A‑600‑05
2007 FCA 106
City of Edmonton (Appellant)
v.
360Networks Canada Ltd./London Connect Inc., Aliant Telecom Inc., Bell Canada, Call‑Net Enterpri-ses Inc., Canadian Cable Telecommunications Association, City of Calgary, City of Ottawa, City of Toronto, City of Vancouver, Federation of Canadian Municipalities, Futureway Communications Inc., MTS Allstream Inc. (formerly Allstream Corpora-tion), Saskatchewan Telecommunications (SaskTel), and TELUS Communications Inc. (Respondents)
Indexed as: Edmonton (City) v. 360Networks Canada Ltd. (F.C.A.)
Federal Court of Appeal, Sexton, Evans and Sharlow JJ.A.—Toronto, December 13 and 14, 2006; Ottawa, March 13, 2007.
Telecommunications — Appeal from Canadian Radio‑ television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) decision determining method for calculating fee payable to appellant by MTS Allstream Inc. for use of light rail transit (LRT) lands to house its fibre optic transmission lines — Allstream’s predecessor entered into Municipal Access Agreement (MAA), LRT Lands Consent and Access Agreement (LRT Agreement) with appellant — Agreements giving Allstream right of access to highways, LRT lands to construct, maintain, operate communications network, transmission lines — When parties negotiated renewal of LRT Agreement, appellant refused to extend MAA to LRT lands — LRT Agreement never renewed, Allstream not removing facilities from LRT lands but applied to CRTC for access to LRT lands to maintain, operate transmission lines — (1) Word “constructing” in Telecommunications Act, ss. 42 to 44 not limited to physical acts of installing or building but also including keeping in place what has been constructed — Act, ss. 42 to 44 should be read as comprehensive, exclusive code for regulating carriers’ access to public places for purposes of constructing, maintaining, operating transmission lines — (2) CRTC’s conclusion LRT lands constituting “public place” not unreasonable, erroneous in law since broad interpretation of “other public place” fitting well with text, context, purposes of current Act — (3) Appellant not establishing CRTC unlawfully fettered exercise of discretion when ordering fee payable to Allstream be based on causal costs — Appeal dismissed.
Construction of Statutes — Telecommunications Act, ss. 42 to 44 — Appeal from Canadian Radio‑television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) decision determining method for calculating fee payable to appellant by MTS Allstream Inc. (Allstream) for use of light rail transit lands to house its fibre optic transmission lines — (1) Because statutes should be interpreted in manner facilitating effective implementation of legislative objectives, CRTC’s conclusion CRTC’s jurisdiction under Telecommunications Act, s. 43(4) including disputes over matters incidental to act of constructing fully justified — (2) Words “public place” in Act, ss. 43, 44 should not be restricted to place with essential characteristics of highway based on ejusdem generis presumption — Wording in current Act should be informed by contemporary setting even though language therein borrowed from historical antecedents.
This was an appeal from a Canadian Radio‑television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) decision determining the method for calculating the fee payable to the appellant by MTS Allstream Inc. (Allstream) for the use of light rail transit lands to house its fibre optic transmission lines. In 1997, Allstream’s predecessor entered into two agreements with the appellant. The first agreement, the Municipal Access Agreement (MAA), gave Allstream access to and the right to enter on and break up highway rights‑of‑way owned by the appellant to construct, maintain and operate a communications network to serve office buildings along the network for a fee of $20-a-metre for the use and occupation of highway rights‑of‑way in the downtown core. The MAA expired on May 29, 2002. The second agreement, the LRT (light rail transit) Lands Consent and Access Agreement (LRT Agreement), gave Allstream access to LRT lands, including tunnels, stations and pedways, to construct, maintain and operate transmission lines. The fee was based on both causal costs and an occupancy rent and was equivalent to the fee required by the appellant’s by‑law. In 2001, the appellant and Allstream agreed to all the terms and conditions of a new MAA, except for the definition of the lands to be included within it. The appellant refused to extend the MAA to the LRT lands claiming that they were not “a highway or other public place” and were not subject to the CRTC’s jurisdiction or to the causal costs principle (which limited the fee payable to any incremental causal costs) laid down in the CRTC’s 2001 decision involving another telecommunications carrier. Therefore, Allstream did not renew the initial LRT Agreement after its expiry and the appellant extended to LRT lands the by‑law imposing an occupancy fee on carriers who ran transmission lines on city property and increased the fee payable. Allstream did not remove its facilities from the LRT lands on expiry of the Agreement and the appellant did not enforce the provision requiring removal. However, in June 2003, it commenced proceedings in Alberta’s provincial court seeking compensation for Allstream’s continued use of LRT lands for its transmission lines. Thereafter, Allstream applied to the CRTC requesting access to the LRT lands to maintain and operate its transmission lines and for an order imposing conditions on its access in accordance with the causal costs principle.
Sections 42 to 44 of the Telecommunications Act (Act) create a qualified right for carriers to enter on public places to construct, maintain and operate their transmission lines and confer power on the CRTC to grant carriers permission to construct lines if municipal consent is not obtained. Subject to subsections 43(3) and 43(4), subsection 43(2) authorizes carriers to “enter on and break up any highway or other public place” for the purpose of “constructing, maintaining or operating” their lines and to “remain there for as long as is necessary for that purpose.” Also, if the carrier cannot obtain a municipality’s consent to construct a transmission line on a highway or other public place, it may apply to the CRTC for permission to construct it (subsection 43(4)). The issues were (1) whether the CRTC had legal authority to decide Allstream’s application; (2) whether the LRT lands constitute an “other public place” for the purpose of section 43 of the Act; and (3) whether the CRTC erred in law by limiting the fee payable by Allstream for the use of LRT lands to the appellant’s causal costs.
Held, the appeal should be dismissed.
(1) Sections 42 to 44 of the Act do not expressly cover the facts of the case. The word “constructing” is not limited to the physical acts of installing or building but also includes keeping in place what has been constructed. Since a right simply to construct, without more, would be of no value in ensuring the provision of telecommunications services to the public, the qualified statutory right to construct a transmission line includes the right to leave it in place after its installation. Since the dispute about acceptable terms on which Allstream’s lines could continue to remain on LRT lands could be described as a dispute about an aspect of Allstream’s qualified right to construct a transmission line, it was therefore within the CRTC’s jurisdiction under subsection 43(4). Such a conclusion was fully justified by the modern contextual and purposive approach to statutory interpretation. Statutes should, whenever possible, be interpreted in a manner that facilitates the effective implementation of legislative objectives. Section 44 provides municipalities with a forum in which to seek a broad range of redress for complaints about carriers’ construction, maintenance or operation of lines and should not be interpreted as limiting the CRTC’s jurisdiction to disputes about the methods of a carrier’s construction, maintenance or operation of lines. Sections 42 to 44 should be read as a comprehensive and exclusive code for regulating carriers’ access to public places for the purposes of constructing, maintaining and operating transmission lines.
(2) The words “any highway or other public place” are not defined in the Act. The words “public place” should not be narrowly construed on the basis of the ejusdem generis presumption so as to include only a place with the essential characteristics of a highway. Although much of the language in sections 43 and 44 was borrowed from older legislation, the interpretation of the phrase “other public place” should be informed more by its contemporary setting in the present Act than by its historical antecedents. The removal from the current Act of the word “square” which appeared in former legislation broadens the meaning of “other public place.” When a more general word or phrase follows a single word, the ejusdem generis presumption of statutory interpretation is of little assistance and a list of one does not normally establish a single genus. The objects of the Act include encouraging the efficient and orderly development of communications networks by providing a regulatory framework which is responsive to advances in telecommunications technology and to the introduction of a competitive business environment and market forces. While no interpretation provides a perfect fit with sections 42 to 44, a broader interpretation of “other public place” is a better fit with the text, context and purposes of the current Act, than “highway‑like” places. The CRTC’s application of multi‑factored criteria for determining that the LRT lands constitute a “public place” was not unreasonable and not erroneous in law.
(3) Under subsection 43(4) of the Act, the CRTC has power to impose conditions when a carrier cannot obtain municipal consent on terms acceptable to it. The appellant did not establish that the CRTC unlawfully fettered the exercise of its discretion or ignored factors that it was obliged to consider when it ordered that the fee payable to Allstream be based on causal costs. In its decision, the CRTC, inter alia, rejected as inappropriate the appellant’s proposal of a $20‑a‑metre occupancy fee based on its land‑value formula because the fee to which the appellant had agreed regarding the non‑LRT lands in the renegotiated MAA was substantially lower than the $20‑a‑metre which the appellant said was based on land value. Therefore, in these circumstances, its decision was not unreasonable and the appeal was dismissed.
statutes and regulations judicially
considered
Railway Act (The), S.C. 1888, c. 29, s. 90 (as am. by S.C. 1899, c. 37, s. 1).
Telecommunications Act, S.C. 1993, c. 38, ss. 7, 42, 43 (as am. by S.C. 1999, c. 31, s. 204(F)), 44, 46 (as am. by S.C. 2004, c. 25, s. 177), 64(1).
cases judicially considered
applied:
Barrie Public Utilities v. Canadian Cable Television Assn., [2003] 1 S.C.R. 476; (2003), 225 D.L.R. (4th) 206; 49 Admin. L.R. (3d) 161; 204 N.R. 1; Bell Canada v. Canada (Canadian Radio‑television and Telecommu-nications Commission), [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1722; (1989), 60 D.L.R. (4th) 682; 38 Admin. L.R. 1; 97 N.R. 15.
distinguished:
Allstream Corp. v. Bell Canada (2005), 338 N.R. 177; 2005 FCA 247.
considered:
Ledcor/Vancouver—Construction, operation and main-tenance of transmission lines in Vancouver, Decision CRTC 2001‑23, January 25, 2001.
referred to:
Federation of Canadian Municipalities v. AT&T Canada Corp., [2003] 3 F.C. 379; (2002), 34 M.P.L.R. (3d) 221; 299 N.R. 165; 2002 FCA 500; leave to appeal to S.C.C. refused, [2003] 2 S.C.R. vi; Chieu v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2002] 1 S.C.R. 84; (2002), 208 D.L.R. (4th) 107; 37 Admin.L.R. (3d) 252; 18 Imm. L.R. (3d) 93; 280 N.R. 268; Alberta Government Telephones v. Canada (Canadian Radio‑television and Telecommunications Commission), [1989] 2 S.C.R. 225; [1989] 5 W.W.R. 385; (1989), 26 C.P.R. (3d) 289; 98 N.R. 161; Ferguson v. MacLean, [1930] S.C.R. 630; [1931] 1 D.L.R. 61.
APPEAL from a Canadian Radio‑television and Telecommunications Commission decision (Telecom Decision CRTC 2005‑36, June 17, 2005) determining the method for calculating the fee payable to the appellant by MTS Allstream Inc. for the use of light rail transit lands to house its fibre optic transmission lines. Appeal dismissed.
appearances:
Andrew J. Roman for appellant.
Patsy J. Scheer for respondent City of Vancouver.
Kirsten Franz for respondent City of Toronto.
Michael S. Koch and Lauren Cappell for respondent MTS Allstream Inc.
Thomas G. Heintzman, Q.C. for respondents Bell Canada, Aliant Telecom Inc., TELUS Communica-tions Inc. and Canadian Cable Telecommunications Association.
Leslie J. F. Milton for respondent CRTC.
No one appearing for respondents 360Networks Canada Ltd./London Connect Inc., Call‑Net Enterprises Inc., City of Calgary, City of Ottawa, Federation of Canadian Municipalities, Futureway Communications Inc. and Saskatchewan Telecommunications (SaskTel).
solicitors of record:
Miller Thompson LLP, Toronto, for appellant.
City of Vancouver, Vancouver, for respondent City of Vancouver.
City of Toronto, Toronto, for respondent City of Toronto.
Goodmans LLP, Toronto, for respondent MTS Allstream Inc.
McCarthy Tétrault LLP, Toronto, for respondents Bell Canada, Aliant Telecom Inc., TELUS Communications Inc., Canadian Cable Telecommunications Association.
Johnston & Buchan LLP, Ottawa, for respondent CRTC.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
Evans J.A.:
A. INTRODUCTION
[1]This is an appeal by the City of Edmonton from a decision of the Canadian Radio‑television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), dated June 17, 2005 (Telecom Decision CRTC 2005‑36 [Part VII Application by Allstream Corp. seeking access to Light Rail Transit (LRT) lands in the City of Edmonton]). In this decision, the CRTC determined the method for calculating the fee payable to Edmonton by MTS Allstream Inc. (Allstream), a telecommunications carrier, for the use of light rail transit (LRT) lands to house its fibre optic transmission lines. This appeal raises three questions of principle.
[2]The first is whether a carrier may apply to the CRTC for permission to enter on municipal land for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating a transmission line after it has been installed with the consent of the municipality. Edmonton says that no provision of the Telecommunications Act, S.C. 1993, c. 38 (Act) confers jurisdiction on the CRTC to entertain such an application from a carrier. In contrast, the Act expressly authorizes the CRTC to entertain applications from municipalities seeking redress against the conduct of carriers.
[3]The second question concerns the interpretation of the words “highway or other public place” [emphasis added] in section 43 [as am. by S.C. 1999, c. 31, s. 204(F)] of the Act. This phrase defines the lands that are subject to carriers right of entry for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating transmission lines. Edmonton argues that, because of its long legislative history in the Act’s predecessors, the phrase, “other public place”, should be interpreted narrowly to mean places with the essential characteristics of a highway. It says that the CRTC committed an error of law when it adopted a broader approach to defining “public place” and concluded that the inside of buildings owned by a municipality and the walls of LRT tunnels constituted a “public place”.
[4]The third is whether the CRTC abused its discretion to impose conditions on the grant of permission when, relying on the methodology established in Ledcor/Vancouver—Construction, opera-tion and maintenance of transmission lines in Vancouver, Decision CRTC 2001‑23 (Ledcor), it imposed a fee calculated on the basis of the costs caused by the presence of Allstream’s lines on municipal land. Edmonton says that, as the owner of the land, it is entitled to an occupancy rent based on fair market value.
[5]In my opinion, the CRTC committed no reviewable error in reaching its decision. Accordingly, I would dismiss Edmonton’s appeal.
B. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
[6]In 1997, Allstream’s predecessor (which I shall also refer to in these reasons as Allstream) entered into two agreements with Edmonton. First, the Municipal Access Agreement (MAA), gave Allstream access to, and the right to enter on and break up, highway rights-of-way owned by Edmonton, in order to construct, maintain and operate a communications network to serve office buildings along or adjacent to the network.
[7]The MAA provided that Allstream would pay a fee of $20-a-metre for the use and occupation of highway rights-of-way in the downtown core. This was the fee that an Edmonton by-law required carriers to pay. The MAA expired on May 29, 2002.
[8]Second, the LRT Agreement [LRT Lands Consent and Access Agreement] gave Allstream access to LRT lands for similar purposes; it defined the LRT lands as including LRT tunnels, stations, and attached pedways and stairwells. The parties negotiated a fee formula for the LRT lands which took into account both causal costs and an occupancy rent. Although the by-law fixing the fee at $20-a-metre did not apply to the LRT lands, Edmonton regarded the fee in the LRT Agreement as substantially equivalent to that contained in the by-law.
[9]Pursuant to the LRT Agreement, Allstream installed approximately 5,000 metres of fibre optic transmission lines, which were housed in metal pipes anchored to the walls of the LRT tunnels, LRT stations and pedways. This represented about 20% of Allstream’s network in Edmonton. The Agreement provided that Allstream would remove its facilities on the expiry of the Agreement, that is, March 27, 2002, unless Allstream exercised its option to extend it, with a mechanism for calculating the fees payable to Edmonton.
[10]From Edmonton’s point of view, an advantage of the LRT Agreement was that transmission lines could be installed on LRT lands without the disruption to traffic caused when highways are dug up for this purpose. The advantages of the Agreement for Allstream are that access to the LRT tunnels is easy and inexpensive, and the lines are protected from the weather, considerations which make the LRT lands particularly valuable. However, there was no evidence that use of the LRT lands was necessary to enable Allstream to serve any of its customers.
[11]In January 2001, just over a year before the LRT Agreement was due to expire, the CRTC issued an important decision in a dispute between the City of Vancouver and Ledcor, another telecommunications carrier, respecting the conditions on which it would be granted access to certain street crossings in Vancouver.
[12]The CRTC determined that the fee payable by Ledcor should be limited to any incremental causal costs incurred by Vancouver as a result of the grant of access to Ledcor. The CRTC stated in its reasons that, while its decision was based on the particular facts of the case, the causal costs principle would assist municipalities and carriers in negotiating the terms on which municipal consent would be given for carriers to construct, maintain and operate transmission lines on municipal property. This Court dismissed an appeal from the decision: Federation of Canadian Municipalities v. AT&T Canada Corp., [2003] 3 F.C. 379 (C.A.), leave to appeal to S.C.C. refused, [2003] 2 S.C.R. vi (September 4, 2003).
[13]In September 2001, Edmonton and Allstream started negotiations for an extension of the agreements. They ultimately agreed to all the terms and conditions of a new MAA, consistent with the Ledcor principles, except for the definition of the lands to be included within it. Edmonton refused to extend the MAA to the LRT lands on the ground that they were not “a highway or other public place”, and the fees payable for their use were therefore not subject to the jurisdiction of the CRTC or to the causal costs principle applied in Ledcor.
[14]On June 18, 2002, several months after the initial term of the LRT Agreement had expired, Allstream advised Edmonton that it was not going to exercise its option to renew on the ground that the fees payable under the renewal clause contravened the causal costs principle in Ledcor. On the same day, Edmonton passed a resolution extending to LRT lands the by-law imposing an occupancy fee on carriers who ran transmission lines on city property and increasing the fee payable.
[15]Despite the expiry and non‑renewal of the LRT Agreement, Allstream did not remove its facilities from the LRT lands as required by the Agreement. Edmonton took no steps to enforce this provision because of the disruptive effect that this would have on Allstream’s business and residential customers. Allstream continued to keep its lines in place and to have access to the LRT lands to operate and maintain its equipment, for which, in the absence of an agreement, it paid no fee.
[16]On June 23, 2003, Edmonton commenced proceedings in the Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench to recover the amount which it claimed that Allstream owed for continuing to keep its facilities on, and for having access to, the LRT lands after the LRT Agreement had expired.
[17]On July 9, 2003, Allstream made an application to the CRTC under Part VII of the Act, requesting that it be granted access to the LRT lands for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating transmission lines, and for an order imposing conditions on its access in accordance with the causal costs principle established in Ledcor.
C. DECISION OF THE CRTC
[18]After fully describing the written submissions made to it by the various parties, the CRTC stated that the issue raised by Allstream was one of ongoing access to the LRT lands. It analysed the parties’ arguments as follows.
[19]First, Edmonton argued that sections 42 to 44 of the Act confer jurisdiction on the CRTC only to determine an application by a carrier to construct transmission lines on municipal property. Since Allstream had already constructed lines pursuant to the LRT Agreement, the CRTC had no jurisdiction over Allstream’s application to resolve a dispute over the fee payable for the lines to remain in place and for access to maintain and operate them. Edmonton had not threatened to remove the transmission lines from the LRT lands.
[20]The CRTC rejected this argument, on the ground that such a narrow interpretation of the provisions would lead to “absurd results”: at paragraph 62. It would prevent the CRTC from entertaining an application by a carrier in the absence of any action by the municipality to have the lines removed. However, if a carrier was ordered to remove its lines, it could make an application to the CRTC for permission to reconstruct the very same lines that it had been ordered to remove.
[21]Second, Edmonton submitted that the CRTC had no jurisdiction to grant access and impose conditions because the LRT lands did not constitute a “highway or other public place” for the purpose of the Act. The CRTC agreed that, since members of the public could not travel in their own vehicles through the LRT tunnels, they were not a “highway”. However, it rejected Edmonton’s argument that “other public place” should be interpreted ejusdem generis, on the grounds that a list of one “highway” does not establish a genus, and that the presence of the word “other” indicates that Parliament intended “public place” to embrace types of property different from a highway.
[22]In the absence of a statutory definition, the CRTC formulated criteria for determining whether a given property was a “public place” for the purpose of sections 42 to 44 of the Act: whether the lands were owned by a public body and used for public purposes and the degree of public access to them. Applying these criteria to the facts, the CRTC concluded that the LRT lands were a “public place” and that it had jurisdiction to grant Allstream access to them, subject to conditions.
[23]Third, the CRTC held that it would be inappropriate to impose the occupancy fee of $20-a-metre proposed by Edmonton on the basis of its land-value formula. The CRTC noted that the fee agreed to by the parties in the renegotiated MAA for access to municipal lands, other than the LRT lands, was consistent with the causal costs principle in Ledcor and was significantly less than $20-a-metre.
[24]Because Edmonton had already incurred the costs of constructing the tunnels, stations and pedways when it built them for the purpose of the LRT, these costs were not attributable to Allstream’s constructing, maintaining and operating its transmission lines on LRT lands. The CRTC ordered the parties to negotiate a fee structure based on the Ledcor causal costs principle, by calculating the future incremental costs to Edmonton of Allstream’s access to the LRT lands for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating transmission lines.
D. LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK
[25]Sections 42 to 44 of the Telecommunications Act create a qualified right for carriers to enter on public places in order to construct, maintain and operate their transmission lines. These provisions also confer power on the CRTC to grant carriers permission to construct lines, if they cannot obtain municipal consent on terms acceptable to them, and to resolve complaints by municipalities about carriers.
[26]Subsection 42(1) confers wide powers on the CRTC “in the exercise of its powers under this Act”. This provision is ancillary to powers conferred on the CRTC by other statutory provisions rather than the grant of an independent jurisdiction.
42. (1) Subject to any contrary provision in any Act other than this Act or any special Act, the Commission may, by order, in the exercise of its powers under this Act or any special Act, require or permit any telecommunications facilities to be provided, constructed, installed, altered, moved, operated, used, repaired or maintained or any property to be acquired or any system or method to be adopted, by any person interested in or affected by the order, and at or within such time, subject to such conditions as to compensation or otherwise and under such supervision as the Commission determines to be just and expedient.
[27]Subsection 43(2) authorizes carriers to “enter on and break up any highway or other public place” for the purpose of “constructing, maintaining or operating” [emphasis added] their lines and to “remain there for as long as is necessary for that purpose”.
43. (1) . . .
(2) Subject to subsections (3) and (4) and section 44, a Canadian carrier or distribution undertaking may enter on and break up any highway or other public place for the purpose of constructing, maintaining or operating its transmission lines and may remain there for as long as is necessary for that purpose, but shall not unduly interfere with the public use and enjoyment of the highway or other public place.
[28]The exercise of the rights created by subsection 43(2) is subject to subsections (3) and (4). Subsection 43(3) provides that no carrier may construct a transmission line “on, over, under or along a highway or other public place” without the consent of the municipality or other public body with jurisdiction over it.
43. . . .
(3) No Canadian carrier or distribution undertaking shall construct a transmission line on, over, under or along a highway or other public place without the consent of the municipality or other public authority having jurisdiction over the highway or other public place.
[29]When a carrier cannot obtain a municipality’s consent “on terms acceptable to it” “to construct a transmission line on . . . a highway or other public place” [emphasis added], it may apply to the CRTC for permission to construct it. The CRTC has an unqualified power to grant the permission “subject to any conditions that the Commission determines”.
43. . . .
(4) Where a Canadian carrier or distribution undertaking cannot, on terms acceptable to it, obtain the consent of the municipality or other public authority to construct a transmission line, the carrier or distribution undertaking may apply to the Commission for permission to construct it and the Commission may, having due regard to the use and enjoyment of the highway or other public place by others, grant the permission subject to any conditions that the Commission determines.
[30]Section 44 enables the CRTC, “on application by a municipality or other public authority” [emphasis added], to order carriers to “bury or alter the route of any transmission line”, actual or proposed, or “prohibit the construction, maintenance or operation” of such a line, “except as directed by the Commission.”
44. On application by a municipality or other public authority, the Commission may
(a) order a Canadian carrier or distribution undertaking, subject to any conditions that the Commission determines, to bury or alter the route of any transmission line situated or proposed to be situated within the jurisdiction of the municipality or public authority; or
(b) prohibit the construction, maintenance or operation by a Canadian carrier or distribution undertaking of any such transmission line except as directed by the Commission.
E. ISSUES AND ANALAYSIS
Issue 1: Did the CRTC have legal authority to decide Allstream’s application?
[31]Edmonton says that the dispute between it and Allstream is over the fee to be paid for the transmission lines to remain on the LRT lands and for Allstream’s entry on the lands for the purpose of maintaining and operating the lines. Counsel for Edmonton submitted that the CRTC has jurisdiction to permit a carrier to construct a line on municipal land when it cannot obtain the consent of the municipality on terms acceptable to it, but it does not have jurisdiction to resolve disputes about the post‑construction use of municipal land.
[32]The present case, counsel argues, does not involve a dispute about consent to construct a transmission line because Allstream has already constructed its lines pursuant to the LRT Agreement. Rather, it is a dispute about the occupancy fee payable for the post‑construction use of LRT lands and must be resolved according to the law of contract by the courts of the province, not the CRTC.
(i) Standard of review
[33]It was not seriously disputed that correctness is the standard of review applicable to the CRTC’s decision that it could determine Allstream’s application and grant it permission to use the LRT lands, subject to the payment of a fee. I agree.
[34]The question in dispute is one of statutory interpretation. In Barrie Public Utilities v. Canadian Cable Television Assn., [2003] 1 S.C.R. 476, it was held that the CRTC’s interpretation of the phrase “supporting structure of a transmission line” in the Telecommuni-cations Act was not within the specialized expertise of the CRTC and was reviewable for correctness. Writing on behalf of the majority of the Court, Gonthier J. chose the correctness standard because the question at issue was one of statutory interpretation, “a purely legal question” (at paragraph 16), which was “of general importance to the telecommunications and electricity industries” (at paragraph 18), and did not engage [at paragraph 16]:
. . . the CRTC’s special expertise in the regulation and supervision of Canadian broadcasting and telecommuni-cations. This is not a question of telecommunications policy, or one which requires an understanding of technical language.
[35]This reasoning is equally applicable to the interpretation of the Act to determine if the CRTC had legal authority to hear and determine Allstream’s application. If, as the parties agree, this issue concerns the CRTC’s “jurisdiction,” that is another reason for concluding that the standard of review is correctness: Chieu v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigra-tion), [2002] 1 S.C.R. 84, at paragraph 24.
(ii) The statutory scheme
[36]The facts of the case must be kept firmly in mind before the statutory scheme is applied. From March 27, 1997 until March 27, 2002, Allstream entered on the LRT lands for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating transmission lines pursuant to the LRT Agreement. The Agreement was not renewed because Allstream refused to agree to Edmonton’s claim to an occupancy fee that was much higher than its causal costs.
[37]The absence of any contract with Edmonton appears to have had no adverse effect on Allstream. Its lines remain in place and its employees continue to enter on the LRT lands in order to maintain them. Indeed, Allstream is better off because it is not paying a fee to Edmonton.
[38]True, Allstream is in breach of its contractual obligation to remove its facilities on the expiry and non‑renewal of the LRT Agreement. However, Edmonton says that it has no intention of enforcing its right because requiring removal is not practicable. Instead, it has instituted an action in Alberta’s Court of Queen’s Bench seeking compensation for Allstream’s continued use of the LRT lands for its transmission lines without Edmonton’s consent.
[39]It is clear that sections 42 to 44 of the Act do not expressly cover these facts. Subsection 43(2) grants carriers the right to enter on “any highway or other public place for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating its transmission lines”, subject to obtaining municipal consent (subsection 43(3)). However, no municipal consent appears to be necessary to enable a carrier to enter on land for the purpose of maintaining or operating a transmission line, even though Allstream’s application sought, and the CRTC’s decision granted, permission to enter for the purposes of constructing, maintaining and operating transmission lines. Similarly, a municipality may not interfere with a carrier when entering on municipal lands for the purpose of maintaining and operating its lines.
[40]If the carrier cannot obtain municipal consent to construct a line on acceptable terms, it may apply to the CRTC for the necessary permission. In my opinion, “constructing” is not limited to the physical acts of installing or building but also includes keeping in place what has been constructed. A right simply to construct, without more, would be of no value in ensuring the provision of telecommunications services to the public, since the land owner could remove the lines the day after they were installed. Hence, the qualified statutory right to construct a transmission line includes the right to leave it in place after its installation.
[41]Because it is not necessary for a carrier to enter on lands for the purpose of keeping transmissions lines in place, this is not included in the words “enter on and break up . . . for the purpose of . . . maintaining or operating” lines. Rather, keeping the lines in place is better seen as integral to constructing them.
[42]In the present case, the lines were constructed and have remained in place pursuant to the LRT Agreement granting Allstream the “non exclusive right and licence to use . . . LRT lands for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating a conduit for fibre optic transmission cables.” On the expiry of the Agreement, the parties were unable to agree on terms acceptable to Allstream on which the lines continued to remain on the LRT lands and Allstream had access for the purpose for maintaining and operating them. In my opinion, this can appropriately be described as a dispute about an aspect of Allstream’s qualified right to construct a transmission line and is therefore within the jurisdiction of the CRTC under subsection 43(4) if the carrier has been unable to obtain the consent of the municipality on terms acceptable to it.
[43]In exercising its jurisdiction under 43(4) with respect to Allstream’s application, the CRTC has broad power under subsection 42(1) to deal with issues inextricably connected with the construction of the transmission lines, including granting permission to enter on LRT lands for the purpose of maintaining and operating them, “subject to such conditions as to compensation or otherwise” as it considers “just and expedient”.
[44]Concluding that the CRTC’s jurisdiction under subsection 43(4) includes disputes over matters necessarily incidental to the act of constructing is, in my opinion, fully justified by the modern contextual and purposive approach to statutory interpretation. Whenever possible, statutes should be interpreted in a manner that facilitates the effective implementation of legislative objectives. Thus, writing for the Court, Gonthier J. said in Bell Canada v. Canada (Canadian Radio‑television and Telecommunications Commission), [1989] 1 S.C. R. 1722, at page 1756:
The powers of any administrative tribunal must of course be stated in its enabling statute but they may also exist by necessary implication from the wording of the act, its structure and its purpose. Although courts must refrain from unduly broadening the powers of such regulatory authorities through judicial law‑making, they must also avoid sterilizing these powers through overly technical interpretations of enabling statutes.
[45]The objects of the Telecommunications Act include the following:
7. It is hereby affirmed that telecommunications performs an essential role in the maintenance of Canada’s identity and sovereignty and that the Canadian telecommunications policy has as its objectives
(a) to facilitate the orderly development throughout Canada of a telecommunications system that serves to safeguard, enrich and strengthen the social and economic fabric of Canada and its regions;
(b) to render reliable and affordable telecommunications services of high quality accessible to Canadians in both urban and rural areas in all regions of Canada;
(c) to enhance the efficiency and competitiveness, at the national and international levels, of Canadian telecommunications;
. . .
(f) to foster increased reliance on market forces for the provision of telecommunications services and to ensure that regulation, where required, is efficient and effective;
. . .
(h) to respond to the economic and social requirements of users of telecommunications services; and
[46]The regulation of telecommunications is within exclusive federal legislative authority: Alberta Govern-ment Telephones v. Canada (Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission), [1989] 2 S.C.R. 225, at pages 256‑268. In order to attain the statutory objects, the Act should be interpreted as creating a comprehensive regulatory scheme. In the context of the present dispute, it is relevant that the speed of technological development, and the enhanced reliance on market forces in the provision of telecommunications, have made parties reluctant to enter into long‑term arrangements, which were more common in earlier times when the predecessors of what are now sections 42 to 44 were enacted.
[47]In my opinion, Edmonton’s argument that the CRTC has no jurisdiction to resolve disputes, on the application of a carrier, which arise after a transmission line has been constructed, is based on an unduly narrow interpretation of the Act. This is at odds with the administration of the Act in a manner that attains the statutory objects of, among other things, encouraging the orderly development of telecommunications networks in Canada.
[48]First, as the CRTC pointed out in its reasons for decision, it would be absurd to interpret the Act as requiring that Edmonton remove, or threaten to remove, existing transmission lines before Allstream could apply to the CRTC under subsection 43(4) for permission to enter on the LRT lands for the purpose of constructing the lines that had just been removed. In any event, as Edmonton recognized, it could not realistically order the removal of the lines, despite Allstream’s contractual obligation to remove them on the expiry of the LRT Agreement.
[49]Second, paragraph 44(b) confers jurisdiction on the CRTC, on the application of a municipality or other public authority, to prohibit the construction, maintenance or operation of a transmission line, except as the CRTC may direct. Counsel for Edmonton argued that the broad words of this provision should be read down so as to limit it to disputes about the methods of a carrier’s construction, maintenance or operation of lines.
[50]I see no justification for reading in this limitation. Section 44 provides municipalities with a forum in which to seek a broad range of redress for complaints about carriers’ construction, maintenance or operation of lines. If Edmonton had chosen to apply under paragraph 44(b), the CRTC would have had jurisdiction to provide a comprehensive solution to its dispute with Allstream, including the basis for the calculation of a fee. To interpret subsection 43(4) as enabling the CRTC to resolve the present dispute on the application of the carrier would thus not empower the CRTC to deal with a subject‑matter otherwise outside its authority.
[51]In contrast, Edmonton’s interpretation of the statutory scheme would allow municipalities to prevent the CRTC’s resolution of such disputes by refusing to avail themselves of the method of redress specifically provided by Parliament in paragraph 44(b) of the Act. Such an approach would fragment the comprehensiveness of the federal regulatory scheme by encouraging resort to the courts, as happened here, and lead to a patchwork approach to telecommunications issues.
[52]Allstream’s application under subsection 43(4) claimed that it had been unable to obtain access “for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating” transmission lines on LRT lands on terms acceptable to it. The CRTC ordered the parties to negotiate a fee structure, based on causal costs, for Allstream to have access to LRT lands for the purposes of “constructing, maintaining and operating transmission lines”, at paragraph 113. Sections 42 to 44 should be read as a comprehensive and exclusive code for regulating carriers’ access to public places for the purposes of constructing, maintaining and operating transmission lines.
Issue 2: Do the LRT lands constitute an “other public place” for the purpose of section 43?
[53]Edmonton’s contention that the LRT lands are not an “other public place” for the purpose of sections 42 to 44 was the principal reason for its refusal to extend the renegotiated MAA to the LRT lands. The requirement that the dispute concern a “public place” limits the reach of the jurisdiction of the CRTC under subsection 43(4). The scope of the phrase has important ramifications for other municipalities as well.
(i) Standard of review
[54]This issue, too, involves statutory interpretation, namely, whether “other public place” is limited to a place possessing the essential characteristics of a highway and the application of that phrase, properly interpreted, to the facts.
[55]It was argued that Barrie Utilities is distinguishable on the ground that a constitutional issue concerning the CRTC’s jurisdiction over the power poles of provincially regulated electric power companies may have cast its shadow over the interpretation of the disputed statutory provision. In the present case, however, the interpretation of “other public place” does not raise even a hint of a constitutional question.
[56]In my opinion, in view of the bases of Gonthier J.’s decision in Barrie Public Utilities on the standard of review applicable to the CRTC’s interpretation of the provisions of the Telecommunications Act in issue in that case, this distinction does not warrant the selection of a less probing standard of review in the present case.
[57]Thus, the CRTC will have erred in law if its interpretation of the words “other public place” is not correct. However, the CRTC’s application of the statutory phrase to the facts is not reviewable for correctness because it is a question of mixed fact and law, and the Court’s appellate jurisdiction over decisions of the CRTC is limited to questions of law and jurisdiction (subsection 64(1)). An unreasonable application of the statutory provision to the facts would constitute an error of law. Since Parliament has provided a right of appeal on questions of law, reasonableness simpliciter is the standard appropriate for reviewing the CRTC’s application of the statute to the facts.
(ii) Interpretation
[58]The words “any highway or other public place” are not defined in the Act. Edmonton argues that, on the basis of the ejusdem generis presumption of statutory interpretation, “public place” should be narrowly construed so as to include only a place with the essential characteristics of a highway, namely, that members of the public have access to it and can travel on it in their own vehicles.
[59]The LRT lands do not have this latter characteristic since the public can only travel through the tunnels in an LRT vehicle. When pressed for examples of what would constitute a “public place” on this definition, counsel suggested the roadway in front of a strip mall adjacent to a highway where customers park their cars.
[60]The interpretative problem seems to result from the fact that much of the language of sections 43 and 44 has been borrowed from older legislation, enacted when the transmission lines principally contemplated were telephone or telegraph wires strung on poles along roads or electricity cables buried under roads. Hence, the corresponding phrase in The Railway Act, starting in 1899 [S.C. 1888, c. 29, s. 90 (as am. by S.C. 1899, c. 37, s. 1)], was “highway, square or public place” [emphasis added]. When used as a third item after “highway” and “square”, the meaning of “public place” may well have been coloured by the presence of these more precise words and interpreted ejusdem generis.
[61]However, the interpretation of the phrase “other public place” should be informed more by its contemporary setting in the present Telecommunications Act, than by its historical antecedents. Thus, the removal of “square” from the current Act seems to me to broaden the meaning of “other public place”. When a more general word or phrase follows a single word, the ejusdem generis presumption of statutory interpretation is of little assistance. A list of one does not normally establish a single genus: Ferguson v. MacLean, [1930] S.C.R. 630, at page 653.
[62]Although counsel could not point to any statutory purpose that would support limiting “other public place” to a “highway‑like” place, they noted that a significant contextual consideration was that the statutory provisions deal with the grant of permission for carriers to “enter on and break up” [emphasis added] a highway or other public place. They argued that these words were not apposite for describing access to buildings, such as the LRT tunnels, stations and pedways: in these contexts, “enter in” would be more apt than “enter on”, and “break up” would be largely irrelevant.
[63]The words “enter on and break up” are time‑honoured and are derived from earlier legislation governing rights of access for regulated carriers. The verbs “enter”, “break up” and “open” have appeared in the Railway Act since 1899. Their retention in the current legislative scheme should not be taken as an indication that Parliament intended the words “other public place” to have a narrower meaning than that indicated by their ordinary usage and the objects of the current Act.
[64]Sections 42 to 44 of the Act appear to have been drafted, in part at least, by “cut and paste.” The history of statutory language should not determine the meaning of words or phrases when used in a relatively new Act if this would thwart the effective administration of the legislation. As already noted, the objects of the Telecommunications Act include encouraging the efficient and orderly development of communications networks by providing a regulatory framework which is responsive to advances in telecommunications technology and to the introduction of a competitive business environment and market forces.
[65]Counsel supporting Edmonton’s position could suggest no reason, consistent with the current legislative scheme, for reading down “other public place” to mean places that members of the public can access and travel on in their own vehicles. However, it was argued that the CRTC’s interpretation was so broad as to make “highway” redundant, and there is a presumption that Parliament intends each word in a statute to have a function.
[66]In my opinion, no interpretation provides a perfect fit with sections 42 to 44, and the phrases that they contain, in large part because they have been transplanted in modified form from earlier legislation. Nonetheless, I am satisfied that a broader interpretation of “other public place” is a better fit with the text, context and purposes of the current Act than that advanced by Edmonton. In short, the phrase is not narrowly confined to “highway‑like” places.
[67]The CRTC did not purport to provide a succinct, dictionary definition of the phrase. Rather, it identified criteria for determining whether a particular location was an “other public place” for the purpose of the Act. These include: ownership of the land, the purpose for which it is used, and the degree of access to it. In my opinion, this multi‑factored approach embodies the correct approach to the interpretation of “other public place” in the Act, by enabling the CRTC to be attentive to the facts of individual cases, as well as to the current statutory objects of the present regulatory scheme.
(iii) Application
[68]Applying these criteria to the facts, the CRTC noted that the LRT lands were owned by Edmonton, a public body, and were used for the public purpose of providing transportation to paying passengers. Further, the public has relatively broad access to the lands in question for the purpose of travelling on the vehicles operated by the LRT.
[69]In my view, on the basis of these criteria, the CRTC’s conclusion that the LRT lands constitute a “public place” is not unreasonable and hence is not erroneous in law.
Issue 3: Did the CRTC err in law by limiting the fee payable by Allstream for the use of LRT lands to Edmonton’s causal costs?
(i) Standard of review
[70]The CRTC has power under subsection 43(4) to impose conditions when a carrier cannot obtain municipal consent on terms acceptable to it:
43. . . .
(4) . . . the Commission may, having due regard to the use and enjoyment of the highway or other public place by others, grant the permission subject to any conditions that the Commission determines. [Emphasis added.]
[71]The CRTC has greater expertise than the Court in designing the conditions, including the setting of fees, to which permission will be subject. This, together with the breadth of the statutory discretion conferred, indicates that a deferential standard is appropriate when the Court is reviewing a decision made under subsection 43(4). However, the presence of a limited right of appeal, and the fact that the decision, while discretionary, is more adjudicative than polycentric, suggests that Parliament did not intend the most deferential standard of review to apply.
[72]Hence, the CRTC will have erred in law if its exercise of discretion under subsection 43(4) does not satisfy the reasonableness simpliciter standard: semble, Federation of Canadian Municipalities v. AT&T Canada Corp., at paragraph 30.
[73]In Allstream Corp. v. Bell Canada (2005), 338 N.R. 177 (F.C.A.), at paragraph 31, this Court applied the more deferential standard of patent unreasonableness to the CRTC’s exercise of discretion in approving tariffs submitted by Bell for the provision of fibre optical services to customers. That case is distinguishable from ours, however, on the ground that rate‑setting decisions are more polycentric, and of broader application, than adjudicative. In any event, nothing turns on which unreasonableness standard applies to the CRTC’s exercise of discretion in this case.
(ii) Was the imposition of a costs‑based occupancy fee unreasonable?
[74]In view of the breadth of the CRTC’s discretion under subsection 43(4) and the deferential standard of review appropriate to its exercise, the appellant faces a formidable task to establish that the CRTC committed a reviewable error.
[75]Counsel developed two principal lines of attack on this aspect of the CRTC’s decision. The essence of the first was that it was fundamentally unfair that Allstream and its customers should be granted the use of the LRT lands for what was likely to be a very small sum because the LRT tunnels and stations had already been built for the transit system.
[76]The argument was that Parliament could not possibly have intended the CRTC to permit a carrier to interfere with the property rights of a municipality without paying proper compensation. In my view, however, when considered in the context of the regulatory scheme established by the Act, this argument falls short of demonstrating that the CRTC’s decision was unreasonable.
[77]First, whatever the abstract “fairness” of this decision may be, it is not the function of the Court to substitute its view of the merits for that of the CRTC. In this context, “fairness” is a subjective and judicially unmanageable standard. Nonetheless, I would note that Edmonton agreed to a fee schedule based on causal costs when it renegotiated the MAA respecting municipal lands, other than the LRT lands.
[78]Second, by granting to carriers a conditional right to enter on and break up a highway or other public place for the purpose of constructing, maintaining or operating transmission lines, subsection 43(2) of the Act explicitly limits the property rights of municipalities and other public authorities in order to ensure the provision to the public of telecommunications services.
[79]Section 46 [as am. by S.C. 2004, c. 25, s. 177] of the Act provides a discrete process for enabling a carrier to expropriate land or an interest in land for the purpose of constructing transmission lines, including the payment of fair market value for the land expropriated. It was not argued that the CRTC’s decision in this case was an expropriation of an interest in Edmonton’s land.
[80]Third, while the CRTC’s decision was undoubtedly beneficial to Allstream, the benefit was not at the expense of the taxpayers of Edmonton, in the sense that Allstream was required to compensate Edmonton for any costs attributable to Allstream’s constructing, maintaining or operating the transmission lines on the LRT lands.
[81]Indeed, the creation of a state‑of‑the‑art, competitively priced telecommunications network to serve downtown Edmonton is likely to produce indirect benefits for the city and its residents through, for example, an increase in municipal revenues and employment opportunities, as a result of the retention, expansion and attraction of businesses.
[82]The second line of attack on the decision focused on the CRTC’s use of its earlier decision in Ledcor, where the CRTC first promulgated “causal costs” as the basis on which a carrier was to pay for access. In particular, it was argued, the CRTC has elevated causal costs to the status of a general principle, despite the warning of this Court in Federation of Canadian Municipalities v. AT&T Canada Corp., at paragraph 21, that the principles elaborated by the CRTC in Ledcor were not binding on anyone.
[83]In my view, however, Edmonton has not established that, in the present case, the CRTC unlawfully fettered the exercise of its discretion, or ignored factors that it was obliged to consider, when it ordered that the fee payable to Allstream be based on causal costs.
[84]First, the CRTC rejected as “inappropriate in the circumstances of this case” (my emphasis), Edmonton’s proposal of a $20-a-metre occupancy fee based on its land-value formula. This was because the fee to which Edmonton had agreed with respect to the non‑LRT lands in the renegotiated MAA was substantially lower than the $20-a-metre which Edmonton said was based on land value: paragraph 107. Edmonton did not suggest any other figure.
[85]Second, the CRTC found that, if it imposed the occupancy fee proposed by Edmonton, it would put Allstream at a competitive disadvantage vis‑à‑vis other carriers because it would be the only carrier paying substantially more than causal costs for access. It is a policy of the Act to foster increased reliance on market forces in the supply of telecommunications services: paragraph 7(f). A decision not to impose on Allstream a higher fee than that paid by its competitors would seem consistent with this policy.
[86]Third, the CRTC rejected Edmonton’s suggestion that a fair market value should be determined by an auction of the rights to use the LRT lands for transmission lines on the ground that, while there were potential bidders, Edmonton was the only seller since no equivalent sources of supply were available: paragraph 110.
[87]Fourth, the CRTC did not prescribe the particular methodology to be used for the calculation of causal costs. It was prepared to leave it to the parties to agree on the appropriate methodology and to intervene only if they could not agree: paragraphs 104‑105 of its reasons.
[88]In summary, I am not persuaded that, on the facts of this case, the CRTC’s conclusion that the fees should be based on causal costs was vitiated by any error that can be said to make its decision unreasonable. This is not to say that, when the appropriate evidence is led, the CRTC is precluded from including in the calculation of causal costs a portion of the costs of the ongoing maintenance of the municipal property being used by a carrier for its transmission line.
F. CONCLUSION
[89]For these reasons, I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
Sexton J.A.: I agree.
Sharlow J.A.: I agree.