Date: 20071204
Docket: T-452-06
Citation: 2007 FC 1267
Ottawa (Ontario), December 4, 2007
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Simon Noël
BETWEEN:
LES AMIS DE LA RIVIÈRE KIPAWA,
incorporated as 1162209036 QUEBEC INC.
Applicant
and
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
and
THE MINISTER OF PUBLIC WORKS AND
GOVERNMENT SERVICES CANADA,
THE MINISTER OF FISHERIES AND OCEANS, THE
MINISTER OF TRANSPORT and DAVID S. LAFLAMME CONSTRUCTION INC.
Respondents
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
I. Introduction
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review of the Canadian Environmental Assessment
(the Decision), of the Laniel Dam Rehabilitation (the Project), rendered
jointly on February 9, 2006, by the Ministers of Fisheries and Oceans Canada
(FOC), Public Works and Government Services Canada (PWGSC) and Transport Canada
(TC), pursuant to subsection 20(1) of the Canadian Environmental Assessment
Act (the ‘CEAA’) S.C. 1992, c. 37 and the related decisions
respectively rendered by TC pursuant to subsections 5(1) and 6(4) of the Navigable
Waters Protection Act R.S.C. 1985, c. N-22 and by DOF under subsection
35(2) of the Fisheries Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-14.
The Parties
[2]
Standing
is not an issue in this case.
[3]
The
parties agree that it is the alleged actions of PWGSC and TC that form the basis
of this application for judicial review. As such, the authority or action of
FOC is not engaged. For similar reasons and with agreement of all parties and
the Court, Counsel for the respondent David S. Laflamme Construction Inc., the
successful bidder to carryout the Project did not make written or oral representations
when the matter was heard in Ottawa on October 23 and 24, 2007.
[4]
The
involvement of the other Respondents merits explanation. First, PWGSC is involved
because it is the proponent of the project. A proponent is defined in section 2
of the CEAA to mean among other things, “the federal authority or
government that proposes the project.” As the proponent, PWGSC would act as the
federal environmental assessment (EA) coordinator for the project. PWGSC was
also responsible for ensuring that there is safe navigation near the dam and that
the proposed improvements to the portage trail, which is to serve as an
alternative access option during the period of construction would meet the requirements
of the NWPA. Finally, PWGSC was responsible for posting signage and
security barriers restricting access to the dam.
[5]
TC,
the second Respondent implicated in this application became involved because of
the possible impact of the project on the navigation in the river. Following
the EA decision of February 9, 2006, TC granted approval the very next day, for
the rehabilitation of the Laniel Dam, pursuant to paragraph 5(1)(a) of the NWPA.
[6]
For
its part, the Applicant, Les Amis de la Rivière Kipawa (“Les Amis”) is a
registered not-for-profit organization founded on June 22, 1998, in response to
the now dormant Hydro-Quebec Tabaret diversion project. Over the years, this
volunteer-run organization has grown to be a stakeholder in the protection and
promotion of the Kipawa River. According to Mr. Doug Skeggs, founding Vice-President
and current member of the Executive, serving as Director of River Preservation,
Les Amis has a double mission:
Its
mission is to protect and promote the ecological and recreational values of the
Kipawa River running from Laniel to Lake Temiscamingue. For Les Amis,
protecting ecological values means the following: ensuring the aquatic
ecosystem is protected, maintained or enhanced; and protecting fish habitat in
the river and in Lake Temiscamingue around the mouth of the river. For Les
Amis, protecting recreational values means the following: promoting the area’s
rich history and natural heritage; recognizing the river’s recreational use;
and protecting and promoting the future tourism and recreation potential of the
river and the region.
[7]
The
Applicant hereby challenges the EA decision of February 9, 2006 because it alleges
that the respondents did not take into consideration the public right of
navigation through the dam. It is argued that the extinguishment of this common
law navigation right should have been found to be a significant adverse
environmental effect under subsection 20(1) of the CEAA.
II. Facts
A Brief History of the
Kipawa River and the Laniel Dam
[8]
The
Kipawa River is recognized as one of North America’s top white-water rivers.
The Kipawa River, which concerns this judicial review application, runs from
the village of Laniel, Quebec, on Lake Kipawa to the mouth of the river on Lake
Temiscamingue. The Kipawa River is 16 km long. It has approximately 16 rapids and
the running of the river is done in about 5 hours beginning through the dam’s
spillway (which is done in 2 minutes) to the Lake Temiscamingue.
[9]
In
1910, through Public Works, the Government of Canada began construction on a
flood control dam at the mouth of the Kipawa River in the village of Laniel,
Quebec, in the Municipalité régional du Canton (MRC) of Temiscamingue.
Completed in 1911, the Laniel Dam is located on federal lands, between an
abandoned Canadian Pacific (CP) rail line and the Highway 101 Bridge on Lake
Kipawa.
[10]
The
purpose of the Laniel Dam was two fold: to regulate the level of water of the
Outaouais river system in order to ease navigation and energy protection, and
to prevent flooding of the forested region along the Kipawa River and the
village of Laniel, which over the years has been transformed into a vacation
village whose economy relies essentially on recreational-tourism. In 2001,
there were 730 cottages, 712 hunting campsites and 30 purveyances. Based on the
2001 Census, there were 85 year-round inhabitants living along the river and in
the municipality of Laniel. This number increased to 150 inhabitants based on
the 2006 Canada Census.
[11]
The
Dam has a concrete evacuator or sluice (see Glossary attached hereto as
Appendix “A”) that is about 14 metres long, as well as a fill dyke embankment
approximately 42,7 meters long and which is made of wood caissons filled with
encroachments. The evacuator has two dewatering outlets, each approximately 6.1
meters long, separated by a pillar. These two dewatering outlets are
mechanically activated through beams from top to bottom following a directive
from the dam operator. This evacuator was originally conceived in 1910 to hold
three dewatering outlets. However, due to technological limitations at the time
of construction and problems with the rock, the third outlet could not be
built.
[12]
In
1918, the Government of Canada granted operation of the Laniel Dam to the
Government of Quebec in an emphyteusis lease (see Glossary). In turn the Quebec
Government lent its rights to the pulp and paper industry until 1965, then to
Hydro Quebec from 1965 to 1986. Following a retrocession of the lease, PWSGC
assumed control of the Laniel Dam in 1986.
[13]
Between
1855 and the mid 1960s, the Kipawa River was used by the logging industry for
log drives. In 1968, the first kayakers ventured down the Kipawa River. This
handful of kayakers returned each year, learning the River, identifying and
naming each of the rapids and classifying each according to the International
classification standard used to establish the level of difficulty of rapids on
a river.
[14]
It
was as a result of the work of these pioneers that the white water industry
began to use the Kipawa River in 1987 for modern commercial and recreational
navigation, including rafting and kayaking. Since 1988, Mr. Jim Coffey of
Esprit Rafting (Davidson, Quebec) has been running the Kipawa River and
offering commercial rafting trips in conjunction with the Kipawa River Rally
(the Festival), which draws more than 150 kayakers and rafters each year from
Quebec, Ontario and the United States, to run the pristine white waters of the
Kipawa River during the St. Jean Baptiste holiday, the third weekend in June. The
Rally has become an annual pilgrimage not only because of the exceptional
recreational features of the lower section of the Kipawa River but also because
of the beauty of this forested valley, through which the Kipawa River makes its
bed.
[15]
The
parties agree that the Laniel Dam is a very unique situation. In terms of size,
width and height, it is the only water control structure or dam in the Province
of Quebec that kayakers and rafters have been navigating through. In the past,
the kayakers and rafters have also navigated through a dam at Kneopfli Falls,
on the Magnetawan River, in Ontario. This activity of kayaking over the dam is similar
to what Les Amis’ members do at the Laniel Dam, in that they start in a pool of
water before the dam, then navigate through the dam and continue downstream.
However, the dam at Kneopfli Falls in Ontario is only 2 meters high whereas,
the Laniel Dam is10 meters or 8 meters higher. The thrill of riding the Laniel
Dam is second to none the Applicant’s members affirm.
[16]
When
it resumed control of the operation of the Laniel Dam in 1986, PWGSC undertook
a series of inspections and geological studies of the dam including the
following:
§
Visual
inspection and underwater inspection conducted in 1987, by Tecsult, who would
be retained in October 2004 as the Engineering Consultant in charge of
designing the project;
§
Geo-technical
analysis of the condition of the concrete, rock and embankment conducted by
Solroc in 1987; and
§
Underwater
inspection conducted by SPG Hydro International in 2000.
[17]
Based
on the findings of these different studies, the sluice and the beam support
system were no longer in good condition. The embankment dyke had important
water leaks and the dam’s evacuation capacity was clearly inadequate to protect
the security of the people who live near the Kipawa River in Laniel, as well as
in Temiscamingue.
[18]
A
massive concrete structure, such as the Laniel Dam has a normal life span of 80
years. PWGSC was aware as early as 2003 that the operation of the Laniel Dam
was seriously compromised by the state of advance degradation of the concrete
in the sluice, due to an alkali-silice reaction (see Glossary). In spite of the
repair works that have been carried out to the Laniel Dam each year since 1987,
experts judged the Laniel Dam to be in an advanced state of degradation.
The construction of an entirely new
structure was deemed inevitable in order not only to assure the long term
safety of the Laniel Dam, but also to ensure the regulation of the level of
water in the Outaouais river system and most importantly, prevent flooding of
the inhabited regions served by both the Kipawa and Temiscamingue Lakes.
[19]
In
December 2003, PWGSC established a concept design for the new dam. This project
concept design was to replace the existing dyke and 2-sluice spillway, with a
4-sluice concrete dam to accommodate as much as possible a 1:10,000 –year flood
event as required by the Quebec Dam Safety regulation, even though PWGSC was
not legally bound to meet the provincial standards.
[20]
Because
of the size and possible impact of the project, PWGSC determined that the project
required a federal screening level assessment. As a result, in the Spring of 2004,
PWGSC asked Jacques Whitford Ltd. (Whitford), its EA consultant, to provide an
EA of the proposed project. Based on Whitford’s preliminary recommendations
dated September 15, 2004, Tecsult completed a detailed project plan on June 15,
2005, which was incorporated into Whitford’s final EA report. Among other
things, the Tecsult report concluded that in its opinion, the existing Laniel
Dam was not designed for the safe passage of vessels, and that the passage in
the sluices of vessels, such as kayaks is a dangerous extreme sport.
Public Consultations
[21]
As
early as May 2004, PWGSC had concluded that it would be necessary to carry out
targeted stakeholder meetings, in order to assess the potential impacts of the
demolition and construction work. This work would not affect the level of water
and navigation on the Kipawa River. However, by February 2005 FOC indicated
that there would be significant impact on the fish habitat, thus requiring an
EA pursuant to subsection 35(1) of the Fisheries Act, L.R.C. 1985, c.
F-14, which provides as follows:
Harmful
alteration, etc., of fish habitat
35.
(1) No person shall carry on any work or undertaking that results in the
harmful alteration, disruption or destruction of fish habitat.
|
Détérioration
de l’habitat du poisson, etc.
35.
(1) Il est interdit d’exploiter des ouvrages ou entreprises entraînant la
détérioration, la destruction ou la perturbation de l’habitat du poisson.
|
[22]
PWGSC
held public
consultation meetings in Kipawa and Laniel on March 16, 2005 about the project
to replace the spillway and embankment of the Laniel Dam. The purpose of these
stakeholder meetings was to provide an overview of the Laniel Dam
rehabilitation project and collect the participants’ comments, thoughts,
concerns and suggestions with respect to the environmental and technical
aspects of the project.
[23]
Participants
at the March 16th meetings included First Nations representatives
from the Eagle Village First Nation, of Kipawa and the Wolf Lake First Nation
of Temiscamingue. In addition to this meeting with members of the Aboriginal
communities, PWGSC held a public consultation meeting that same day with
targeted interested groups. Participants in this stakeholder meeting included
the following:
§
Laniel municipal
committee (6 representatives);
§
ATV
(all-terrain vehicle) Club (3 representatives);
§
Les Amis
de la Rivière Kipawa (1 representative);
§
Owners of the
properties adjacent to the dam (2 representatives); and
§
Fédération
québécoise de canoë kayak d’eau vive (FQCKEV) (2 representatives).
[24]
All
participants contributed to the meeting. Several concerns were raised. These concerns
were all considered and resolved by PWGSC to the participants’ satisfaction,
except one of the concerns raised by Mr. Peter Karwacki, founding President
and representative of Les Amis regarding trespassing the Laniel Dam. This concern is
captured in an
e-mail message to Mr. Goulet of the Whitford office, dated March 3, 2005, in
which Peter Karwacki wrote:
Mr. Goulet,
Thanks once again for seeking the input
of Les Amis de la Rivière Kipawa concerning the design and implementation of
refurbishments to the Laniel water control dam.
Les
Amis de la Rivière Kipawa wishes that the dam remain navigable by features of
its design if this is at all feasible. This means that at least one of possibly
two or three water control gates, and preferably the left most gate, be designed
with water release from the top of the dam to enable kayaks, rafts, and canoes
to pass from the lake, over the top of the dam and on down the river as has
been enjoyed by recreational enthusiasts for the last twenty-five years.
I
hope that this idea is being presented to you in a timely way given the
process.
We
recognize that some additional planning or negotiation of scope may be
necessary. [. . .]
Les Amis de la Rivière Kipawa
Peter Karwacki
President
[25]
At this public
consultation meeting, Les Amis argued among other things that kayakers and
rafters have passed through the sluice at the Laniel Dam for several years and
that the Kipawa Rally has existed for almost 20 years. The representative
questioned the basis of the project’s proposed prohibition against boats, such
as kayaks and rafters from going through the dam and wanted to know whether
there was a law or regulation forbidding passage through the dam.
[26]
PWGSC
representatives clearly indicated that the passage through the spillway was not
allowed due to safety concerns, explaining PWGSC’s responsibilities as the owner
of the dam. PWGSC also pointed out that permission had never been requested and
was never issued to pass through the spillway. Furthermore, PWGSC would never
grant permission for such activities, as it entails too high a risk of
liability. However, as a mitigation measure, PWGSC indicated that the
construction of a trail was a possibility to allow access downstream of the dam
and that the flow of water into the Kipawa River would be maintained during
construction, to the extent possible.
[27]
PWGSC
also asked the stakeholders what the impact on the economy and recreotourism would
be if the kayakers could no longer pass through the spillway. In response to this,
Les Amis indicated that the dam was but 1 of 16 rapids and that there are
normally 320 kayakers each season. Moreover, letters from the regional
governments indicated that the loss of navigation through the dam spillway
would not be an important economic impact to the region’s tourism industry.
[28]
Whitford
prepared a public consultation report in May 2005 as a summary of the public
consultation meetings. This report outlined the concerns raised and the
answers provided during the discussion. The draft of the public consultation report
was circulated to the stakeholders in May and June 2005. An interim response
was received on July 4, 2005 from Peter Karwacki requesting the specific statute
and/or regulation that would prohibit white-water enthusiasts from running the
dam at Laniel, and asserting that employees of PWGSC have been aware of the dam
being run by white-water recreational enthusiasts.
[29]
Mr.
Skeggs provided a full response to PWGSC on July 14, 2005 indicating the
impacts they perceived to Les Amis’ activities. In October 2005, Ms. Turnbull,
the PWGSC EA Project Manager for the Laniel dam rehabilitation project sent an
excerpt of the analysis and mitigation measures section of the ‘near-final’ EA
report to the stakeholders, including Les Amis, to present PWGSC’s final responses
to the concerns raised since the March 2005 public consultation.
[30]
Final
comments were requested in two weeks and no request for an extension was received
from Les Amis. The comments and information received from the public and other
stakeholders, including Les Amis were the subject of numerous discussions
within PWGSC (operational requirements), and between PWGSC and TC (NWPA
requirements), during the 11 months from the public consultation meeting in
March 2005 and the final EA decision on February 9, 2006, when the three
responsible authorities (PWGSC, TC and FOC) decided that they could exercise
any power or perform any duty or function with respect to the project because,
after having considered the screening report and the comments received from the
public, they were of the opinion that the project was not likely to cause
significant adverse environmental effects. The three authorities also concluded
that in light of the proposed mitigation measures, the adverse impacts of the project
would not be significant.
[31]
Even
though the authorities were unable to accommodate the request for passage
through the spill because of the safety and liability concerns, PWGSC was able
to act upon other concerns raised by kayakers and rafters. For instance, PWGSC
shortened the originally proposed portage trail and by widening the proposed
portage trail to allow vehicular access.
The exchange of
communication between Les Amis and the Respondents
[32]
Subsequent
to the March meeting, Les Amis contacted TC requesting that the design of the
new dam be such as to allow them to cross the dam. Indeed, Les Amis undertook a
massive letter writing campaign to PWGSC, TC and FOC, sending over a hundred testimonials
and e-mails, along with a DVD, documenting the Kipawa River Rally festival and
kayakers navigating down the different rapids, through the sluice and over the
Laniel Dam. So determined was Mr. Karwacki that in an e-mail dated August 23,
2005, he wrote:
“We
don’t really need any more information about the project; we need the
navigability of the dam at Laniel to be protected.”
[33]
Moreover,
on October 31, 2005, Mr. Karwacki made a written request to have access to consult
the EA public Registry. On November 1, 2005, he was granted access to this EA
public registry, which is a mandatory registry of all EA documents pursuant to
section 55 of the CEAA. In addition, Mr. Karwacki also received a paper
copy of the dam operations manual and Tecsult's letter of opinion on the risk
of navigating through the sluice.
[34]
Indeed
by early
November 2005, Les Amis had received all the material upon which the EA
mitigation measures, as well as PWGSC’s determination of potential liability,
and the decision of significance of impacts on navigation were based. This
material included the following:
·
The
public consultation report;
·
The
EA analysis and mitigation measures excerpt;
·
Appendix
F of the EA screening report, which included the comments from Les Amis; and
Tecsult’s letter of June 15, 2005, noting that the existing and proposed dams
were not designed for safe passage of watercraft ; and
·
Verbal
information from PWGSC on a reported boating accident.
[35]
After
having consulted all the mandatory public registry documents, Mr. Karwacki then
requested to view additional documents related to the file, including all
documents related to PWGSC`s determination of the risk of running the dam.
However, PWGSC decided to limit communication with Mr. Karwacki and Les Amis
after derogatory comments were posted on Les Amis’ website and the harassing
behavior by Mr. Karwacki toward the staff involved in the project.
Communications were eventually limited to the respondents’ solicitors when Les
Amis threatened litigation.
Presence of security
measures: boom and signage
[36]
When
the federal government took over the control of the Laniel Dam in 1986, there
was a wood boom (see Glossary) that Hydro-Quebec had put in place upstream to
the Dam, in order to warn boaters of the dam and to establish an upstream
perimeter from the dam on the Kipawa Lake. This wood boom stayed in place until
1988, when PWGSC installed a boom with security floats. These security floats
are still in place today and offer a clearly visible signal warning boaters on
the Kipawa Lake that there is a Dam up ahead and that there is a security
perimeter in place to prohibit access to the dam from Lake Kipawa.
[37]
That
is why when it became aware for the very first time at the March 16th
2005 meeting that this activity has been going on each year for almost two
decades; with documented proof to bear, PWGSC sent a representative, Mr. Guy
Lafond to observe and gather information regarding the activities through and
around the Laniel Dam, at the time of the 2005 Kipawa River Rally.
[38]
Mr.
Lafond reported that indeed kayakers were ignoring the security perimeter and
navigating through the dam and over the falls. His report recommended among
other things that PWGSC ameliorate the security perimeter booms, repair the
launching pad and post signage on and near the Laniel Dam, warning against
swimming and navigating vessels beyond the perimeter and through the dam.
[39]
Following
Mr. Lafond’s report of his visit, PWGSC improved the security measures at
Laniel Dam. The Dam is now equipped with signs indicating to boaters and
members of the public that swimming and navigation are forbidden near the dam.
The parties agree that these signs were put in place only after Mr. Lafond’s
visit to the Rally in 2005, after PWGSC first became aware from the Applicant
that its members have been navigating through the evacuators or spillways and
over the dam, since 1987.
The awarding of the contract
[40]
At
the time of the public consultation meetings in March 2005, PWGSC planned to incorporate
the public consultation results and to finalize the EA as soon as possible in
2005, as the construction contract was to be issued in the fall of 2005 and PWGSC
wished to avoid potential re-tendering of the construction contract.
[41]
However,
these plans were frustrated by repeated delays. In June 2005, TC informed PWGSC
that it too had to conduct its own EA. However, it would rely on the
information obtained from PWGSC’s public consultation meetings on March 16,
2005. In September 2005, Whitford, the EA Consultant provided a draft EA report
for review and consideration by PWGSC, TC and FOC. TC did not confirm that it
would be a responsible authority for the project until October 7, 2005. An
excerpt of the EA referring in part to the analysis and the mitigation measures
was sent to Les Amis in October 2005.
[42]
In
light of the delays and given the potential consequences of failure of the dam,
PWGSC went ahead and made a public announcement by Press Release dated November
7, 2005, awarding the construction contract of the project as designed prior to
the finalization of the EA process. This was done also to avoid having to delay
the start of work on the project until after the fish spawning season in the Spring
of 2006. The press release made it clear that the work will be carried out with
a view to the environment and that consultation had occurred to meet the
concerns of the interested parties.
[43]
The
contract was awarded to David S. Laflamme Construction Inc., in the amount of
$13, 406,560. Since the EA process was not finalized, the contract contained a
provision for obtaining approvals and permits before work started. Further
delays in the EA and NWPA processes resulted in the deferral of the EA decision
and of the construction of the cofferdams (see Glossary) as any work in the
reservoir and river could not proceed until both the FOC and NWPA approvals
were received.
[44]
The
contracting process continued because a re-tendering would likely delay the rehabilitation,
which was not acceptable to PWGSC as the completion of the dam rehabilitation
was required to ensure the safety and economic well-being of the inhabitants of
the area and especially of those who rely on the dam and the reservoir.
Eventually, TC’s EA report granting the green light to the project was
announced on February 10, 2006, or one day after the impugned decision.
III. The Legal
Framework
[45]
The
steps to be followed to build or rehabilitate a Dam are set out in subsection
20(1) of the CEAA and related decisions of paragraph 5(1) (a) and subsection
6(4) of the NWPA. I shall deal first with the latter statutory provision,
referring to it as the 6(4) licensing process. This will be followed by the
5(1) licensing process and then the 20(1) licensing process.
The 6(4) licensing
process
[46]
By
letter dated March 17, 2004, FOC informed PWGSC that the construction of the
1911 Dam was not approved pursuant to the NWPA, and said approval would
be required before the start of the rehabilitation work on the Dam. In other
words, PWGSC was required to first legalize the existing dam by virtue of subsection
6(4) of the NWPA for the proposed renovation of the dam, the concrete
evacuator with its two dewatering outlets, as well as the fill dyke. For ease
of reference subsection 6(4) of the NWPA, provides as follows:
Ministerial
orders respecting unauthorized works
Approval
after construction commenced
6.
(4) The Minister may, subject to deposit and advertisement as in the case of
a proposed work, approve a work and the plans and site of the work after the
commencement of its construction and the approval has the same effect as if
given prior to commencement of the construction of the work.
|
Ordres
ministériels à l’égard d’ouvrages non autorisés
Approbation
après le début des travaux
6.
(4) Le ministre peut, sous réserve de dépôt et d’annonce comme dans le cas
d’un ouvrage projeté, approuver un ouvrage, ainsi que ses plans et son
emplacement, après le début de sa construction; l’approbation a alors le même
effet que si elle avait été donnée avant le début des travaux.
|
[47]
On
June 11, 2004, PWGSC applied to TC for approval of the existing 1911 Laniel
Dam. As part of the 6(4) licensing process, PWGSC was required to submit plans
for the proposed refurbishment of the dam and publish notices of the proposed
renovation project in the Canada Gazette, as well as in the legal
section of two local newspapers at least once.
[48]
In
compliance with these requirements, a Notice was published in the Canada
Gazette, dated September 10, 2005 informing the public that PWGSC had
deposited plans to TC under the NWPA for approval of the plans and site
of work on the existing dam, dyke and boom on Kipawa Lake near the Kipawa River
at Laniel Quebec. The notice in the Canada Gazette solicited comments
regarding marine navigation on the deposited plans and proposed work on the
dam. However, such comments would be considered only if they were in writing
and were received not later than 30 days after the date of publication.
[49]
A
similar notice appeared in both official languages, in the local newspaper Le
Témiscamien dated September 7, 2005. In addition a second newspaper, Le
Reflet published the identical notice in its September 9th, 2005
edition. On October 18, 2005, PWGSC provided proof of these three public
notices and the 6(4) licence approving the 1911 dam was granted on October 24,
2005. It thereby permitted the Minister of TC to authorize existing works on
navigable waters in Canada. As such this decision was for the purpose of
approving the dam built in 1911 and its upstream boom on Kipawa Lake. For Les
Amis also, it meant that their navigation rights were now formally prohibited.
[50]
The
6(4) licensing process did not require public consultation under the CEAA
because the existing dam was built prior to June 22, 1984, as stipulated by
subsection 74(4) of the CEAA. Similarly, no environmental screening,
including an analysis of potential mitigation measures, and an EA decision
pursuant to the CEAA were necessary prior to the issuance of the
subsection 6(4) permit. The Applicant does not contest the Minister’s decision
to obtain this subsection 6(4) permit. However, the Applicant challenges the
fact that they were not notified and merely happened to be informed by someone
in Temiscamingue of the
notices in the local papers.
The 5(1) (a) licensing
process
[51]
TC
rendered its decision approving the licensing process pursuant to
paragraph 5(1) (a) of the NWPA, on February 10, 2006 or a day after the
finalization of the decision that forms the object of this judicial review
application. The purpose of the paragraph 5(1) (a) NWPA licence was to
authorize PWGSC to go ahead with the construction of works on the River
according to the conditions set forth in the permit issued by TC. The pertinent
passages of section 5 of the NWPA provide as follows:
Construction
of works in navigable waters
5.
(1) No work shall be built or placed in, on, over, under, through or across
any navigable water unless
(a)
the work and the site and plans thereof have been approved by the Minister,
on such terms and conditions as the Minister deems fit, prior to commencement
of construction;
[.
. .]
|
Construction
d’ouvrages dans les eaux navigables
5.
(1) Il est interdit de construire ou de placer un ouvrage dans des eaux
navigables ou sur, sous, au-dessus ou à travers de telles eaux à moins que :
a)
préalablement au début des travaux, l’ouvrage, ainsi que son emplacement et
ses plans, n’aient été approuvés par le ministre selon les modalités qu’il
juge à propos;
[.
. .]
|
For the purposes of paragraph 5 (1) (a) above,
under section 2 of the NWPA, ‘Minister’ means the Minister of Transport.
[52]
However
by virtue of paragraph 5(1) (d) of the CEAA, an Environmental Assessment
is required prior to carrying out certain projects, such as the building or
rehabilitation of a dam. The authority to conduct an EA is granted by paragraph
5(1)(d) of the CEAA, which is set out below:
Projects
requiring environmental assessment
5.
(1) An environmental assessment of a project is required before a federal
authority exercises one of the following powers or performs one of the
following duties or functions in respect of a project, namely, where a
federal authority
[.
. .] or
(d)
under a provision prescribed pursuant to paragraph 59(f), issues a permit or
licence, grants an approval or takes any other action for the purpose of
enabling the project to be carried out in whole or in part.
|
Projets
visés
5.
(1) L’évaluation environnementale d’un projet est effectuée avant l’exercice
d’une des attributions suivantes:
[.
. .]
d)
une autorité fédérale, aux termes d’une disposition prévue par règlement pris
en vertu de l’alinéa 59f), délivre un permis ou une licence, donne toute
autorisation ou prend toute mesure en vue de permettre la mise en oeuvre du
projet en tout ou en partie.
|
[53]
Paragraph
59(f) of the CEAA grants the Governor in Counsel the authority to enact
regulations pursuant to paragraph 5(1) (d) of the CEAA, which it did by
enacting the Law List Regulations, SOR/94-636. The EA screening process
is to be carried out pursuant to subsection 16(1) of the CEAA, which
states:
ENVIRONMENTAL
ASSESSMENT PROCESS
General
Factors
to be considered
16.
(1) Every screening or comprehensive study of a project and every mediation
or assessment by a review panel shall include a consideration of the
following factors:
(a)
the environmental effects of the project, including the environmental effects
of malfunctions or accidents that may occur in connection with the project
and any cumulative environmental effects that are likely to result from the
project in combination with other projects or activities that have been or
will be carried out;
(b)
the significance of the effects referred to in paragraph (a);
(c)
comments from the public that are received in accordance with this Act and
the regulations;
(d)
measures that are technically and economically feasible and that would
mitigate any significant adverse environmental effects of the project; and
(e)
any other matter relevant to the screening, comprehensive study, mediation or
assessment by a review panel, such as the need for the project and
alternatives to the project, that the responsible authority or, except in the
case of a screening, the Minister after consulting with the responsible
authority, may require to be considered.
|
PROCESSUS
D’ÉVALUATION ENVIRONNEMENTALE
Dispositions
générales
Éléments
à examiner
16.
(1) L’examen préalable, l’étude approfondie, la médiation ou l’examen par une
commission d’un projet portent notamment sur les éléments suivants :
a)
les effets environnementaux du projet, y compris ceux causés par les
accidents ou défaillances pouvant en résulter, et les effets cumulatifs que
sa réalisation, combinée à l’existence d’autres ouvrages ou à la réalisation
d’autres projets ou activités, est susceptible de causer à l’environnement;
b)
l’importance des effets visés à l’alinéa a);
c)
les observations du public à cet égard, reçues conformément à la présente loi
et aux règlements;
d)
les mesures d’atténuation réalisables, sur les plans technique et économique,
des effets environnementaux importants du projet;
e)
tout autre élément utile à l’examen préalable, à l’étude approfondie, à la
médiation ou à l’examen par une commission, notamment la nécessité du projet
et ses solutions de rechange, — dont l’autorité responsable ou, sauf dans le
cas d’un examen préalable, le ministre, après consultation de celle-ci, peut
exiger la prise en compte.
|
The 20(1) licensing
process
[54]
The
third and final step in the statutory framework requires the responsible
authorities to decide on a course of action once the EA screening process is
complete. That is what subsection 20(1) of the CEAA is for. It provides,
among other things the following options:
Screening
Decision of responsible
authority following a screening
20.
(1) The responsible authority shall take one of the following courses of
action in respect of a project after taking into consideration the screening
report and any comments filed pursuant to subsection 18(3):
(a)
subject to subparagraph (c)(iii), where, taking into account the
implementation of any mitigation measures that the responsible authority
considers appropriate, the project is not likely to cause significant adverse
environmental effects, the responsible authority may exercise any power or
perform any duty or function that would permit the project to be carried out
in whole or in part;
(b)
where, taking into account the implementation of any mitigation measures that
the responsible authority considers appropriate, the project is likely to
cause significant adverse environmental effects that cannot be justified in
the circumstances, the responsible authority shall not exercise any power or
perform any duty or function conferred on it by or under any Act of
Parliament that would permit the project to be carried out in whole or in
part; or
(c)
where
(i)
it is uncertain whether the project, taking into account the implementation
of any mitigation measures that the responsible authority considers
appropriate, is likely to cause significant adverse environmental effects,
(ii)
the project, taking into account the implementation of any mitigation
measures that the responsible authority considers appropriate, is likely to
cause significant adverse environmental effects and paragraph (b) does not
apply, or
(iii)
public concerns warrant a reference to a mediator or a review panel,
the
responsible authority shall refer the project to the Minister for a referral
to a mediator or a review panel in accordance with section 29.
|
Examen
préalable
Décision
de l’autorité responsable
20.
(1) L’autorité responsable prend l’une des mesures suivantes, après avoir
pris en compte le rapport d’examen préalable et les observations reçues aux
termes du paragraphe 18(3) :
a)
sous réserve du sous-alinéa c) (iii), si la réalisation du projet n’est pas
susceptible, compte tenu de l’application des mesures d’atténuation qu’elle
estime indiquées, d’entraîner des effets environnementaux négatifs
importants, exercer ses attributions afin de permettre la mise en œuvre
totale ou partielle du projet;
b)
si, compte tenu de l’application des mesures d’atténuation qu’elle estime
indiquées, la réalisation du projet est susceptible d’entraîner des effets
environnementaux négatifs importants qui ne peuvent être justifiés dans les
circonstances, ne pas exercer les attributions qui lui sont conférées sous le
régime d’une loi fédérale et qui pourraient lui permettre la mise en oeuvre
du projet en tout ou en partie;
c)
s’adresser au ministre pour une médiation ou un examen par une commission
prévu à l’article 29 :
(i)
s’il n’est pas clair, compte tenu de l’application des mesures d’atténuation
qu’elle estime indiquées, que la réalisation du projet soit susceptible
d’entraîner des effets environnementaux négatifs importants,
(ii)
si la réalisation du projet, compte tenu de l’application de mesures
d’atténuation qu’elle estime indiquées, est susceptible d’entraîner des
effets environnementaux négatifs importants et si l’alinéa b) ne s’applique
pas,
(iii)
si les préoccupations du public le justifient.
|
IV. The
Impugned Decision
[55]
Having
completed the screening of the Laniel Dam Rehabilitation and considered the
comments from the public, the authorities were of the opinion that “the project
is not likely to cause significant adverse environmental effects.” It is this
little phrase that forms the gravamen of this application.
[56]
For
purposes of completeness, the decision also states as follows:
As detailed in the environmental
assessment report, mitigation measures have been required for the project to
address:
§
air
quality
§
water
quality
§
water
quantity
§
sedimentation
§
soil
quality
§
vegetation
§
noise
levels
§
birds
and/or their habitat
§
fish
and/or their habitat
§
structure,
site or thing of historic, archaeological, paleontological or architectural
significance
§
socio-economic
impacts
A follow-up program has been implemented
to verify the accuracy of the environmental assessment of a project and/or
determine the effectiveness of any measures taken to mitigate the adverse
environmental effects of the project and because of the following reasons:
§
Environmentally
Sensitive Area/Valued Ecosystem Components
§
Public
Concerns
§
New or
Unproven Technologies
It is estimated this program will start
on May 1, 2007 and continue until November 1, 2012.
For more information or how to obtain a
full description of the follow-up program and its results, please contact:
Tamara Taub
Senior Environmental Assessment Officer
V. Issues
1.
Has
the Applicant demonstrated that, through an unrecognized use by kayakers and
rafters of the spillway of the Laniel Dam as a launching point into the River,
for over 40 years, a navigable common law right existed? If that right existed,
was it considered by the authorities during the licensing process that was followed
in accordance with the law?
2.
Assuming
that the project was the cause prohibiting navigation through the dam is the
decision rendered under subsection 20(1) of the CEAA nevertheless
reasonable since the prohibition does not constitute a “significant adverse
environmental effect?
3.
Was
the Applicant’s right to procedural fairness breached during the course of the
EA process? If so, should the remedy sought of quashing the February 9, 2006
decision, rendered pursuant to subsection 20(1) of the CEAA be granted?
VI. The
Standards of Review
[57]
The
6(4) licensing permit upon which the first issue of the common law navigation
right is based, raises the question of whether the law was followed. This is a
question of law. Consequently, the correctness standard should apply.
[58]
The
5(1) licensing process and the EA procedure followed are mainly questions of
mixed fact and law. Therefore, the applicable standard of review is reasonableness
simpliciter. In this regard, I adopt the compelling reasoning of Mr.
Justice Sexton of the Federal Court of Appeal in Inverhuron & District
Ratepayers’ Association v. Canada (Minister of the Environment), [2001]
F.C.J. No. 1008, 2001 FCA 203. This was an appeal from an order of the Trial
Division, dismissing an application for judicial review of the Minister of the
Environment’s decision that a project to develop a dry storage facility for
used nuclear fuel at the Bruce Nuclear Power Facility was not likely to cause
significant adverse environmental effects. In determining the applicable
standard of review, Sexton J held as follows at paragraphs 32, 36, 40:
32 In the recent decision
in Bow Valley Naturalists Society v. Canada (Minster of Canadian Heritage), 10
this Court considered the standard of review to be applied to a decision of a
responsible authority upon receipt of a screening level environmental
assessment. Applying the pragmatic and functional approach most recently
propounded by the Supreme Court in Pushpanathan v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration),11 Linden J.A., writing for a unanimous panel,
held that the appropriate standard was reasonableness simpliciter.
36 This Court has recognized that
policy concerns militate in favour of a more deferential standard of review.
The environmental assessment process is already a long and arduous one, both
for proponents and opponents of a project. To turn the reviewing Court into an
"academy of science" -- to use a phrase coined by my colleague
Strayer J. (as he then was) in Vancouver Island Peace Society v. Canada12 --
would be both inefficient and contrary to the scheme of the Act. Thus, in Bow
Valley Naturalists, Linden J.A. had the following to say regarding the scope of
judicial review of a decision taken upon receipt of an environmental
assessment:
The Court must ensure that the steps in
the Act are followed, but it must defer to the responsible authorities in their
substantive determinations as to scope of the project, the extent of the
screening and the assessment of the cumulative effects in the light of the
mitigating factors proposed. It is not for the Judges to decide what projects
are to be authorized, but, as long as they follow the statutory process, it is
for the responsible authorities.13
40 In my opinion, Rothstein J.A.'s
approach is equally applicable to the decision made in the case at bar. A
standard of review of reasonableness simpliciter requires that the Minister
have a reasonable basis for arriving at her decision. In conducting its review,
the Court should consider all of the material available to the Minister and
draw a conclusion. Such a conclusion can be drawn without the Court becoming an
"academy of science". The Court is not required to agree with the
Minister's decision. It must merely be able to perceive a rational basis for
it.
[59]
Finally,
where questions of procedural fairness and the principles of natural justice
are raised as in the third issue in this application, the standard of review is
always correctness. See Ellis-Don Ltd. v. Ontario (Labour Relations Board),[2001]
1 S.C.R. 221 at paragraph 65.
VII. Analysis
Issue 1
Has the Applicant demonstrated that
through an unrecognized use by kayakers and rafters of the spillway of the
Laniel Dam as a launching point into the River, for over 40 years, a navigable
common law right existed? If that right existed, was it considered by the
authorities during the licensing process that was followed in accordance with
the law?
[60]
The
Applicant has not demonstrated that, through the unrecognized use by kayakers
and rafters who have used the dam as the launching gate into the Kipawa River
for a little more than 25 days per year, for the past 40 years, a navigable
common law right exists. It is undeniable that the Kipawa River has been for
enthusiastic kayakers and rafters an attractive site for their specialized sport. It was initially
discovered in the late 1960s. For a good number of years, a festival is held on
site on the third weekend in June, where initially 200 persons came. The most
recent festival events in 2005 attracted more than 300 enthusiastic users.
[61]
The
evidence also shows that the owner of the dam has collaborated through the
years with the festival organizers in ensuring that a minimum level of water
goes through the dam to supply the proper level of water to permit the proper
exercise of the sports on the Kipawa River. It should be noted that the evidence also shows
that the necessary refurbishment of the dam will not prevent the Kipawa River
Rally from taking place or that the longstanding cooperation between Les Amis
and staff at PWGSC with respect to the annual release of water to the required
levels will not continue, on the contrary.
[62]
What
is at issue here is not the practice of the sport on the river but the
navigability of the Laniel Dam. The fact that the Applicant’s members because of their experience have safely used
the dam does not mean that it is not dangerous to the general public. The use
of the dam by kayakers and rafters through the years does not create a common
law right. The owner has never officially granted permission to use the dam as
a rapid. It is the opinion of the owner that it is dangerous for the general
public to use the gateway as an entrance. The fact that Les Amis, as
experienced river runners have been using it without incident, as a launching
rapid into the river does not take away the concern for the danger that an
owner may have; keeping in mind the public safety of the general public. A
navigable right through the dam has not been created for the general public or
for Les Amis because of their use over close to 40 years.
[63]
While
I have concluded that the Applicant has not demonstrated that such a common law
right exists by virtue of the unrecognized use of navigating through the dam,
for a number of years, it would otherwise not be necessary to reply to the
corollary question in this first issue, which is “[i]f that right existed, was
it considered by the authorities during the licensing process that was followed
in accordance with the law?” However, in order to provide a clarity and
completeness, I find it necessary to respond.
[64]
This
common law right does not exist. Based on the evidence, it is also evident that
even if the Court were to find that this right does exist, the Applicant’s
position that this right was not taken into consideration by the authorities
during the licensing process would fail because it is not supported by the
evidence.
[65]
The
parties agree that the 6(4) licensing process had to be done and there was no complaint
that the process was carried out in a manner that is contrary to the CEAA. The
Respondent authorities complied with each of the requirements of TC for the
retroactive official approval of the existing structure. The authorities gave
the necessary public notices in the Canada Gazette and two local
newspapers. Comments and input were invited. When these were received,
satisfactory responses were provided, such that the approval of the 6(4) permit
was granted forthwith.
[66]
Moreover, the question
of navigation is not an unfettered right. Navigation is not
absolute. It must be exercised reasonably. In Friends of the Oldman River
Society v. Canada (Minister of Transport), [1992] S.C.J. No. 1, Mr. Justice
La Forest held at paragraph 69:
69 The nature of the public right of
navigation has been the subject of considerable judicial comment over time, but
certain principles have held fast. First, the right of navigation is not a
property right, but simply a public right of way; see Orr Ewing v. Colquhoun
(1877), 2 App. Cas. 839 (H.L.), at p. 846. It is not an absolute right, but
must be exercised reasonably so as not to interfere with the equal rights of
others.
43 The inconsistency contended for is
that the Navigable Waters Protection Act implicitly precludes the Minister of
Transport from taking into consideration any matters other than marine
navigation in exercising his power of approval under s. 5 of the Act, whereas
the Guidelines Order requires, at a minimum, an initial environmental impact
assessment. The appellant Ministers concede that there is no explicit
prohibition against his taking into account environmental factors, but argue
that the focus and scheme of the Act limit him to considering nothing other than
the potential effects on marine navigation. If the appellants are correct, it
seems to me that the Minister would approve of very few works because several
of the "works" falling within the ambit of s. 5 do not assist
navigation at all, but by their very nature interfere with, or impede
navigation, for example bridges, booms, dams and the like. If the significance
of the impact on marine navigation were the sole criterion, it is difficult to
conceive of a dam of this sort ever being approved. It is clear, then, that the
Minister must factor several elements into any cost-benefit analysis to
determine if a substantial interference with navigation is warranted in the
circumstances.
[67]
These
same principles apply to the circumstances in this case. It is for these
reasons that the response to the first issue is negative. Even if there was a
common law right to navigate through the dam, the evidence does not support the
proposition that the authorities did not take this factor into consideration. This
is sufficient to settle the litigation at stake. However, I do think that the
parties deserve answers to the two remaining issues in dispute. Hopefully,
this will bring finality to the litigation.
Issue 2
Assuming that
the project was the cause that prohibited navigation through the dam, is the
decision rendered under subsection 20(1) of the CEAA nevertheless reasonable
since the prohibition does not constitute a “significant adverse environmental
effect?
[68]
The Applicant argues
that the decision reached establishing that the Project was unlikely to cause
significant adverse environmental effect was an unreasonable conclusion to draw
from the evidence for there was ample documentation and proof to substantiate
the fact that Les Amis navigated the Laniel Dam. In fact, they have done so
without mishap or injury on a regular basis, water levels permitting, each year
and for over 40 years. Les Amis do not consider the dam to be dangerous because
of the past experience going back close to 40 years.
[69]
However, the evidence also
shows that representatives of the owner of the dam have never officially
granted permission to use the dam. While Les Amis have navigated through the
spillway of the dam, the evidence shows that this has always been an
unauthorized use of the Laniel Dam. Indeed, when the authorities learnt during
the March public consultations that this has been the practice all along, they
took immediate action to first monitor this activity, and then take decisive
action to protect the general public from the danger posed by the dam.
[70]
Signs were posted in
2005 forbidding the use of the dam and Les Amis still used the dam as an
entrance into the River. The dam entrance is a Class III category depending on
the level of water going into the dam. A Class III chute is defined as a rapid
that can be run safely by intermediate paddlers, which can be run at water
levels between 100 and above 120 cms.
[71]
In the English original
text of the document entitled “A Brief History of Modern Commercial and
Recreational Navigation on the Laniel-to-Lake Temiscamingue Section of the
Kipawar River in Northwest Quebec,” authored by Doug Skeggs, in March 2005,
which was submitted to PWGSC for its consideration during the EA process, the
document sets out the levels of water required to run the dam safely. However,
the wording in the French version of this document is significantly different
and more serious in terms of the danger represented by the dam at different
water levels. I note that the translator of the English text, José Mediavilla,
is an avid kayaker who has run the Kipawa River since the early 1970. Both
versions are reproduced below:
The Dam
(Class III all levels):
The flood
control dam under the highway bridge in Laniel is very runnable at any level
above 120 cms. It has been run at levels below 100 cms but, depending on
whether the water is going through one or both gates, the drop may be [too]
steep and not recommended, your choice. Above 250 cms a hole starts to form
reacting off the pillar between the two flood gates, but [it’s] fairly easy to
work around on either side.
Le Déversoir
(classe R II, indépendamment du débit)
Le Déversoir qui
se trouve sous le pont de la route 101 à Laniel est praticable à tous les
débits supérieurs à 120 m3/s. La descente a été pratiquée à des niveaux
aussi bas que 100 m3/s, mais la dénivellation est alors si forte qu’elle forme
une chute peu recommandée. À moins de 100 m3/s, la descente doit être évitée à
tout prix. À plus de 250 m3/s, un rouleau se forme autour du pilier central
entre les deux portes d’évacuation, mais il est très facile de l’éviter en
passant d’un côté ou de l’autre. (My emphasis)
[72]
This difference in the
French text is instructive coming from an experienced kayaker who has personal
experience of navigation through the dam.
[73]
There are several other
facts on the record indicating that it was not unreasonable for PWSC, TC and
FOC to be of the joint opinion that the project is not likely to cause
significant adverse environmental effects. First, the water levels reach the
Class III category only approximately 25 days per year. The remainder of the
year, it is a more hazardous classification. To obtain the proper level of
water to reach the appropriate floatability through the dam, there has to be an
intervention by man. It is not alone a consequence of nature through rain or
the melting of snow.
[74]
Second, the
representatives of the owner of the dam consider that it is a danger to give
access to the public. To come to this conclusion, they relied on the hydraulic
knowledge of Mr. Yvon Morin, Administrator for PWGSC in the field of Coastal
and port engineering, as well as on Richard Jones, Navigable Waters Protection
Agent, Marine Safety, and Transport Canada. In addition, it relied on the
opinion of Tecsult, which states as follows [original in French; translation by
the Court]:
“The dock that
we recommend will allow rescuers to intervene in case of incidents [such as the
boat that drifted over the dam] and permit kayakers to launch their kayaks
safely and descend the rapids of the Kipawa River to the Temiscamingue Lake
without having to go through and over the dam itself. Going over the dam is
extremely dangerous and we cannot approve the request made by Les Amis to
recognize the Laniel dam as being navigable. The Laniel Municipal Committee
completely disassociates itself from the position and actions of Les Amis.”
[75]
The owner of the dam
has a responsibility to the public to ensure that it is not dangerous. It must
take means to ensure that the dam will not attract boats into its gate. Signs
have been put up to that effect, in addition to the booms. An owner has a right
and a duty to ensure safety of its property. Safety booms on the Kipawa Lake
have existed at least as early as when Hydro Quebec managed the dam from1965 to
1986. The safety booms are in existence in order to indicate danger and to
forbid coming close to the dam. Under cross examination on affidavit dated
September 15, 2006, Mr. James Coffey, Director of Esprit Rafting Adventures
confirmed as follows:
Q: And you recall
your experience in ’87 now.
A: Yes.
Q: Do you
recall there being a boom upstream of the dam at
that point
in time?
A: A boom as in
. . .
[. . .]
Q: Something to
delineate upstream of the actual dam itself, either made out of wood or made
out of plastic, something that delineates and potentially restricts access to
the dam itself.
A: There has
been, to the best of my recollection, since I first went to Kipawa, a cable
with a plastic sheath around it that could be described as a boom upstream of
the water control structure of Laniel.
Q: Which would
have been present, to the best of your recollection, in 1987?
A: I believe
so, yes.
[76]
The evidence shows that
a kayaker suffered an ankle injury in 2005. More seriously, there was a boating
accident in the 1980s as noted in a letter dated June 15, 2005 to PWGSC from
Mr. Yvon Gagnon, President, Comité municipal de Laniel Inc. In this incident, a
client of the company “Jack Newman Place,” had problems with the motor of his
boat while on Lake Kipawa in Laniel Bay. The force of the current drifted the
boat towards the Laniel Dam before emergency help could arrive. The boat went
through the dam and was destroyed by the rocks. The occupants of the boat were
rescued. Similarly, a boat belonging to Mr. Georges Trudel, owner of “Camp de
la Baie Smith” also was destroyed when it got loose from the dock and drifted
over the dam.
[77]
Third, the evidence of
Mr. Coffey, also establishes that the non-use of the dam would not cancel the
use of the river for rafting purposes. On the contrary, Les Amis admit that the
dam is but one rapid among sixteen rapids. The Kipawa River is a gem for
kayakers and rafters. In addition, the Municipality, the MRC, and the Société
de développement are all of the opinion that the dam is dangerous and its
non-use could not stop its festivities for rafters. Therefore, keeping in mind
all of these points, the evident conclusion to arrive at is that the none-use
of the dam is not a significant adverse environmental effect.
[78]
Fourth, to have tried
to meet the needs of Les Amis and insert a passage for them to go through the
spillway in the new design concept would have cost an additional $750,000 dollars
for a use of a little more than 20 days per year. Admittedly, $750,000 is but a
mere fraction amounting to less than 5% of the estimated total cost of the
project. But to refuse to spend taxpayers money to the tune of ¾ million dollars
for less than 20 days a year for the thrill of a ride over the falls, can
hardly be characterized as an unreasonable proposition.
[79]
In
a letter dated October 13, 2005, Mr. Yvon Gagnon, President, Comité Municipal
de Laniel Inc. wrote as follows [original in French; translation of the Court]:
“As a
commentary, I add that we are surprised to see the great interest of the
kayaking clubs in the construction when everyone very well knows that these
kayakers come to Laniel during the annual Rally, which lasts for two days
maximum. These are the only two days out of the year when one can see kayakers
on the River.
Moreover, there
are about a dozen rapids along the 17 km stretch of the Kipawa River and this
it is in these rapids that true kayakers test their abilities. However, not a
single kayaker can go over the “Grand Chute” because at this rapid, all
kayakers must take a long and difficult portage, about twenty minutes long
before going down the last rapid that enters into the Temiscamingue Lake.
Perhaps we will receive demands to make the “Grande Chute” navigable??
The Comité Municipale
de Laniel Inc. refuses to get involved and completely disassociates itself from
all responsibility regarding the navigation through the dam by amateur or
professional kayakers.”
[80]
It
is PWGSC’s studied opinion that it has no information in its database
pertaining to the navigation of the Laniel Dam and certainly no permission was
ever granted to anyone, including the Applicant’s experienced kayaking members,
to navigate through the sluice and over the Laniel Dam. For PWGSC, it is a
public safety issue that engages Crown liability.
[81]
For
all these reasons, the Court finds that the decision pursuant to subsection
20(1) concluding that the Project does not constitute a “significant adverse environmental effect is
reasonable”.
Issue 3
Was the
Applicant’s right to procedural fairness breached during the course of the EA
process? If so, should the remedy sought of quashing the February 9, 2006
decision, rendered pursuant to subsection 20(1) of the CEAA be granted?
[82]
The Applicant submits
that the authorities breached the principles of procedural fairness during the
EA process in that they operated under tight timeframes making it unlikely that
proper consideration was accorded to the numerous submissions made by Les Amis.
Other examples of the denial of procedural fairness include the fact that
PWGSC’s conclusion that navigation was unsafe was based on Tecsult’s letter
dated June 15, 2005, the same person responsible for the design of the Project.
Also, the Applicant alleges that they were denied the opportunity to present
opposing expert evidence to the findings that navigating the dam was unsafe.
[83]
The
Court takes seriously the allegations of breach of procedural fairness where
participatory rights have been denied. In this regard, the Court relies on the
standard set by the Supreme Court of Canada in Baker v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), (1999), 174 D.L.R. (4th) 193
(S.C.C.). While unlike the circumstances of the humanitarian and compassionate
application in Baker (above), the Applicant in the present matter is not
alleging the denial of the right to an oral hearing, the principles at the
heart are the same. Madam Justice l’Heureux-Dubé wrote in part at paragraph 30:
“[T]aking into
account the other factors related to the determination of the content of the
duty of fairness, the failure to accord an oral hearing and give notice to Ms.
Baker or her children was inconsistent with the participatory rights required
by the duty of fairness in these circumstances. At the heart of this
analysis is whether, considering all the circumstances, those whose interests
were affected had a meaningful opportunity to [page215] present their case
fully and fairly. [the Court’s emphasis ]”
[84]
Based
on the overwhelming evidence in this case it is not necessary to undertake the
balancing analysis proned in Baker. It is enough for the purposes of
the present matter to determine whether “considering all the circumstances;”
Les Amis whose interests were affected by the new Project had a meaningful
opportunity to present their case fully and fairly.
[85]
The
parties agree that the targeted public consultations that took place in March
2005 included representatives from all the groups who would be affected by the
proposed rehabilitation of the dam. The evidence clearly shows that Les Amis were consulted along with other
stakeholder groups directly affected by the proposed work to the Laniel Dam.
Their point of view, like that of the other participants was considered. It so
happens that it was not possible to satisfy their demands. Just because their position
was not retained does not mean it was not considered fully or fairly.
[86]
The Court is mindful of
the following additional facts. First, EA Registry access was given to Les Amis
on November 1, 2005, the very day after their request for such access. The
behaviour and derogatory comments of the President, Peter Karwacki did not help
the situation. His behaviour was deemed to be harassment.
[87]
Also, the Court is
mindful of the fact that the mitigation measures did take into consideration the
opinion of Les Amis, including the following:
§
maintaining
the current management of waters of the Kipawa reservoir after construction;
§
ensuring
that the procedures for the dam operation will also remain unchanged;
§
maintaining
the levels of water during the navigation period, between the maximum elevation
of 269.75 meters and the minimal level necessary for navigation (269.50 meters);
§
creating
a safe pathway from the Lake to the River;
§
constructing a boat
ramp; and
§
providing
a navette from the lake to the river during construction.
[88]
Ms.
Turnbull, the E.A. Manager, stated in her affidavit sworn on August 11, 2006,
and which was confirmed under cross examination on affidavit on September 15,
2006 that the concerns of kayakers were taken into consideration. She noted in
particular that in addition to the concerns expressed by Les Amis, the
representative of the Quebec Federation of Whitewater canoers and kayakers
(FQCKEV) another intervener presented a similar point of view concerning the
navigation into the River.
[89]
As
Ms. Turnbull affirms, the contrasting views on navigation were clearly
indicated in the EA report, acknowledging that “for Les Amis this is an
important impact” and that “[m]any comments have been received from area
kayakers: therefore, arrangements must be made for the safe descent into the
river.” In addition, the documents received from Les Amis outlining its members
concerns were included in Appendix F of the EA report.
[90]
Finally,
because the evidence clearly shows that opportunities for timely and meaningful
public participation throughout the processes were given to the public, which
included Aboriginal groups, municipalities, MRC, individuals and Les Amis, the
Applicant has failed to demonstrate that there was a breach of the principle of
procedural fairness such that the remedy sought to quash the decision may be
granted.
VIII. Conclusion
[91]
For
the reasons outlined above the application for judicial review shall be
dismissed.
[92]
The
question of costs was left to the Judge. Accordingly, no costs are awarded because
of the particular circumstances of this case. To come to this conclusion, I
have taken into consideration the parties involved, their respective objectives
and the hope that this litigation has come to an end. The Kipawa River is
still navigable for the fervent kayakers and rafters.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS AND
ADJUDGES THAT:
-
The
application for judicial review of the decision dated February 9, 2006 is dismissed;
-
Without costs.
“Simon
Noël”
FEDERAL COURT
NAME OF COUNSEL AND SOLICITORS
OF RECORD
DOCKET: T-452-06
STYLE
OF CAUSE: Les
Amis de la Rivière Kipawa,
incorporated as 1162209036 Quebec Inc. and
The
Attorney General of Canada and the Minister of Public Works and Government Services
Canada, the Minister of Fisheries and Ocean, The Minister of Transport and
David S. La Flamme Construction Inc.
PLACE OF HEARING: Ottawa, ON
DATE OF HEARING: October 23, 2007
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
AND JUDGMENT: NOËL J.
DATED: December 4,
2007
APPEARANCES:
Robert Monti FOR
APPLICANT
Vincent Veilleux FOR
RESPONDENTS
Bernard Letarte
SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
Nelligan O’Brien Payne LLP FOR
APPLICANT
Ottawa, ON
John H. Sims, Q.C. FOR
RESPONDENTS
Deputy Attorney General of Canada
Ottawa, ON
Appendix
‘A’
Glossary
The definitions are those provided by and
commonly used by the parties.
‘Alkali-silice
reaction’ = a chemical reaction of the contents of the concrete that
provokes a swelling or expansion of the concrete. This leads to an ongoing and
progressive degradation of the structure.
‘Boom’
= Barrier across river to warn of danger beyond the point of the barrier. Booms
may be wooden or buoys attached together along a line that lies on top of the
water across the width of the river.
‘Cofferdams’=
watertight enclosure pumped dry to permit work below the waterline.
‘Emphyteusis’=
“A hereditary leasehold; a non-owner’s right to use land in perpetuity, subject
to forfeiture for non-payment of a fixed rent or for certain other
contingencies.” (Black’s Law Dictionary, 7th ed. p. 542).
‘Estacade’
= landing stage
‘Spillway’/‘Sluice’
= canal or in Maritime parlance, a dewatering outlet.