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Issue link: https://digital.lawtimesnews.com/i/712017
Page 8 August 8, 2016 • LAw times
www.lawtimesnews.com
Governments move on co-operative securities regulator
BY JIM MIDDLEMISS
For Law Times
B
ill Black is carrying a big
weight on his shoulders
these days.
Black, a Canadian busi-
nessman who is the former CEO
of Maritime Life Insurance and
sits on a number of corporate
boards , is chairman of the board
of directors of the Capital Mar-
kets Regulatory Authority, the
body tasked with creating the
Cooperative Capital Markets
Regulatory System.
"It's complicated, just the
number of pieces you have to get
together," Black says of the ef-
forts that are underway to create
the new securities regulator.
The undertaking comprises
the federal government, Ontario,
British Columbia, Saskatch-
ewan, PEI, New Brunswick and
the Yukon, and stems from the
Supreme Court of Canada's re-
buffing of the former Conserva-
tive government's effort to create
a national securities regulator.
The CCMRS is being designed
to streamline Canada's capital
markets regulatory framework
and reduce the byzantine system
of 13 market overseers.
One of Black's biggest chal-
lenges is that he's been the chair-
man of a board for more than a
year that, until recently, had yet
to have any members appointed
to it. This was holding up the
rollout.
However, in late July, the par-
ticipating governments finally
agreed on 14 new members to
the board. At the same time, it
extended the timeline for the
rollout to June 2018.
Originally, under the memo-
randum of understanding
signed by the participating par-
ties, the plan was to be oper-
ational by the fall of 2016 and the
board was going to be smaller.
"Agreeing on a set of nom-
inees can sometimes take quite
a bit of time. It's slower than
anybody was expecting," says
Black, who has been on the job
for just a little over a year now
and has given few interviews
over that time.
He agreed to speak to Law
Times to address concerns
raised by lawyers about the
length of time it is taking to roll
out the new regulator.
"Some of that has to do with
the fact there was a transition
in government," he says, adding
that "slowed things down."
As well, the legislation setting
things is still being developed.
The Capital Markets Stabil-
ity Act, the federal legislation
dealing with systemic risk, is
not complete, nor is the Cap-
ital Markets Act, the legislation
that will replace the provincial
securities acts of the partici-
pating provinces. Also missing
is the much-needed legislation
that sets up how the author-
ity will work and interact with
non-participating markets.
As well, the new federal gov-
ernment's support of the nation-
al regulator has been tepid at
best. In January, Finance Min-
ister Bill Morneau told reporters
in Halifax during pre-budget
consultation that "we do favour
a collaborative national secur-
ities regulator."
John Tuzyk, a lawyer at Blake
Cassels & Graydon LLP, pointed
out in a recent bulletin that the
federal government has done
little outside of that statement to
indicate public support.
It wasn't listed in the govern-
ment's top 25 priorities set out
in the minister's mandate letter
from Prime Minister Justin Tru-
deau, nor was there much men-
tion of it in the recent budget,
prompting many to question the
federal government's commit-
ment.
"There has been a dearth of
public statements by the federal
government and the minister of
Finance," said Tuzyk.
"They haven't tabled the
legislation which actually sets up
the authority."
"There is uncertainty, gen-
erally, about how and when the
new regime is going to be intro-
duced," says lawyer Barbara
Hendrickson, of BAX Securities.
Rima Ramchandani, a cap-
ital markets lawyer at Torys
LLP, adds, "It's going at a gla-
cial pace." She says it "felt to
us going into 2016 that things
have lost some momentum."
Neither have proponents been
out there selling the concept at
securities conferences.
In fairness to Black, he is not
a lawyer, which makes it difficult
for him to hit the hustings plug-
ging a system that the lawyers
have yet to finish designing.
As he notes, he is "not the
technical expert. Nobody want-
ed me in this role because I am
an expert."
Rather, that job will fall to
the chief regulator and his or
her deputies when appointed.
Hiring can proceed now that a
board is in place.
Until now, Black's focus has
been on operations and get-
ting systems and financing into
place. It's a massive undertaking
that will see the various partici-
pating provinces roll their cur-
rent operations into a single unit.
"That work has continued,"
he said. In fact, provinces have
already been compensated for
their participation, with the
prior government earmarking
$150 million for provinces who
joined.
Black notes that work con-
tinues on the two structural acts,
the CMA and the CMSA. On
that front, a revised consultation
draft of the CMSA was released
in May and the consultation
period closed in early July.
Lawyers say the federal gov-
ernment largely took lawyers'
concerns into consideration in
the latest draft.
As well, a blacklined draft of
the CMA was released in Janu-
ary, but it has yet to be passed by
the participating provinces.
"There is still a lot of con-
cern about the model provincial
legislation," says Tuzyk.
He notes there is a "signifi-
cant number of changes from
the Ontario legislation" related
to the Ontario Securities Act.
Missing is some of the ration-
ale for the changes, says Tuzyk,
which is normally explained
when Ontario makes a change
to its securities law. LT
FOCUS ON
CORPORATE/COMMERCIAL LAW
FOCUS
Barbara Hendrickson says 'there is
uncertainty about how and when the
new co-operative securities regulator
is going to be introduced.'
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