directly affects private enterprise. We're a private marina here. It's not like it's the middle of the lake. We try to do our best to control what goes on in here, and sometimes we have people here who do not want to act with respect. There are sometimes 2,000 or 3,000 people in here on a Saturday or Sunday afternoon. They come in with a high rate of speed and create a large wake that can damage property, but also they'll stop and fish in the middle of the channel or play their music right around dinner time when people are trying to enjoy dinner with their family.
Unfortunately, at this time, in the way the Canadian Navigable Waters Act is read and the way that some of the other agencies, such as the Ministry of Natural Resources, are interpreting it, these people are allowed to stop and anchor right in our waterway. We don't have an entrance and an exit; we have one entrance, and the exit is the same here at MacDonald Turkey Point Marina, so it makes it very difficult to have any kind of control in our waterway.
It's no different here in Long Point Bay from any of the marshes and hunting clubs along the north shore of Lake Erie. They're all posted as no trespassing, but now everybody can go in there and fish, whereas previously they were capable of keeping folks out.
:
Thank you, Mr. Bélanger. We'll come back to that later, if we can. You've opened doors to other interesting topics.
Mr. Rennie, thank you for your presentation. It's always a pleasure to welcome university representatives, because academics base their views on science and evidence. You mentioned something very new today. We've never heard of it.
Criteria were mentioned, such as the 30 kilometre-per-hour speed limit and the requirement to stay no closer than 300 metres from shore. We also talked about the waves caused by boats with strong wakes and big boats.
From your side, you talked about the harmful effects that the accumulation of small waves on a large scale can have. This is a new argument for us.
Can you tell us more about it? How are small waves measured, and why did you conclude that their accumulation could cause environmental damage?
I thank the witnesses for being here today.
I will now turn to the representatives of the Fondation Rivières.
This is our third meeting on this study. We've had the opportunity to discuss the regulatory process on several occasions. Many people have told us that large-wake boats, in particular, are a major source of irritation. However, I'd like to raise another point.
In Quebec, trucks are not allowed on all roads, nor are scooters, whether municipal roads or highways. Drivers also know that school zone regulations and speed limits must be respected. So there are rules in place. This is not the case for boaters on a river or lake. There are no rules, unless you take steps locally.
Does this situation seem normal to you?
What would be the solution to remedy this shortcoming?
Thank you to the IT folks for the view of the room there.
Thanks to all of our witnesses for joining us for this study. It's a really interesting one.
I was remarking at one of our last meetings about how different the context is across Canada. We're talking about recreational boating and its impact on aquatic environments, and a lot of that seems to be a result of high density of use. There are many parts of northern Canada where the density of use by recreational boaters is exceptionally low, so I would assume that the impacts are consequently low as well.
Listening to Dr. Rennie's and Dr. Vermaire's testimonies, it sounds like there's really a proven link between intensive use by pleasure craft and these impacts on shorelines and on the aquatic environment.
In your view, is the extent of the impacts worth a concerted federal approach to regulating recreational boating to minimize those impacts?
That's part of the problem, because there is no way of funding the collection and disposal of flares as you have suggested doing through having a deposit or whatever.
There's also the cost to the marinas and the chandleries. They have to have bunkers to store these flares while they're waiting to ship them off to one of the manufacturers for disposal. There's a cost there as well. It's very difficult to get people to even think about that, let alone really do something about it.
We introduced this program in 2014—by “we”, I mean Canadian Power and Sail Squadrons, CanBoat—because there was a growing need to be able to dispose of these flares. We got funding for that program over eight years from the boating safety contribution program, but that funding stopped last year. Even though we applied, we were not accepted.
My understanding is that this year we reapplied for next year and the two years following, and that the program had been put on hold—
The majority of my questions will be for Mr. Gullick and Mr. Thomson.
I'll start with you, Mr. Thomson.
We've heard a lot of talk about the luxury tax, but actually, in a lot of our testimony, it should really be renamed the “union workers and small business tax”. It's had a tremendous impact on the workers who construct these boats and a tremendous impact on those individuals who are involved in the tourist industry.
Would you agree with my analysis and, quite frankly, with the testimony of other witnesses?
:
Yes, I would agree with that.
It hasn't affected the rich, as far as we can see. The main concern here is that it affected the middle class, the workingman of Canada, the working men and ladies. Some of the pontoon boats we're seeing now are over $250,000. Basically, that's just a recreational Saturday or Sunday afternoon boat. It's not something that they're going to take on a two-week vacation cruise.
For these folks who were selling the boats at the dealerships and renting the docks—like me—at the marinas, right down to the grass cutters and the boat detailers, there have been jobs lost and businesses closed, and sales of larger yachts have been going down south. It has been a burden on the industry. I just hope that there is some sort of resolution and that everybody can chime in here and something can be done to help everyone out. Let's get things rolling and moving in a positive way. Let's get the economy going. Let's sell some boats. Let's keep some people employed.
Mr. Gullick, I have a few questions for you.
You've said a few times that the Canadian government should do more, especially after imposing this luxury tax. If you were to buy a boat, I guess you would understand that there's money to be disbursed. On average, anybody who buys something....
If I were to buy a Ferrari and I was planning to take it out, after a year I would have to do an oil change or I would have to change the brakes, and I wouldn't expect to pay 50 bucks or 100 bucks to get an oil change; I would expect to pay close to thousands. It's expected of me to understand that if I have a luxury item, I need to have a luxury life and money that I am able to spend. Do you agree with me?
Mr. Rennie, thank you for being with us again at the committee. I very much enjoyed the testimony you gave at your last appearance.
As I understand it, you conducted tests on the Rideau River, in the Ottawa area.
You mentioned that high-wake boats and pleasure cruisers would be the two main types of craft that would cause the biggest waves.
How can you compare waves produced by a small boat to those produced by a boat with a strong wake or a pleasure cruiser? What would a ratio of 1:10 or 1:100 mean?
What data are quantified? Have you done this exercise?
I'll pick up where I left off in talking about the flares, because it seems like the kind of problem that should be easily solvable.
Here you have a product that you don't want to see ending up in trash cans or on the beach at marinas. What we need is some leadership, and we need some sort of program to ensure that these are disposed of properly. When you buy tires, you pay an eco fee on top of the cost of the tires, which allows you to take those tires back to registered facilities, which are compensated for the task of collecting those tires and disposing of them properly.
To both of our witnesses who spoke on this topic, would you support moving toward such a system, which would require regulation but wouldn't necessarily require a subsidy through taxation of the non-boating public? It could be financed by the users of the products.
Is that something you'd support?
:
I would say yes. It's something that we've talked about at the Standing Committee on Recreational Boating at Transport Canada for a number of years, but I think an intervention by the government is required to make that happen.
However, in the meantime, we've still got this program, and even if you were to introduce a fee that goes along with the flares that are sold today, what about the flares that have been sold over the last 50 years? We've been collecting flares that quite literally have come from the World War II era, and there's no fund to pay for those.
If you're going to do something, I would applaud, but I think that while the introduction of a service fee comes into place, there needs to be a balance against an effort like ours, which will actually collect any flares from any boater coast to coast to coast, regardless of their age and type.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair. I'm going to direct my questions to Mr. Thomson.
Mr. Thomson, first of all, I want to say thank you and congratulations. I know how your marina operates. Greetings from down at Sugarloaf Marina harbour down in Port Colborne. A lot of people are coming along Lake Erie because of people like you and the operation you have, as well as the other operations along the north shore of Lake Erie. Thank you for that.
My questioning is going to go more toward Mr. Thomson and what we can do for you. Of course, “we” means the federal government, but also in partnership with the province and the municipal government. I'm also the co-chair of the Great Lakes task force, so a few of my questions are going to be relative to the environment, which I'm going to start off with.
On the environmental footprint, the environmental impact that you have on the lake, does the marina take any measures to protect Lake Erie's water quality? Are there any green initiatives planned for the marina?
Finally, with respect to the environmental aspect, is there any marine life protection as it relates to the wildlife and fish habitats in your specific area?
:
My final question is for you, Mr. Thomson, and it's a recommendation to you.
One of the reasons we put in place, for example, the luxury tax, the carbon tax and things like that is that we reinvest those dollars into different services, whether they be offsetting property taxes, water bills from the infrastructure side or other services both municipal and personal, but I don't want to get into that.
What I'm most interested in is where some of that help can be placed on you as a marine operation—or anybody, for that matter—so that some of those dollars can be contributing to you as well as municipalities and Canadians.
I'll ask that you pass that on to us. That would be wonderful.
We deal with a lot of interesting dynamics between the recreational fishery, the indigenous fishery and the commercial fishery, and the lack of infrastructure that our communities received. All these big factors are at play on the Fraser River now, and unfortunately we haven't received any infrastructure money to protect our waterways post flood, especially our critical salmon habitats, but I guess that will have to wait for another time.
I have one final question for you as we wrap up.
Those in the middle class and those working hard to join it, as we heard earlier, are very concerned about the carbon tax. Has the carbon tax impacted the number of boats on the Ottawa River and soil turbidity?
:
I think my time is almost up.
I'm told I have 20 seconds left.
[English]
Okay, I have enough time for another question.
[Translation]
You talked about the diversity of boat types on bodies of water, for example personal watercraft, fishing boats and other boat types that often have to cohabit.
How would you describe the cohabitation that exists between all boaters, in your case? The other witnesses mostly came to talk about small bodies of water, which are more reserved for pleasure craft.
Do you think that separate corridors should be set up for each category of craft, or have you found instead that there is good cohabitation?
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thanks again to our witnesses for engaging with us on these topics.
We've heard from witnesses who are primarily concerned about the impact of recreational boating on the aquatic ecosystem, shorelines and that sort of thing. We've also heard from people from the recreational boating community who are concerned about several topics, including flares, which we heard about today. We've heard about the cost of boating. We've heard about infrastructure needs and those sorts of things.
My question for Mr. Thomson and Mr. Gullick is what they make of the concerns about the impact of recreational boating on shorelines and the aquatic environment, and the idea of improving the regulation of recreational boating to minimize those impacts.
The question isn't whether there's an impact occurring; obviously, on lakes and rivers, where there's high boat traffic, there will be impacts. It's really about how you govern recreational boating effectively. What order of government is best positioned to provide regulation and enforcement, and what does that look like?
Is it embraced by the recreational boating community? I imagine some recreational boaters are travelling an hour or two for recreation on a lake or a river, and their view of the situation is probably quite different from someone who lives on the bank of that river or the shore of that lake and who boats in the local vicinity and experiences the impacts in a different way.
What do you make of this whole conversation around environmental impacts from recreational boating?
:
There's no question that there's shoreline erosion.
On impacts of recreational boating, I think the most important things that need to be looked at are speed zones and no-wake zones. We struggle with that right here at the MacDonald Turkey Point Marina. I have four-by-eight sheets of plywood that say, “No wake, no throttle.” I have probably eight of them around the facility.
Mother Nature is another problem, though. With shoreline erosion, the biggest problem is that the shoreline has to be protected, whether it's through armour stone in environmental ways or through other ways of doing it. Mother Nature and some big storms cause more destruction at this marina than any boat going up and down the channel or in our facility. I see it all the time.
Shoreline protection is definitely a big thing, and that would obviously come from the federal and provincial governments stepping in.