Vancouver Sun

Alberta disputes ‘national concern’

- BOB WEBER

EDMONTO • Allowing Ottawa’s carbon tax law to stand would give the federal government a tool it could use to repeatedly chip away at provincial powers, lawyers for the Alberta government argued Monday.

“If you uphold this legislatio­n, you’re opening the door to exactly that type of thing,” Peter Gall told a panel of five Alberta Court of Appeal judges.

The federal government justifies the law under a section of the Constituti­on that allows Ottawa to step in over issues of “national concern.”

Gall argued such issues are rare. Greenhouse gases don’t meet the test, he said, and letting the carbon tax law stand would open the door to allowing Parliament to step in whenever it wanted.

“You can call anything a national concern,” he told court.

The Constituti­on gives provinces adequate power to regulate greenhouse gases and Ottawa’s legislatio­n simply ties their hands, Gall said. “It’s invasive in terms of taking away policy options that would otherwise be open to the provinces.”

Alberta is the latest province to challenge the tax. Ontario and Saskatchew­an lost cases in their top courts, but are appealing to the Supreme Court of Canada.

The attorneys-general of Ontario, New Brunswick, Saskatchew­an and British Columbia are also to speak during the three-day hearing in Edmonton. Eight First Nations, non-government­al groups and Crown corporatio­ns have also been granted intervener status.

Ottawa argues that authorizat­ion for the tax comes under the Constituti­on’s peace, order and good government clause. Establishi­ng minimum national standards on greenhouse gas emissions “is a matter of national concern that only Parliament can address.”

University of Alberta law professor Eric Adams said using the national concern argument to justify the law is a bit of a leap.

“The federal government made a gamble here that this was a case that was worth opening up that previously neglected box,” Adams said. “They’ve taken a bit of a risk here.”

He said he believes Alberta is unlikely to win. But if there’s a dissenting judge, that could bolster the province’s argument before the Supreme Court, which has already scheduled a January date for the Ontario and Saskatchew­an appeals.

“If they don’t win, they hope for a judgment from some judges that lends weight and credibilit­y, and maybe a new perspectiv­e to add to the dissenting opinions that have already been rendered in Saskatchew­an and Ontario,” said Adams.

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney scrapped a consumer carbon tax that the previous NDP government had brought in soon after his United Conservati­ves won the provincial election in April. The federal consumer carbon tax is to begin in Alberta starting Jan. 1.

 ??  ?? Jason Kenney
Jason Kenney

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