BILL 47 2004
TRANSPORTATION ACT
Contents
HER MAJESTY, by and with the advice and consent of the Legislative
Assembly of the Province of British Columbia, enacts as follows:
Part 1 -- Interpretation
Definitions
1 In this Act:
"arterial highway" means any land, improvement or
highway that is designated as an arterial highway under section 45 or that
becomes an arterial highway under section 56 (2) (a);
"authority" means the BC Transportation Financing
Authority continued under section 25;
"concession agreement" has the same meaning as in
the Transportation Investment Act;
"concession highway" has the same meaning as in the
Transportation Investment Act;
"concessionaire" has the same meaning as in the
Transportation Investment Act;
"controlled access highway" means a highway
designated as a controlled access highway under section 48;
"documented item" means a thing that has been
seized under this Act if
(a) a record of the Insurance Corporation of British
Columbia identifies the owner of the thing, or
(b) there is, in the personal property registry or in or
on the thing, evidence identifying the owner of the thing or a person who holds
an interest in the thing;
"ferry" means any vessel
(a) by which individuals or goods may be transported over
water, and
(b) that is part of the provincial public highway system,
but does not include
(c) a ferry to which the Coastal Ferry Act applies,
or
(d) a ferry that is part of the regional transportation
system as defined in the Greater Vancouver Transportation Authority
Act;
"furnish" means furnish in accordance with section
82;
"highway" means a public street, road, trail, lane,
bridge, trestle, tunnel, ferry landing, ferry approach, any other public way or
any other land or improvement that becomes or has become a highway by any of the
following:
(a) deposit of a subdivision, reference or explanatory
plan in a land title office under section 107 of the Land Title Act;
(b) a public expenditure to which section 42 applies;
(c) a common law dedication made by the government or any
other person;
(d) declaration, by notice in the Gazette, made before
December 24, 1987;
(e) in the case of a road, colouring, outlining or
designating the road on a record in such a way that section 13 or 57 of the
Land Act applies to that road;
(f) an order under section 56 (2) of this Act;
(g) any other prescribed means;
"improvement" includes a structure or work;
"municipal highway" means a highway within a
municipality that is not an arterial highway;
"municipality" means, as applicable,
(a) the corporation into which the residents of an area
are incorporated as a municipality under Part 2 of the Local Government
Act, under the Vancouver Charter or under any other Act, or
(b) the geographic area of the municipal corporation;
"personal property registry" means the registry
referred to in section 42 of the Personal Property Security Act;
"provincial public highway" means any highway that
is a rural highway, an arterial highway or a highway referred to in section 35
(2) (f) of the Community Charter;
"provincial public undertaking" means any
improvement or other work of public utility that relates to transportation,
including, without limitation,
(a) ferries,
(b) provincial public highways,
(c) hydraulic powers created by the construction of
highways or works of public utility, and
(d) canals, ditches, drains, drainage, irrigation works
and earthworks required for the planning, design, acquisition, holding,
construction, use, operation, upgrading, alteration, expansion, extension,
maintenance, repair, rehabilitation, protection, removal, discontinuance,
closure and disposal of highways and public works;
"regional district" has the same meaning as in the
Local Government Act;
"rural highway" means a highway that is not within
a municipality;
"scenic highway" means a highway designated as a
scenic highway under section 54;
"terminal" means the buildings, fixtures, docks,
wharves, ramps, landings, approaches, ways, offices and other improvements and
facilities, other than land or a ferry, necessary for or incidental to the
operation of ferry, shipping and related services;
"transportation" includes transportation by land,
water or air;
"undocumented item" means a thing that has been
seized under this Act if
(a) there is no record of ownership of the thing in the
records of the Insurance Corporation of British Columbia,
(b) there is no evidence in the personal property registry
of the ownership of the thing or of any interest held in the thing, and
(c) there is not, in or on the thing, any evidence of the
identity of the owner of the thing or of any person who may have an interest in
the thing;
"vehicle" has the same meaning as in the Motor
Vehicle Act, and, in Division 3 of Part 5 of this Act, includes a disabled
vehicle.
Part 2 -- Powers of The
Minister
Division 1 -- General
Rights, powers and advantages of
minister
2 (1) Without limiting any other rights, powers or
advantages of the minister under this or any other enactment, the minister may
do whatever is or may be necessary to do any or all of the following:
(a) plan, design, acquire, hold, construct in any manner
and in any place the minister considers appropriate, use, operate, upgrade,
alter, expand, extend, maintain, repair, rehabilitate, protect, remove,
discontinue, close and dispose of provincial public undertakings and related
improvements;
(b) acquire, carry on or dispose of any business or
commercial or industrial enterprise that relates to transportation;
(c) grant franchises and licences, and enter into
agreements, to operate any ferry services on terms and conditions set by the
minister, including, without limitation,
(i) terms and conditions respecting fares or rates that
may be charged for those services, and
(ii) authorizing one or more providers of ferry services
to charge and retain fares or rates;
(d) make grants and contributions;
(e) enter into arrangements or agreements, including,
without limitation, arrangements or agreements for the exchange of information,
or for the payment or sharing of the cost of anything related to provincial
public undertakings or to transportation, with any person, including, without
limitation, any of the following:
(i) the government of Canada, the government of a province
or territory within Canada or the government of a jurisdiction outside of
Canada, or an agent, agency, department or official of any of those
governments;
(ii) a local government body, educational body or health
care body, as those terms are defined in the Freedom of Information and
Protection of Privacy Act;
(iii) a first nation;
(iv) any other body prescribed by regulation as a public
authority for the purposes of one or more provisions of this Act;
(f) name and rename provincial public highways.
(2) If the minister changes the name of a provincial
public highway, the minister must publish notice of the change in the prescribed
manner.
Division 2 -- Contracting for
Transportation Related Projects
Power to contract
3 Without limiting any other power the minister has
under this or any other enactment, the minister may enter into contracts for, or
otherwise provide for the carrying out of, any activity or service relating to
transportation, including, without limitation, the planning, design,
acquisition, holding, construction, use, operation, upgrading, alteration,
expansion, extension, maintenance, repair, rehabilitation, protection, removal,
closure and disposition of provincial public undertakings and related
improvements.
Competitive processes
4 (1) Before awarding a contract to any person in
relation to the construction or repair of a provincial public highway, the
minister must invite tenders in any manner that will make the invitation for
tenders reasonably available to the public.
(2) The minister need not invite tenders for a project
referred to in subsection (1) if
(a) delay would be injurious to the public interest,
(b) the project is to be carried out by officers or
employees of the government,
(c) the minister believes that an alternative contracting
process will result in a competitively established cost for the project,
(d) the project must be completed to meet a condition of
or other requirement for subdivision approval, whether completion of the project
precedes or follows that approval,
(e) the project must be completed to meet a condition
imposed
(i) by the minister in relation to an authorization under
section 51,
(ii) in an agreement referred to in section 52 (2),
(iii) by the minister in relation to an approval of a
bylaw under section 52, or
(iv) by the minister in relation to an approval of a site
plan under section 924 of the Local Government Act, or
(f) the minister is, in relation to the project, relieved
from that obligation by order of the Lieutenant Governor in Council.
(3) For each tender received in response to an invitation
for tenders under subsection (1), the minister must cause the tender price and
the name of the person tendering to be published in any manner set out in the
invitation to tender.
(4) For each contract awarded in the circumstances
described in subsection (2) (c), the minister must make available to any person,
on request, the name of the person to whom the contract is awarded and the price
of the contract.
(5) If, in the case of any project in relation to which
the minister must, under subsection (1), invite tenders, the minister believes
that it is not expedient to award the project to the lowest tenderer, the
minister must report to and obtain the approval of the Lieutenant Governor in
Council before passing by the lowest tender, unless delay would be injurious to
the public interest.
Security for performance
5 (1) If any project referred to in section 4 (1)
is to be performed under a contract awarded under this Division,
(a) the minister may require that security be provided
(i) to the government, and
(ii) in the form and amount the minister believes will
provide reasonable assurance that the project will be completed in the manner
and within the time specified in the contract,
(b) the contract must be signed by all parties to it
before any money is paid, or any work is performed, under the contract, and
(c) unless the contract provides otherwise, the security,
if any, referred to in paragraph (a) of this subsection must be provided before
any money is paid, or any work is performed, under the contract.
(2) The minister may, at any time, release or surrender
all or part of any security provided under subsection (1) (a).
Disputes arising from contracts
6 (1) If the minister enters into a contract under
section 3, a provision in that contract that stipulates a drawback, penalty or
amount of liquidated damages for failing to perform, fulfill or comply with a
term, condition, covenant or promise of the contract must not be construed as
punitive, but as importing by mutual consent an assessment of the damages that
would be caused by the failure.
(2) If a claim is made under a contract entered into under
section 3,
(a) no compensation is payable to the claimant if the
claim is founded on the ground that the cost to the claimant of performing the
contract was greater than the contract price, and
(b) no interest is payable on any money awarded or paid in
response to the claim unless the contract in relation to which the claim is made
expressly provides for payment of such interest.
Division 3 -- Dealings with
Land
Acquisition
7 The minister may acquire, hold and maintain
land.
Entry
8 (1) Without limiting Division 4, the minister
may, without consent, for any of the purposes in subsection (2) of this section,
(a) enter, remain on and use land, and
(b) do one or more of the following:
(i) take possession of or use timber, stone, gravel, sand,
clay and other materials on the land;
(ii) place or store anything on the land;
(iii) construct temporary roads or improvements;
(iv) provide, remove or repair access from the land to a
provincial public undertaking and, for that purpose, take possession of, use or
move anything on the land.
(2) The minister may exercise the rights, powers and
advantages granted under subsection (1) to
(a) acquire, hold, construct, use, operate, upgrade,
alter, expand, extend, maintain, repair, rehabilitate or protect a provincial
public undertaking,
(b) remove, discontinue, close or dispose of a provincial
public undertaking,
(c) protect any animal, bird, fish or plant species or
habitat, or the environment, from the effects of a provincial public
undertaking, or
(d) carry out work connected with planning or designing a
provincial public undertaking.
Compensation for entry
9 (1) Except as provided in subsection (4), the
Expropriation Act does not apply to an entry on land under section 8 of
this Act or to any other activity undertaken by the minister under section
8.
(2) Subject to subsection (5) of this section, if any
entry or other activity of the minister under section 8 causes any damage, the
minister must
(a) remedy the damage, or
(b) if the minister chooses not to remedy the damage, pay
compensation for the damage.
(3) If the minister takes possession of or uses any thing
under section 8 (1) (b), the minister
(a) must, subject to subsection (5) of this section, pay
compensation for the thing, or
(b) may pay compensation for the thing, in an amount
determined by the minister, if the minister took possession of or used the thing
under the authority of this or any other Act or under a reservation, in a Crown
grant relating to the land, that provides the right to take possession of or use
the thing without compensation.
(4) If the minister and a person entitled to compensation
under subsection (2) (b) or (3) (a) of this section fail to agree on the amount
of compensation payable, the amount must be determined by the Expropriation
Compensation Board established under the Expropriation Act.
(5) The minister is not required to pay compensation for
any entry onto land under section 8 of this Act, or for any other thing done
under section 8, including, without limitation, any activity or taking of
possession of or using any thing, if the entry, activity, taking possession or
use was to deal with a situation that
(a) directly interferes with the minister's ability to
exercise the rights, powers and advantages granted under this Act, and
(b) was created or condoned by the owner or occupier of
the land.
Expropriation
10 The minister may expropriate land for any of the
purposes in section 8 (2) (a) or (c).
Compensation for expropriation
11 If the minister exercises the power under
section 10 to expropriate land, the minister must pay compensation as agreed
with the owner of the land or, if there is no agreement, in accordance with the
Expropriation Act.
Injurious affection
12 (1) Subject to subsection (2), but despite any
other enactment or the common law, no action lies and no proceeding may be
brought against the government, the minister or any other person for
compensation or damages resulting from injurious affection to land resulting
from the exercise of a power provided to, or the performance of a duty imposed
on, the minister under this Act or any predecessor Act.
(2) If the minister expropriates part of the land of an
owner, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to the minister if and to the
extent that injurious affection results to the unexpropriated remainder of that
land.
Disposition of land
13 (1) The minister may dispose of land.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1) and despite Part 3,
the minister may
(a) dispose of the whole or any part of a provincial
public highway by lease for any purpose, including, without limitation, a
commercial purpose, and
(b) if a provincial public highway is discontinued and
closed, dispose of the whole or any part of the land over which the provincial
public highway was discontinued and closed.
(3) If the minister wishes to sell land that is not a
provincial public highway, the minister must, in selecting the person to whom
the sale is to be made, use a public competitive process unless,
(a) in the case of a disposition referred to in subsection
(2) (b), the disposition is
(i) to the authority or the Greater Vancouver
Transportation Authority,
(ii) to a municipality or regional district for
consideration determined by the minister,
(iii) in exchange for other land, with or without
additional consideration, or
(iv) to an owner of land adjacent to the land over which
the provincial public highway was discontinued and closed, or
(b) in the case of any other disposition of land, the
disposition is one referred to in paragraph (a) (i), (ii) or (iii) of this
subsection.
(4) If the minister wishes to dispose of land that is not
a provincial public highway by lease, the minister must, in selecting the person
to whom the lease is to be granted, use a public competitive process unless the
lease is for at least market rent or is to
(a) an agency, board or commission of the government,
(b) the authority or the Greater Vancouver Transportation
Authority,
(c) a municipality or regional district,
(d) a corporation
(i) established by an Act of the Legislature of British
Columbia or by an Act of the Parliament of Canada, and
(ii) of which the majority of shares are owned by the
government of British Columbia or the government of Canada, or
(e) any other person if
(i) special circumstances exist, and
(ii) the lease arrangements are approved by the Lieutenant
Governor in Council.
(5) The proceeds of every disposition of land referred to
in this section must be paid to the government.
Owner's responsibility to
maintain
14 (1) The minister may furnish a notice under this
section in respect of an improvement in either of the following circumstances:
(a) the minister has entered into an agreement with an
owner of land under which the owner agrees to maintain the improvement in
accordance with the agreement, and the minister believes that the improvement is
not being maintained in accordance with the agreement;
(b) the minister has attempted to negotiate an agreement
referred to in paragraph (a) in relation to the improvement but, in the
minister's opinion, it will not be possible to reach such an agreement with the
owner within a reasonable time, and the minister believes that the improvement
(i) has been constructed by the minister under this or any
other enactment,
(ii) relates to a provincial public undertaking, and
(iii) is primarily for the benefit of the owner.
(2) If, under subsection (1), the minister furnishes a
notice to an owner of land in respect of an improvement on the land, the owner
must, at the owner's expense, keep the improvement in good repair.
(3) A notice under subsection (1) must
(a) require the owner to keep the improvement in good
repair, and
(b) indicate that, if the improvement is not kept in good
repair, the minister may, at the owner's expense, enter the land and carry out
any action considered by the minister to be necessary for that purpose.
(4) The minister may refrain from furnishing a notice
under subsection (1) or may revoke a notice furnished under that subsection if
the minister believes that the notice obligation would cause undue hardship to
the owner.
(5) If the minister believes that the owner to whom a
notice has been furnished under subsection (1) in respect of an improvement has
not kept the improvement in good repair, the minister may
(a) enter the land on which the improvement is located,
and
(b) carry out any repairs or other remedial actions
considered by the minister to be appropriate.
(6) If the minister enters land or performs any remedial
actions under subsection (5), the minister may demand, from the owner of the
land, payment of
(a) the expenses incurred as a result of any entry and
remedial actions by the minister under subsection (5),
(b) interest on the amount referred to in paragraph (a) of
this subsection, and
(c) the expenses incurred in recovering the amounts
referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b).
(7) An amount demanded by the minister from an owner of
land under subsection (6) is due, owing and payable by the owner to the minister
on the owner's receipt of the demand and, without limiting section 76, may, if
the land is outside a municipality, be recovered as delinquent taxes in the same
manner as delinquent taxes may be recovered under the Taxation (Rural Area)
Act.
Division 4 -- Remedial
Action
Definition
15 In this Division, "responsible person"
means a person to whom a notice is furnished under section 16 (1) that
requires the person to take some remedial action.
Minister may require remedial
action
16 (1) Subject to section 22, the minister may
furnish a notice under this section to the owner or occupier of land if the
minister believes that there is on the land, whether or not that land is near a
provincial public undertaking, equipment or a tree, fence, sign, building,
vehicle, device, object or situation that, in the minister's opinion,
(a) creates a need to act to protect
(i) a provincial public undertaking,
(ii) any land or improvement related to a provincial
public undertaking, or
(iii) any thing that is or may be on or near a provincial
public undertaking,
(b) might affect the safety of any person who is or might
be on or near
(i) a provincial public undertaking, or
(ii) any land or improvement related to a provincial
public undertaking,
(c) is causing or might cause the accumulation of snow,
water, debris or any other potentially hazardous material on or near a
provincial public undertaking or on or near any land or improvement related to a
provincial public undertaking, or
(d) is a nuisance that might distract the operator of a
vehicle on or near a provincial public undertaking or impair the operator's
ability to drive safely.
(2) A notice under subsection (1) must
(a) specify the remedial actions the minister requires,
(b) specify the time or date on or before which the
remedial actions must be completed, and
(c) indicate that if the specified remedial actions are
not completed by the specified time or date, the minister may carry out remedial
actions at the expense of the responsible person.
(3) The minister may extend the time for completion of a
required remedial action whether or not a previously specified time limit has
expired.
Notice to other affected
persons
17 If a notice is furnished under section 16 (1), a
copy of the notice must be sent, by ordinary mail, to the last known address, if
any, of
(a) the occupier, if the responsible person is the owner,
and
(b) the owner, if the responsible person is the
occupier.
Action by minister on failure to
comply
18 If the remedial actions specified in a notice
furnished under section 16 (1) have not been completed by the time or date set
in the notice for completion, the minister may
(a) subject to section 23, enter any place or premises on
the land where the action was required to be taken, and
(b) carry out any remedial actions considered by the
minister to be appropriate, including, without limitation,
(i) seizing or impounding any thing the minister believes
caused or contributed to the situation for which the remedial actions were
required,
(ii) constructing, upgrading, altering, expanding,
extending, repairing, rehabilitating and removing any improvement as the
minister considers necessary, and
(iii) subject to section 19, disposing of any thing seized
under subparagraph (i) of this paragraph.
Disposition of seized items
19 (1) A documented item must not be disposed of by
the minister under section 18 (b) (iii) unless
(a) notice in writing is furnished to
(i) the person, if any, shown as the current owner of the
documented item in the records of the Insurance Corporation of British Columbia,
and
(ii) any other person who is shown in the personal
property registry, or in or on the documented item, as being an owner of the
documented item or as having an interest in the documented item, and
(b) 14 days have elapsed since the date of the notice and
no person has, within the 14 days, established ownership, paid the expenses
recoverable under subsection (3) of this section and taken custody of the
documented item.
(2) An undocumented item must not be disposed of by the
minister under section 18 (b) (iii) unless
(a) 7 days have elapsed since the seizure, and
(b) no person has, within the 7 days, established
ownership, paid the expenses recoverable under subsection (3) of this section
and taken custody of the undocumented item.
(3) The expenses incurred in entering any land under
section 18 (a) and carrying out any remedial actions under section 18 (b),
including, without limitation, seizing, removing, impounding or disposing of any
thing under section 18 (b), are recoverable by the minister from the responsible
person.
Proceeds on disposition
20 (1) If the minister gives or sells any thing
under section 18 (b) (iii),
(a) the person to whom the thing is given or sold takes it
free and clear of any encumbrances, including, without limitation, any right,
title or interest of the person who was its owner before the disposition but
excluding any right, title or interest retained by the minister by the
disposition, and
(b) the minister must apply any proceeds realized from
that disposition to the expenses recoverable under section 19 (3).
(2) If, after the proceeds realized from a disposition are
applied to the expenses recoverable under section 19 (3), a balance of proceeds
remains that is in excess of $10, the minister must,
(a) if the thing that was disposed of is a documented
item, furnish a notice of that balance and of the person to whom, under
subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph, that balance is to be paid to every person
to whom notice of disposition was furnished under section 19 (1) and
(i) pay the balance in accordance with any court order
received by the minister within 14 days after the date of the notice under this
subsection, or
(ii) if no court order is received by the minister within
that 14 day period, pay the balance to the person who is shown as the owner of
the documented item in the records of the Insurance Corporation of British
Columbia or, if no person is shown as the owner in those records, to the person
who is shown as the owner of the documented item in the personal property
registry or in or on the documented item, or
(b) if the thing that was disposed of is an undocumented
item and no person has, within 14 days after the disposition, satisfied the
minister as to that person's ownership of the undocumented item, pay the balance
to the administrator under the Unclaimed Property Act.
(3) Money paid to the administrator under subsection (2)
(b) of this section is deemed to be an unclaimed money deposit under the
Unclaimed Property Act.
Recovery of expenses
21 (1) The minister may demand, from the
responsible person, payment of
(a) the expenses recoverable under section 19 (3) that
have not been satisfied under section 20 (1) (b),
(b) interest on the amount referred to in paragraph (a) of
this subsection, and
(c) the expenses incurred in recovering the amounts
referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b).
(2) An amount demanded by the minister under subsection
(1) is due, owing and payable by the responsible person to the minister on the
responsible person's receipt of the demand and, without limiting section 76,
may, if the responsible person is the owner of the land referred to in section
18 (a) and that land is outside a municipality, be recovered as delinquent taxes
in the same manner as delinquent taxes may be recovered under the Taxation
(Rural Area) Act.
Minister may act without notice in
emergency
22 (1) If the minister believes that the
circumstances referred to in section 16 (1) create an urgent need for remedial
action, the minister may
(a) subject to section 23, enter any place or premises on
the land without notice to or the consent of the owner or occupier of the land,
and
(b) carry out any remedial actions considered by the
minister to be appropriate, including, without limitation,
(i) seizing, removing or impounding any thing the minister
believes caused or contributed to the situation for which the remedial actions
are required,
(ii) constructing, upgrading, altering, expanding,
extending, repairing, rehabilitating and removing any improvement as the
minister considers necessary, and
(iii) subject to section 19, disposing of any thing seized
under subparagraph (i) of this paragraph.
(2) Subject to subsection (3) of this section, section 9
(1) to (4) applies to any entry or activity of the minister under subsection (1)
of this section.
(3) The minister is not required to pay compensation for
any entry onto the land under subsection (1) of this section, or for anything
done under subsection (1) in connection with any entry onto the land, including,
without limitation, any activity or taking of possession of or using any thing,
if the situation that created the urgent need was created or condoned by the
owner or occupier of the land.
(4) Sections 19, 20 and 21 apply to any disposition of a
thing under subsection (1) (b) (iii) of this section and, for that purpose, a
reference to "the responsible person" in those provisions as they apply for the
purposes of this section is deemed to be a reference to the owner or occupier of
the land.
Search of residence under
warrant
23 (1) Subject to this section, the power to enter
premises under section 18 (a) or 22 (1) (a) must not be used to enter a dwelling
occupied as a residence without the consent of the occupier.
(2) Without limiting any other rights, powers or
advantages of the minister under this or any other enactment, the minister may,
for the purposes referred to in section 18 (b) or 22 (1) (b), as the case may
be, enter a dwelling occupied as a residence, without the consent of the
occupier, under the authority of a warrant issued under subsection (3) of this
section.
(3) A justice may issue a warrant authorizing a person
named in the warrant and, if appropriate, any peace officer that the named
person may call on for assistance to enter a dwelling occupied as a residence in
accordance with the warrant, for the purposes referred to in section 18 (b) or
22 (1) (b), if the justice is satisfied by evidence on oath that the entry is
required for those purposes.
Part 3 -- BC Transportation Financing
Authority
Definitions
24 In this Part:
"board" means the board of directors of the
authority;
"director" means a member of the board.
Authority continued
25 (1) The BC Transportation Financing Authority is
continued as a corporation consisting of a board of directors made up of the
minister and not more than 4 other members appointed by the Lieutenant Governor
in Council.
(2) The minister is the chair of the board.
Purpose of the authority
26 The purpose of the authority is to acquire,
construct, hold, improve or cause to be constructed or improved transportation
infrastructure, other than infrastructure related to municipal highways,
throughout British Columbia, and to do such other things as the Lieutenant
Governor in Council may authorize.
Powers, capacity and
immunities
27 (1) The authority is an agent of the
government.
(2) Subject to this Act and the regulations, the authority
has the power and capacity of an individual of full capacity.
(3) Without limiting subsection (2) but subject to this
Part and the regulations, the authority may do one or more of the following for
the purposes of this Part:
(a) acquire, construct, hold or improve transportation
infrastructure or cause it to be constructed or improved;
(b) acquire or expropriate land;
(c) hold and maintain land acquired or expropriated under
paragraph (b);
(d) dispose of land acquired or expropriated under
paragraph (b);
(e) with the approval of the Minister of Finance, provide
financial assistance by way of grant, contribution, loan or guarantee;
(f) with the approval of the Lieutenant Governor in
Council, enter into agreements with the government of Canada, the government of
a province or territory within Canada or the government of a jurisdiction
outside Canada, or with an agency, department or official of any of those
governments;
(g) create subsidiary corporations to carry out the
purposes of the authority;
(h) do such other things as the Lieutenant Governor in
Council may authorize.
(4) The authority has the same immunities in relation to
property of the authority as the government has in relation to property of the
government.
(5) Subject to subsection (6), but despite any other
enactment or law, no action lies and no proceeding may be brought against the
authority, the government, the minister or any other person for compensation or
damages resulting from injurious affection to land resulting from the exercise
of a power provided to, or the performance of a duty imposed on, the authority
under this Act or any predecessor Act.
(6) If the authority expropriates part of the land of an
owner, subsection (5) does not apply in relation to the authority if and to the
extent that injurious affection results to the unexpropriated remainder of that
land.
Meetings and quorum
28 (1) A majority of the directors holding office
constitutes a quorum at meetings of the board.
(2) Without limiting section 29 (5), the affirmative votes
of the majority of the directors present at a meeting at which a quorum is
present are sufficient to pass a resolution of the board.
Powers of board
29 (1) The directors must manage the affairs of the
authority or supervise the management of those affairs.
(2) The directors may
(a) exercise the rights, powers and advantages conferred
on them under this Part,
(b) exercise the rights, powers and advantages of the
authority on behalf of the authority, and
(c) delegate the exercise or performance of any right,
power, advantage or duty conferred or imposed on them to the chief executive
officer of the authority or to a person employed by the authority.
(3) The directors may pass the resolutions they consider
necessary or advisable for the management and conduct of the affairs of the
authority, the exercise of their rights, powers and advantages or the
performance of their duties.
(4) Without limiting subsection (3), the directors may
pass resolutions respecting the procedure to be followed at meetings of the
board.
(5) A resolution of the board that is approved by
directors, whether present in person or approving by telex, telegraph, facsimile
transmission, telephone or any other similar means of communication confirmed in
writing or other graphic communication, is as valid as if it had been passed at
a meeting of the directors properly called and constituted.
Board remuneration
30 The authority may pay to a director
(a) an allowance for reasonable travelling and incidental
expenses necessarily incurred in carrying out the business of the authority,
and
(b) if the director is not a member of the Legislative
Assembly or a public servant, remuneration at rates set by the Lieutenant
Governor in Council.
Officers and employees
31 (1) The board may appoint a chief executive
officer of the authority.
(2) The chief executive officer must carry out those
functions and perform those duties that are specified in the resolutions of the
board.
(3) The chief executive officer, to the extent authorized
by the board, may appoint officers and employees of the authority necessary to
carry on the business and operations of the authority and may define their
duties and determine their remuneration.
(4) The Public Service Act and the Public
Service Labour Relations Act apply to the authority and the officers and
employees of the authority.
Benefits
32 (1) The Public Service Benefit Plan Act
applies to the officers and employees of the authority.
(2) The Public Service Pension Plan, continued under the
Public Sector Pension Plans Act, applies to the authority and the
officers and employees of the authority.
Financial administration
33 (1) The authority must
(a) establish and maintain an accounting system
satisfactory to the Minister of Finance, and
(b) whenever required by that minister, render detailed
accounts of its revenues and expenditures for the period or to the day that
minister designates.
(2) All records of the authority must at all times be open
for inspection by the Minister of Finance or a person designated by that
minister.
(3) The Minister of Finance may direct the Comptroller
General to examine and report to the Treasury Board on any or all of the
financial and accounting operations of the authority.
(4) At least once in every fiscal year, the accounts of
the authority must be audited and reported on by an auditor appointed by the
Lieutenant Governor in Council, with the costs of the audit paid by the
authority.
(5) The accounts referred to in subsection (4) must be
prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.
(6) The Minister of Finance is the fiscal agent of the
authority.
Revenue from gasoline tax
34 (1) If a regulation is made under subsection
(2), the Minister of Finance must pay to the authority out of the consolidated
revenue fund, without an appropriation other than this section, amounts
equivalent to the net revenue under section 13 of the Motor Fuel Tax Act
in the prescribed area.
(2) On request by resolution of the board, the Lieutenant
Governor in Council may, by regulation for the purposes of this Part,
(a) bring into force section 13 of the Motor Fuel Tax
Act in a prescribed area of British Columbia, and
(b) prescribe the tax to be collected under that section
in the prescribed area.
Authority revenue from car rental
tax
35 The Minister of Finance must pay to the
authority out of the consolidated revenue fund, without an appropriation other
than this section, amounts equivalent to the net revenue collected under section
26 of the Social Service Tax Act.
Tolls and charges
36 (1) Subject to the approval of the Lieutenant
Governor in Council, the authority may establish a system of tolls or charges to
be paid to the authority in respect of the use of a provincial public
highway.
(2) If a system of tolls or charges has been established
by the authority under this section in respect of the use of a provincial public
highway, a person must not take or operate a vehicle on the provincial public
highway without paying the toll or charge applicable to the vehicle.
Investment powers
37 Subject to the approval of the Minister of
Finance, the authority may invest or loan any money of the authority that is not
otherwise required for the purposes of the authority in investments or loans
authorized by the Lieutenant Governor in Council.
Borrowing powers
38 (1) Subject to the approval of the Lieutenant
Governor in Council and the Minister of Finance, the authority may borrow the
sums of money it considers necessary or advisable for the purpose of carrying
out any right, power, advantage or duty conferred or imposed on it under this or
any other Act, and may issue securities in relation to that borrowing in the
form and on the terms and conditions determined by the Minister of Finance at or
before the time the securities are issued.
(2) By resolution, the board may delegate any of its
rights, powers and advantages or the powers of the authority under this section
to any director or officer of the authority.
(3) A recital or declaration in a resolution of the board
authorizing the issue of securities, to the effect that the issue of the
securities authorized under subsection (1) is being made for the purposes of the
authority and that the amount is necessary to realize the net sum required for
those purposes, is conclusive evidence of the fact.
(4) Subject to the approval of the Lieutenant Governor in
Council and the Minister of Finance, the authority, on terms it considers
necessary or advisable, may
(a) dispose of securities of the authority, either at par
value or at less or more than par value, and
(b) charge, pledge, hypothecate, deposit or otherwise deal
with the securities as collateral security.
(5) The securities of the authority, other than notes,
together with any coupons attached, must bear the signatures of
(a) the chair and another director or officer, or
(b) those directors or officers of the authority or
officers of the Ministry of Finance as the authority may determine.
(6) As the fiscal agent of the authority, the Minister of
Finance may arrange all details and do, transact and execute all deeds, matters
and things that are required during the negotiation of a loan or for the purpose
of placing a loan.
(7) The mechanically reproduced signature of a person
authorized under subsection (5) is for all purposes valid and binding on the
authority, even if the person whose signature is reproduced has ceased to hold
office before the date of the security or before its issue.
Sinking funds
39 If required to do so by the Minister of Finance,
the authority must, on terms and conditions specified by that minister,
(a) establish one or more sinking fund accounts, or
(b) make other arrangements for the repayment of
securities issued by the authority.
Limit of outstanding debt
40 (1) The outstanding debt of the authority
arising from borrowings, as calculated under subsection (2), must not be greater
than the amount established for the purpose of this section by the Lieutenant
Governor in Council.
(2) The outstanding debt of the authority arising from
borrowings must be calculated by taking the aggregate of the principal value of
its outstanding debt from borrowings,
(a) adding the amounts of any unamortized premiums in
relation to the debt,
(b) subtracting the amounts of any unamortized discounts
in relation to the debt,
(c) subtracting the amounts of the value, as determined by
the Minister of Finance, of
(i) any sinking funds established under section 39 for the
retirement of the debt, and
(ii) the balances attributable to the authority in any
sinking funds established by the government under the Financial
Administration Act in relation to the debt, and
(d) adding or subtracting other amounts as prescribed by
the Lieutenant Governor in Council.
(3) For the purpose of this section, if any outstanding
debt of the authority arises from borrowings in currencies other than Canadian
dollars, the outstanding debt in respect of those borrowings must be determined
by calculating the Canadian dollar equivalent of these borrowings on the basis
of
(a) the Bank of Canada Canadian dollar noon spot exchange
rate for the currency borrowed as quoted on the day of the borrowing, or
(b) if there is no Bank of Canada Canadian dollar noon
spot exchange rate quoted for the currency borrowed on the day of the borrowing,
the noon spot exchange rate for the currency borrowed on the day of the
borrowing at a Canadian chartered bank that the Minister of Finance considers
appropriate.
Application of other Acts
41 (1) Subject to subsection (2), the Business
Corporations Act does not apply to the authority.
(2) The Lieutenant Governor in Council may, by order,
declare that certain provisions of the Business Corporations Act apply to
the authority.
Part 4 -- Highways
Division 1 -- New
Highways
Travelled roads becoming highways
42 (1) Subject to subsection (2), if public money
is spent on a travelled road that is not a highway, the travelled road is deemed
and declared to be a highway.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to any road or class of
roads, or to any expenditure or class of expenditures, that is prescribed by the
regulations.
Dedicated land becoming provincial
public highways
43 If a person agrees under section 3 (1) of the
Expropriation Act or otherwise to dedicate land to the government to
become a highway, the minister may, for the purposes of section 107 of the
Land Title Act, prepare and deposit with the registrar of the applicable
land title office an explanatory plan showing that land as highway, and, in that
event,
(a) section 107 (1) (c) and (d) and (3) of the Land
Title Act applies, and
(b) the dedicated land becomes a provincial public
highway.
Division 2 -- Arterial
Highways
Definition
44 In this Division, "affected
municipality", in relation to an arterial highway, means the municipality in
which the arterial highway is located.
Designation of highways as
arterial
45 (1) The Lieutenant Governor in Council may, by
order, on the recommendation of the minister,
(a) designate as an arterial highway all or any part of
(i) any land or improvement in a municipality that has
been expropriated or otherwise acquired by the government,
(ii) a municipal highway that has been resumed under
section 35 of the Community Charter, or
(iii) any land or improvement in a municipality referred
to in section 35 (2) (a) to (f) and (j) of the Community Charter, and
(b) remove the designation of "arterial highway" from all
or part of any land or improvement or highway.
(2) After an order is made under subsection (1), the
minister must publish notice of the order in the prescribed manner.
Consultation with
municipality
46 Before making a recommendation referred to in
section 45 (1) in relation to any land, improvement or highway, the minister
must consult with the municipal council of the municipality in which the land,
improvement or highway or a part of it is located.
Minister has municipality's
rights, powers and advantages
47 In addition to any other rights, powers and
advantages held by the minister in relation to an arterial highway under this
Act, the minister
(a) has, and may exercise, in relation to the arterial
highway, all of the rights, powers and advantages that the affected municipality
had, before the arterial highway was designated as such under this or any other
Act, to plan, design, acquire, hold, construct, use, operate, upgrade, alter,
expand, extend, maintain, repair, rehabilitate, protect, remove, discontinue,
close and dispose of the highway,
(b) has, and may exercise, in relation to any improvement
on, under, over or related to the arterial highway, all of the rights, powers
and advantages that the affected municipality had, before the arterial highway
was designated as such under this or any other Act, to plan, design, acquire,
hold, construct, use, operate, upgrade, alter, expand, extend, maintain, repair,
rehabilitate, protect, remove, discontinue, close and dispose of the
improvement,
(c) has, and may exercise, all of the rights, powers and
advantages that the affected municipality had, before the arterial highway was
designated as such under this or any other Act, under any contract relating to
the highway or any related improvement, and
(d) may sue in the name of the minister to enforce any of
the rights, powers or advantages referred to in this section.
Division 3 -- Controlled Access
Highways
Controlled access highways
48 (1) The minister may, by order,
(a) designate all or any part of a provincial public
highway as a controlled access highway, and
(b) remove the designation of "controlled access highway"
from all or any part of a highway.
(2) If a provincial public highway designated as a
controlled access highway under subsection (1) was, before that designation, a
rural highway, an arterial highway or a scenic highway, the provisions of this
or any other enactment that apply to rural, arterial or scenic highways, as the
case may be, continue to apply to the controlled access highway for so long as
it is a rural highway, an arterial highway or a scenic highway.
(3) After an order is made under subsection (1), the
minister must publish notice of the order in the prescribed manner.
Restrictions on access
49 (1) A person must not,
(a) without the authorization of the minister, construct
or reopen, or allow the construction or reopening of, any means of access to or
from a controlled access highway, or
(b) obtain access to or from any controlled access highway
other than by way of an access point
(i) constructed by the minister, or
(ii) authorized by the minister under paragraph (a).
(2) An authorization under subsection (1) must be in
writing unless the authorization is provided to a person who is to engage in the
authorized activity within the course of his or her employment as a public
officer.
Unauthorized access
50 (1) If the minister believes that there is a
location at or through which unauthorized access to or from a controlled access
highway may be obtained, the minister may furnish a notice to the owner or
occupier of the land to or from which that access may be obtained requiring the
person to seal off the access point in the manner and within the time specified
by the minister.
(2) Division 4 of Part 2 applies to a notice under
subsection (1).
Authorization for constructing or
reopening access
51 (1) The minister may, on terms and conditions
the minister considers appropriate, provide to a person an authorization to
construct or reopen, or allow the construction or reopening of, any means of
access to or from a controlled access highway.
(2) Without limiting other terms and conditions the
minister may impose in relation to an authorization under this section, the
minister may, as part of the terms and conditions on which an authorization may
be provided, do one or more of the following:
(a) establish the location and form of the authorized
access;
(b) require the person to whom the authorization is
provided to construct, upgrade, alter, expand, extend, repair, rehabilitate or
protect any improvement that the minister considers necessary to facilitate the
required access;
(c) establish terms and conditions relating to the
planning, design, acquisition, holding, construction, use, operation, upgrading,
alteration, expansion, extension, maintenance, repair, rehabilitation,
protection, removal, discontinuance, closure and disposition of the access,
including, without limitation, the standards to which that work is to be
completed;
(d) impose limitations on the authorized access;
(e) charge and collect a fee for the authorization in the
amount prescribed.
(3) The minister may amend or terminate an authorization
given in relation to a controlled access highway under subsection (1) in
any of the following circumstances:
(a) the minister believes that the amendment or
termination is necessary to protect the health or safety of a person who is or
may be using, or who is near to, a provincial public undertaking;
(b) the minister believes that there is an urgent public
need to amend or terminate the authorization;
(c) the minister believes that the amendment or
termination is necessary to
(i) protect or preserve the integrity of the controlled
access highway, or
(ii) operate the controlled access highway in the most
efficient and effective manner;
(d) the minister believes that the authorization has
resulted in an unreasonable impediment to the minister's ability to exercise one
or more of the minister's rights, powers or advantages under this Act;
(e) the holder of the authorization has breached any of
the terms and conditions on which the authorization was granted.
Development near controlled access
highway
52 (1) In this section:
"controlled area" means, in relation to an
intersection of a controlled access highway with any other highway, land and
improvements within a radius of 800 metres from the intersection;
"zoning bylaw" means
(a) a zoning bylaw under the Local Government Act,
or
(b) for a community planning area, a zoning bylaw under
the Local Services Act.
(2) The minister may enter into an agreement under this
section with the municipality or regional district in which a controlled area is
located.
(3) A zoning bylaw of a municipality or regional district
does not apply to a controlled area unless
(a) the bylaw has been approved in writing by the minister
or any person designated in writing by the minister before its adoption, or
(b) the bylaw is in compliance with the terms of an
agreement referred to in subsection (2) between the minister and the
municipality or regional district.
(4) If the minister enters into an agreement referred to
in subsection (2) with a municipality or regional district,
(a) a zoning bylaw is in compliance with that agreement,
for the purposes of subsection (3) (b), if and for so long as
(i) development within the controlled area complies with a
plan that forms part of or is identified in the agreement, and
(ii) the municipality or regional district complies with
the terms of the agreement, and
(b) a zoning bylaw that is not in compliance with the
agreement must be submitted to the minister for approval in writing under
subsection (3) (a).
(5) The minister must not approve a zoning bylaw under
this section unless the bylaw meets the prescribed criteria.
Division 4 -- Scenic
Highways
Definitions
53 In this Part:
"garbage" includes rubbish, ashes, filth, discarded
materials and the bodies or parts of vehicles or machinery;
"roadside land" means land within 150 metres of the
centre line of a scenic highway.
Designation
54 (1) The minister may, by order,
(a) designate a highway or part of a highway as a scenic
highway, or
(b) remove the designation of a highway as a scenic
highway.
(2) If a scenic highway under subsection (1) is also a
rural highway, a controlled access highway or an arterial highway, the
provisions of this or any other enactment that apply to rural, controlled access
or arterial highways, as the case may be, continue to apply to the scenic
highway for so long as it is a rural highway, a controlled access highway or an
arterial highway.
(3) After an order is made under subsection (1), the
minister must publish notice of the order in the prescribed manner.
Garbage removal remedial
action
55 (1) If satisfied that there is, on roadside
land, garbage that is likely to be unsightly or offensive to the public
travelling on the scenic highway, the following may furnish to the owner or
occupier of the roadside land a notice under this section, requiring the owner
or occupier, as the case may be, to remove the garbage or to take such other
remedial actions as may be specified in the notice:
(a) if the roadside land is within a municipality, the
municipal council;
(b) if the roadside land is within a regional district but
not within a municipality, the board of the regional district;
(c) if the roadside land is not within a municipality or a
regional district, the minister.
(2) Division 4 of Part 2 applies to a notice furnished
under subsection (1) of this section, and, for that purpose, a reference to
"minister" in that Division, as it applies for the purposes of a notice referred
to in subsection (1) (a) or (b) of this section, is deemed to be a reference to
the applicable municipality or regional district, as the case may be.
(3) Without limiting subsection (2),
(a) Division 14 of Part 7 of the Community Charter
applies to an amount recoverable by a municipality under section 21 of this Act
as it applies under subsection (2) of this section, and
(b) section 363.2 of the Local Government Act
applies to an amount recoverable by a regional district under section 21 of this
Act as it applies under subsection (2) of this section.
(4) Nothing in this section limits any other powers of the
minister, a municipality or a regional district under this or any other
enactment.
Division 5 -- Forest Service
Roads
Forest service roads
56 (1) In this section, "forest service
road" has the same meaning as in section 1 of the Forest Act.
(2) Without limiting any right or power the Minister of
Forests may have in relation to forest service roads, the Lieutenant Governor in
Council may, with the consent of the Minister of Transportation and the Minister
of Forests, order that a forest service road cease to be a forest service road
for the purposes of the Forest Act and become, for the purposes of this
Act,
(a) if and to the extent it is located in a municipality,
an arterial highway, or
(b) in any other case, a rural highway.
(3) Without limiting any right or power the Minister of
Transportation may have to close a provincial public highway, the Lieutenant
Governor in Council may, with the consent of the Minister of Transportation and
the Minister of Forests, order that a provincial public highway cease to be a
provincial public highway and become a forest service road for the purposes of
the Forest Act, and, in that event, the provincial public highway is
deemed to be closed and discontinued at the time it becomes a forest service
road.
(4) Before an order is made under subsection (2) (a) in
relation to a forest service road, the minister must consult with the municipal
council of the municipality in which the forest service road or a part of it is
located.
Division 6 -- Ownership of
Highways
Soil and freehold of provincial
public highways vested in government
57 Unless otherwise provided for in this Act, the
soil and freehold of every provincial public highway is vested in the
government.
Transfers of highways and other
land
58 (1) In this section, "provincial public
highway" does not include
(a) a ferry landing,
(b) a highway on land leased to the government unless that
highway is a bridge, or
(c) a highway that is part of the major road network
within the meaning of the Greater Vancouver Transportation Authority
Act.
(2) Subject to subsection (5), the authority
(a) holds all of the government's right and title in and
to the soil and freehold of every provincial public highway in British Columbia,
and
(b) acquires all of the government's right and title in
and to the soil and freehold of every provincial public highway that comes into
being.
(3) This section does not affect any powers, duties,
functions and liabilities, in relation to highways, of the government, the
Lieutenant Governor in Council, the minister or ministry, another minister or
ministry or another authority under
(a) this Act or any other enactment,
(b) any contract, licence or permit, or
(c) the law.
(4) The authority, in relation to a provincial public
highway referred to in subsection (2), does not hold, because of subsection (2),
any of the powers, duties, functions and liabilities referred to in subsection
(3), except for the purpose of accounting for the provincial public highways,
and does not have, and has not had, since acquiring the right and title referred
to in subsection (2), any of those powers, duties, functions and liabilities
except for that purpose.
(5) The authority may transfer to the government the
authority's right and title in and to the soil and freehold of any provincial
public highway and, in that event, subsection (2) does not apply to that
provincial public highway.
(6) Subsection (2) does not operate to constitute the
authority as an occupier, within the meaning of the Occupiers Liability
Act, of a provincial public highway.
Transfers to Canada
59 (1) Subject to the terms, reservations and
restrictions the Lieutenant Governor in Council considers advisable, the
Lieutenant Governor in Council may, despite section 58, transfer the
administration, control and benefit of any provincial public highway to the
government of Canada, in the same manner and with the same effect as if the
transfer were a transfer of Crown land under the Land Act, either in
perpetuity or for a specified period, and with or without consideration.
(2) Except to the extent that it so provides, a transfer
under subsection (1) is not subject to section 50 of the Land Act.
Division 7 -- Closure of Highways
Power to close a highway
permanently
60 (1) In this section, "surplus highway"
means a provincial public highway or part of a provincial public highway that is
not considered necessary in the public interest.
(2) The minister may discontinue and close a surplus
highway by publishing in the prescribed manner a notice in a form, and
containing the particulars, the minister considers appropriate.
(3) If, in the opinion of the minister, no highway that is
an alternative to a surplus highway exists or will be provided, the minister
must, before publication of the notice referred to in subsection (2), give
notice of the intention to discontinue and close the surplus highway by notice
published, in a manner and with a frequency prescribed by the regulations, over
4 consecutive weeks.
(4) A surplus highway to which a notice referred to in
subsection (2) is published ceases to be a highway on the date specified in the
notice.
Power to close a highway
temporarily
61 (1) Without limiting section 60, the minister
may close a provincial public highway under this section for any reason,
including, without limitation, if the minister believes that the closure is
necessary
(a) for the planning, design, acquisition, holding,
construction, use, operation, upgrading, alteration, expansion, extension,
maintenance, repair, rehabilitation, protection, removal, discontinuance,
closure or disposition of a provincial public undertaking or any related land or
improvement,
(b) for the protection of the health or safety of a person
who is or may be using, or who is near to, the provincial public undertaking or
any related land or improvement, or
(c) to enable traffic that is allowed to access the
provincial public highway to be handled safely and expeditiously.
(2) The minister may close a provincial public highway
under subsection (1)
(a) at a time,
(b) for a period of time, and
(c) for any or all classes of traffic or use,
that the minister considers appropriate.
Part 5 -- Use of Highways
Division 1 --
Authorizations
Authorization of use or occupation
of provincial
public highways
62 (1) A person must not use, occupy or do anything
to or on a provincial public highway, or to or on any land or improvement
related to a provincial public highway, unless the person is authorized to do so
under this Part, under another enactment, by a lease entered into under section
13 (2) (a) or at law.
(2) The minister may, on terms and conditions the minister
considers appropriate, authorize any person to use or occupy, in any manner and
for any purpose, including a commercial purpose, the whole or any part of a
provincial public highway, or land or improvements related to a provincial
public highway, and, in that event, the person may engage in the authorized
activity despite any other provision of this Act.
(3) Without limiting any other terms and conditions the
minister may impose in relation to an authorization under this section, the
minister may, as part of the terms and conditions on which an authorization is
provided, do one or more of the following:
(a) establish the period during which the authorization
remains effective;
(b) provide for termination of the authorization on the
occurrence of an event or condition specified by the minister;
(c) limit, regulate or prohibit access to or entry on the
provincial public highway, land or improvement in relation to which the
authorization is given;
(d) charge and collect a fee for the authorization in an
amount approved by the Lieutenant Governor in Council or, if the authorization
is in the nature of a licence, charge not less than a market rent for that
licence.
(4) An authorization under subsection (2) must be in
writing unless the authorization is provided to a person who is to engage in the
authorized activity within the course of his or her employment as a public
officer.
(5) The minister may amend or terminate an authorization
given under subsection (2) in relation to a provincial public highway, land or
an improvement in any of the following circumstances:
(a) the minister believes that the amendment or
termination is necessary to protect the health or safety of a person using or
near the provincial public highway, land or improvement;
(b) the minister believes that there is an urgent public
need to amend or terminate the authorization;
(c) the minister believes that the amendment or
termination is necessary to
(i) protect and preserve the integrity of the provincial
public highway, land or improvement, or
(ii) operate the provincial public highway in the most
efficient and effective manner;
(d) the minister believes that the authorization has
resulted in an unreasonable impediment to the minister's ability to exercise one
or more of the minister's rights, powers or advantages under this Act;
(e) the holder of the authorization has breached any of
the terms and conditions on which the authorization was granted.
(6) In addition to the minister's ability to give
authorizations under subsection (2), the minister may
(a) prescribe one or more general authorizations under
which all persons or specified classes of persons are authorized to use or
occupy one or more of the following:
(i) any or all provincial public highways;
(ii) one or more classes of provincial public highways;
(iii) any other land or improvement, or class of land or
improvements, related to a provincial public highway, and
(b) in relation to any authorization prescribed under this
subsection, prescribe terms and conditions applicable to that authorization,
including, without limitation, terms and conditions respecting the manner in
which and the purpose for which the provincial public highway, land or
improvement referred to in the regulation may be used or occupied.
(7) A person to whom a regulation referred to in
subsection (6) applies may use or occupy the provincial public highways, land or
improvements to which the regulation applies in the manner and for the purposes
provided in the regulation without obtaining an individual authorization from
the minister under subsection (2).
Unauthorized use
63 (1) The minister may furnish a notice to any
person who the minister believes is contravening or has contravened
section 62 (1).
(2) A notice under subsection (1)
(a) must require the person to stop any contravention the
minister believes is ongoing, and
(b) may require the person to take specified remedial
actions.
(3) If a notice under subsection (1) includes a
requirement under subsection (2) (b), Division 4 of Part 2 applies.
Division 2 -- Abnormal Use of
Provincial Public Undertakings
Interference with provincial
public undertakings
64 (1) A person must not
(a) directly or indirectly interfere with or obstruct the
planning, design, acquisition, holding, construction, use, operation, upgrading,
alteration, expansion, extension, maintenance, repair, rehabilitation,
protection, removal, discontinuance or closure of a provincial public
undertaking, or of any related land or improvement, that is authorized under
this Act, another enactment or at law, or
(b) moor or attach a vessel or other floating object to a
bridge or other structure that forms part of a provincial public
undertaking.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who does
anything referred to in subsection (1) if the thing done is within the course of
the person's employment as a public officer.
Minister may furnish notice
65 (1) The minister may furnish a notice to any
person who the minister believes is contravening or has contravened section 64
(1).
(2) A notice under subsection (1) of this section
(a) must require the person to stop any contravention the
minister believes is ongoing, and
(b) may require the person to take specified remedial
actions.
(3) If a notice under subsection (1) includes a
requirement under subsection (2) (b), Division 4 of Part 2 applies.
Extraordinary traffic
66 (1) In this section, "extraordinary traffic"
includes the carriage of goods or persons over a provincial public highway,
whether in vehicles drawn by animal power or propelled by other means, that in
conjunction with the nature or existing condition of the provincial public
highway is so extraordinary or improper
(a) in the quality or quantity of the goods or the number
of persons carried,
(b) in the mode or time of use of the provincial public
highway, or
(c) in the speed at which the vehicles are driven or
operated,
as, in the opinion of the minister, substantially alters
or increases the burden imposed on the provincial public highway through its
proper use by ordinary traffic, and causes damage and expense to the provincial
public highway beyond what is reasonable or ordinary.
(2) If the minister believes that a provincial public
highway is liable to damage through extraordinary traffic, the minister may
limit, prohibit or make directions respecting the use of the provincial public
highway by a person operating or in charge of the extraordinary traffic or
owning the goods carried by it or the vehicles used in it.
(3) Any person to whom this section might otherwise apply
may, with the approval of the minister, enter into an agreement for the payment
to the government of compensation for the damage or expense that may, in the
opinion of the minister, be caused by the extraordinary traffic, and, in that
event, the person may use the provincial public highway in the manner
contemplated by the agreement despite any limitation, prohibition or direction
of the minister under subsection (2) that would otherwise affect that use.
Division 3 -- Abandoned Vehicles
or Things
Definition
67 In this Division, "seized item" means a
vehicle or other thing seized under section 68 (5) or (6).
Abandoned vehicles and things
68 (1) A person must not abandon a vehicle or other
thing on a highway.
(2) If the minister believes that a vehicle or other thing
has been abandoned on a provincial public highway, the minister may furnish a
notice to the owner or, if known, to any other person who is responsible for
abandoning the vehicle or thing on the provincial public highway.
(3) A notice under subsection (2) must
(a) require the person to whom it is furnished to remove
the vehicle or thing from the provincial public highway,
(b) specify the time or date before which the vehicle or
thing must be removed, and
(c) indicate that if the removal is not completed by the
specified time or date, the minister may effect the removal at the expense of
the person to whom the notice was furnished.
(4) The minister may extend the time for removal whether
or not a previously specified time limit has expired.
(5) The minister may seize a vehicle or thing that the
minister believes has been abandoned on a provincial public highway if
(a) the vehicle or thing is the subject of a notice under
subsection (2) and the notice has not been complied with in the time specified,
or
(b) the minister believes that the vehicle or thing has
been abandoned for more than 72 hours.
(6) Without limiting subsection (5), the minister and any
member of the Provincial police force or a municipal police department may seize
any vehicle or thing on a provincial public highway if
(a) the vehicle interferes with the normal flow of traffic
on the provincial public highway,
(b) the vehicle interferes with the maintenance of the
provincial public highway by equipment for that purpose, or
(c) the vehicle or thing is causing, or might cause, a
danger or inconvenience to persons using the provincial public highway.
Disposition of seized items
69 (1) The minister may, in respect of a seized
item,
(a) remove it from the provincial public highway,
(b) relocate it,
(c) impound it, or
(d) subject to subsection (4), dispose of it by sale,
destruction or otherwise.
(2) The expenses incurred in seizing, removing, impounding
and disposing of, as the case may be, a seized item, less the proceeds, if any,
realized from a disposition of the seized item, are recoverable by the minister
from the person who abandoned or left, or authorized the abandonment or leaving,
of the seized item.
(3) In the case of a vehicle seized under section 68 (5)
(b) or (6), in the absence of proof to the contrary, the last person whose name
appears as owner of the vehicle in the records of the Insurance Corporation of
British Columbia is, for the purposes of subsection (2) of this section, deemed
to have abandoned or left, or authorized the abandonment or leaving, of the
vehicle.
(4) Section 19 (1) and (2) applies to a disposition under
subsection (1) (d) of this section.
Proceeds on disposition
70 (1) If the minister gives or sells any thing
under section 69 (1) (d),
(a) the person to whom the thing is given or sold takes it
free and clear of any encumbrances, including, without limitation, any right,
title or interest of the person who was its owner before the disposition but
excluding any right, title or interest retained by the minister by the
disposition, and
(b) the minister must apply any proceeds realized from
that disposition to the expenses recoverable under section 69 (2).
(2) If, after the proceeds realized from a disposition are
applied to the expenses recoverable under section 69 (2), a balance of proceeds
remains that is in excess of $10, the minister must,
(a) if the thing that was disposed of is a documented
item, furnish a notice of that balance and of the person to whom, under
subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph, that balance is to be paid to every person
to whom notice of disposition was furnished under section 19 (1), as it applies
for the purposes of section 69, and
(i) pay the balance in accordance with any court order
received by the minister within 14 days after the date of the notice, or
(ii) if no court order is received by the minister within
that 14 day period, pay the balance to the person who is shown as the owner of
the documented item in the records of the Insurance Corporation of British
Columbia or, if no person is shown as the owner in those records, to the person
who is shown as the owner of the documented item in the personal property
registry or in or on the documented item, or
(b) if the thing that was disposed of is an undocumented
item and no person has, within 14 days after the disposition, satisfied the
minister as to that person's ownership of the undocumented item, pay the balance
to the administrator under the Unclaimed Property Act.
(3) Money paid to the administrator under subsection (2)
(b) of this section is deemed to be an unclaimed money deposit under the
Unclaimed Property Act.
Division 4 -- Concession
Highways
Application
71 (1) Without limiting section 6 (3) of the
Transportation Investment Act, this Division applies to a concessionaire
unless the concession agreement provides otherwise.
(2) If a concession highway is also a rural highway, an
arterial highway, a controlled access highway or a scenic highway, the
provisions of this or any other enactment that apply to rural, arterial,
controlled access or scenic highways, as the case may be, continue to apply to
the concession highway for so long as it is a rural highway, an arterial
highway, a controlled access highway or a scenic highway.
Authorization
72 (1) A person must not use, occupy or do anything
to or on a concession highway unless the person is authorized to do so under
this section or at law.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1), a person must not
cause or allow equipment or a tree, fence, sign, building, vehicle, device,
object or situation to exist on land that, in the concessionaire's opinion,
(a) creates a need to act to protect
(i) the concession highway,
(ii) any land or improvement related to the concession
highway, or
(iii) any property that is or may be on or near the
concession highway,
(b) might affect the safety of any person who is or might
be on or near
(i) the concession highway, or
(ii) any land or improvement related to the concession
highway,
(c) is causing or might cause the accumulation of snow,
water, debris or any other potentially hazardous material on or near the
concession highway or on or near any land or improvement related to the
concession highway, or
(d) is a nuisance that might distract the operator of a
vehicle on or near the concession highway or impair the operator's ability to
drive safely.
(3) The concessionaire may, if and only to the extent that
the concessionaire is expressly allowed to do so by the concession agreement,
authorize any person, on terms and conditions the concessionaire considers
appropriate, to use or occupy, in any manner and for any purpose, including a
commercial purpose, the whole or any part of the concession highway, and, in
that event, the person may engage in the authorized activity despite any other
provision of this Act.
(4) Section 62 (3), (4) and (5) (a) to (c) and (e) applies
to a concession highway and, for that purpose, a reference in those provisions,
as they apply for the purposes of this section,
(a) to "minister" is deemed to be a reference to the
concessionaire, and
(b) to "provincial public highway" is deemed to be a
reference to the concession highway.
Interference with concession
highways
73 Section 64 applies to a concession highway and,
for that purpose, a reference to "provincial public undertaking" in that
provision, as it applies for the purposes of this section, is deemed to be a
reference to the concession highway.
Remedial action
74 (1) The concessionaire may furnish a notice to
any person who the concessionaire believes is contravening or has contravened
(a) section 72, or
(b) section 64 as it applies to a concession highway under
section 73.
(2) A notice under subsection (1) of this section
(a) must require the person to stop any contravention the
concessionaire believes is ongoing, and
(b) may require the person to take specified remedial
actions.
(3) If the remedial actions specified in a notice
furnished under subsection (2) have not been completed by the time or date set
in the notice for completion, the concessionaire may,
(a) if and to the extent that remedial actions may be
performed on the concession highway, undertake whichever of those remedial
actions the concessionaire considers appropriate, and sections 18 to 21 apply,
or
(b) if and to the extent that remedial actions are
required as a result of a breach of section 72 (2), refer the matter to the
minister.
(4) If a matter referred to in subsection (3) is referred
to the minister under subsection (3) (b), the minister may
(a) subject to section 23, as it applies for the purposes
of subsection (6) of this section, enter any place or premises on the land where
the action was required to be taken, and
(b) carry out any remedial actions considered by the
minister to be appropriate, including, without limitation,
(i) seizing or impounding any thing the minister believes
caused or contributed to the situation for which the remedial actions were
required,
(ii) constructing, upgrading, altering, expanding,
extending, repairing, rehabilitating and removing any improvement as the
minister considers necessary, and
(iii) subject to section 19, as it applies for the
purposes of subsection (6) of this section, disposing of any thing seized under
subparagraph (i) of this paragraph.
(5) Sections 18 to 21 apply to any action taken by the
concessionaire under subsection (3) (a) and, for that purpose, a reference to
"minister" in those provisions, as they apply for the purposes of this section,
is deemed to be a reference to the concessionaire.
(6) Sections 18 to 23 apply to any action taken by the
minister under subsection (4).
Abandoned vehicles and things
75 Sections 67 to 70 apply to a concession highway
and, for that purpose, a reference in those provisions, as they apply for the
purposes of this section,
(a) to "minister" is deemed to be a reference to the
concessionaire, and
(b) to "highway" or to "provincial public highway" is
deemed to be a reference to the concession highway.
Part 6 -- General
Division 1 -- Collection of
Outstanding Money
Recovery of money due
76 (1) Any money due to or recoverable by the
minister under this Act may be recovered as a debt due to the government.
(2) The rights, powers and advantages provided to the
government under subsection (1) are in addition to any other rights, powers and
advantages the government or the minister may have under this or any other
enactment or at law to collect the money referred to in subsection (1).
Interest on money due
77 Interest on any money due to or recoverable by
the minister or the government under this Act is payable and must be calculated
(a) at the rate prescribed under section 20 (1) of the
Financial Administration Act, and
(b) in the manner prescribed in the regulations.
Division 2 -- Offences
Offence Act
78 Section 5 of the Offence Act does not
apply to this Act or the regulations.
Offences
79 (1) A person commits an offence who
(a) contravenes section 36 (2), 49, 62 (1), 64 (1) or 68
(1),
(b) fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with a
notice furnished to the person under section 16 (1), 50 (1), 55 (1), 63 (1), 65
(1) or 68 (2),
(c) unless authorized under section 66 (3), drives on or
uses a provincial public highway in contravention of a limitation, prohibition
or direction made under section 66 (2),
(d) obstructs or prevents another person from entering
land or engaging in any other activity if that entry or activity is authorized
by this Act,
(e) contravenes a regulation made under section 87 (2)
(b), (c), (d), (e), (f) or (g), or
(f) fails to pay a toll the person is required to pay
under regulations prescribed under section 91.
(2) A person commits an offence who
(a) contravenes section 72 (1) or (2),
(b) contravenes section 64 as it applies to a concession
highway under section 73, or
(c) contravenes section 68 (1) as it applies to a
concession highway under section 75.
Liability of officers and
employees
80 If a corporation commits an offence under this
Act, any employee, officer, director or agent of the corporation who authorizes,
allows or acquiesces in the offence commits the same offence whether or not the
corporation is convicted of the offence.
Remedies preserved
81 A proceeding, conviction or penalty for an
offence under this Act does not relieve a person from any other liability.
Division 3 -- General
How records are furnished
82 (1) For the purposes of this Act, a record may
be furnished
(a) to an individual,
(i) by giving it to the individual, or
(ii) by sending it by registered mail to the individual's
last known address,
(b) to a corporation, by serving the corporation as
provided by
(i) the Rules of Court of the Supreme Court, or
(ii) the Business Corporations Act,
(c) to any other organization, by delivery to, or by
sending it by registered mail to, the last known address in British Columbia for
the organization, or
(d) in any manner ordered by the Supreme Court on
application for an order allowing the record to be furnished in a different
manner.
(2) A notice sent by registered mail is deemed to be
furnished to the addressee on the 5th business day after mailing.
Remedial action
83 Nothing in this Act requires the minister to
take any action to stop, prevent or remedy any act or omission that is or may
constitute a contravention of this Act or the regulations or to remedy any
situation that the minister has the right to remedy under this Act.
Minister has discretion
84 Nothing in this Act obliges the minister to
plan, design, acquire, hold, construct, use, operate, upgrade, alter, expand,
extend, maintain, repair, rehabilitate, protect, remove, discontinue, close or
dispose of any highway or any part of a highway.
Minister may rely on public
officials
85 A belief, opinion, determination or
consideration referred to in this Act in relation to the minister may be the
belief, opinion, determination or consideration of the minister or of any public
officer who forms that belief, opinion, determination or consideration within
the course of his or her employment as a public officer or on whose belief,
opinion, determination or consideration, as the case may be, the minister
otherwise chooses to rely for that purpose.
Limitation of liability
86 (1) No action lies and no proceeding may be
brought against the government or the minister for loss or damages to person or
property caused directly or indirectly by any acts or omissions of, or any works
constructed or maintained by,
(a) a person to whom a disposition is made under section
13, or
(b) a person acting or purporting to act under an
authorization of the minister.
(2) If a vehicle or thing is seized or otherwise dealt
with under section 16 (2), 18, 50 (2), 63 (3), 65 (3) or Division 3 of Part 5 by
the minister or under section 55 (2) by the minister, a municipality or a
regional district, none of the minister, municipality or regional district, as
the case may be, a person to whom the vehicle or thing is disposed of or the
government is liable, in damages or otherwise, for or in respect of any claim
that may arise in respect of the vehicle or thing after its disposal in
accordance with this Act.
Part 7 -- Regulations
Division 1 -- Regulations of the
Lieutenant Governor in Council
Regulations
87 (1) The Lieutenant Governor in Council may make
regulations referred to in section 41 of the Interpretation Act.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1) of this section, the
Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations as follows:
(a) respecting means by which a public street, road,
trail, lane, bridge, trestle, tunnel, ferry landing, ferry approach, other
public way or other land or improvement may become a highway;
(b) bringing into force section 13 of the Motor Fuel
Tax Act in one or more areas of British Columbia;
(c) respecting the tax that may be collected under section
13 of the Motor Fuel Tax Act;
(d) respecting the system of tolls or charges referred to
in section 36;
(e) respecting amounts that, under section 40 (2) (d), may
be added or subtracted in calculating the outstanding debt of the authority;
(f) prescribing roads, classes of roads, expenditures or
classes of expenditures for the purposes of section 42;
(g) respecting the manner in which and the frequency at
which the minister may publish any records that may or must be published by the
minister under this Act, with power to prescribe different manners and different
frequencies for different records and situations;
(h) respecting criteria that must be met by a zoning bylaw
before it can be approved by the minister under section 52 (5), with power to
prescribe different criteria for different situations;
(i) respecting fees;
(j) respecting the manner in which interest payable under
this Act may be calculated.
(3) The Lieutenant Governor in Council may make
regulations the Lieutenant Governor in Council considers necessary or advisable
for
(a) meeting or removing any difficulty arising out of the
transition to this Act from the Highway Act, the Build BC Act, the
Ministry of Transportation and Highways Act and the Highway Scenic
Improvement Act, including, without limitation, disapplying or varying any
provision of this Act, and
(b) resolving any errors, inconsistencies or ambiguities
that arise in, or in relation to, another enactment affected by this Act.
(4) A regulation made under subsection (3) may be made
retroactive to a date not earlier than the date this section comes into
force.
(5) This subsection and subsections (3) and (4) and any
regulations made under them are repealed on July 1, 2006.
Regulations relating to
ferries
88 (1) Without limiting section 87 (1), the
Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations as follows:
(a) prescribing vessels, including, without limitation,
vessels of a class of vessels, as ferries;
(b) providing for the direction and control of passenger
and vehicular traffic on ferries and in terminals;
(c) respecting the safety and security of individuals on
ferries and in terminals;
(d) prohibiting conduct on ferries or in terminals that
does or could
(i) pose a risk to the health, safety or security of
individuals or property, or
(ii) interfere with the comfort and enjoyment of
individuals using ferries or terminals;
(e) respecting the manner in which passengers and vehicles
are to load onto and unload from ferries;
(f) respecting parking on ferries or at terminals;
(g) respecting fares or rates that may be charged for
ferry services, including, without limitation, for carrying individuals,
vehicles or property, or one or more classes of individuals, vehicles or
property, on ferries;
(h) exempting a class of persons or vehicles from all or
part of this Part or a regulation;
(i) prescribing schedules of ferry departures and
arrivals.
(2) A regulation under subsection (1) may make different
provisions for different
(a) ferries or terminals or classes of ferries or
terminals,
(b) persons or classes of persons, and
(c) vehicles or classes of vehicles.
(3) Subsections (1) and (2) do not apply to ferries or
terminals that
(a) are owned or operated by British Columbia Ferry
Services Inc., or
(b) are or form part of a concession highway under the
Transportation Investment Act.
Regulations relating to concession
highways
89 Without limiting section 87 (1), the Lieutenant
Governor in Council may make regulations in relation to ferries that are, or
form part of, a concession highway as follows:
(a) prescribing a ferry or class of ferries to which this
section applies;
(b) providing for the direction and control of passenger
and vehicular traffic on ferries and in terminals;
(c) respecting the safety and security of individuals on
ferries and in terminals;
(d) prohibiting conduct on ferries and in terminals that
does or could
(i) pose a risk to the health, safety or security of
individuals or property, or
(ii) interfere with the comfort and enjoyment of
individuals using ferries or terminals;
(e) respecting the manner in which passengers and vehicles
are to load onto and unload from ferries;
(f) respecting parking at terminals or on ferries;
(g) exempting a class of persons or vehicles from all or
part of a regulation.
Division 2 -- Regulations of the
Minister
Regulations
90 The minister may make regulations as
follows:
(a) for the purposes of protecting provincial public
undertakings or persons on or near provincial public undertakings;
(b) respecting use of provincial public highways by
persons or vehicles;
(c) respecting authorizations and applicable terms and
conditions for the purpose of section 62 (6);
(d) providing for the manner and location in which signs
or structures and trees or other plants may be placed near any provincial public
undertaking or any related land or improvement.
Regulations relating to the
Coquihalla Highway
91 (1) The minister, with the approval of the
Lieutenant Governor in Council, may make regulations as follows:
(a) establishing a system of tolls to be paid in respect
of the use of vehicles on the Coquihalla Highway, with power to prescribe
different tolls for different classes of vehicles;
(b) establishing, on the Coquihalla Highway, stations for
the collection of tolls;
(c) prescribing the toll to be paid for any vehicle or
class of vehicles passing through a toll station on the Coquihalla Highway;
(d) providing for the manner of collection of tolls
prescribed under this section;
(e) prescribing classes of vehicles for the purposes of
this section;
(f) exempting any class of vehicle from paying tolls
prescribed under this section;
(g) respecting the management of the Coquihalla
Highway.
(2) If, under the regulations, a toll station has been
established on the Coquihalla Highway, a person must not take or operate a
vehicle, other than a vehicle exempted under subsection (1) (f), through the
toll station without paying the toll prescribed for the vehicle.
Consequential Amendments
Build BC Act
92 The Build BC Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 40, is repealed.
Builders Lien Act
93 Section 1.1 (a) of the Builders Lien Act, S.B.C. 1997, c. 45, is
amended by striking out "Highway Act," and
substituting "Transportation Act,".
Coastal Ferry Act
94 Section 30 of the Coastal Ferry Act, S.B.C. 2003, c. 14, is amended
by repealing the definition of "public highway" and
substituting the following:
"public highway" has the same meaning as "highway"
in the Transportation Act; .
95 Section 33 (2) (b) is amended by striking out "one or both
of the Highway Act and the Ministry of Transportation and Highways
Act." and substituting "the Transportation
Act."
Community Charter
96 Sections 35 (6), (9) and (10), 36 (2) (c) and 41 (3) of the
Community Charter, S.B.C. 2003, c. 26, are amended by striking out
" Highway Act" and substituting
"Transportation Act".
97 Section 40 (8) is amended by striking out "section 4 of the
Highway Act." and substituting "section 42 of the
Transportation Act."
98 Section 46 is amended by adding the following
subsection:
(3) If a thing is seized under subsection (2), by a
municipality, neither the municipality nor a person to whom the thing is
disposed of is liable, in damages or otherwise, for or in respect of any claim
that may arise in respect of the thing after its disposal in accordance with
this Act.
99 Section 1 of the Schedule is amended by repealing the definition of
"Provincial arterial highway" and substituting the
following:
"Provincial arterial highway" means a highway that
has been designated as an arterial highway under the Transportation Act;
.
Creston Valley Wildlife Act
100 Section 1 of the Creston Valley Wildlife Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 84,
is amended in the definition of "arterial highway" by
striking out "section 27 of the Highway Act;" and
substituting "section 1 of the Transportation Act;".
Expropriation Act
101 Section 2 (2) (d) of the Expropriation Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 125,
is repealed and the following substituted:
(d) an entry on land under section 20 of the Hydro and
Power Authority Act or section 8 of the Transportation Act.
102 Section 3 (3) (c) is amended by striking out "section 5 (4)
of the Highway Act" and substituting "section 43 of
the Transportation Act".
103 Section 30 (3) is amended by striking out "section 12 (1)
of the Highway Act or".
104 Section 55 (2) (a) is repealed.
Forest Act
105 Section 121 of the Forest Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 157, is amended
(a) by repealing subsections (2) (a) and (6), and
(b) in subsection (9) (c) by striking out "Highway
Act," and substituting "Transportation
Act,".
Forest and Range Practices Act
106 Section 22 (1) of the Forest and Range Practices Act, S.B.C. 2002,
c. 69, is amended by adding "the Transportation Act," after
"the Highway Act,".
107 Section 24 is amended by striking out "section 4 of the
Highway Act," and substituting "section 42 of the
Transportation Act,".
Forest Practices Code of British Columbia
Act
108 Section 84 (3) (b) of the Forest Practices Code of British Columbia
Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 159, is amended by striking out "Highway
Act," and substituting "Transportation
Act,".
Greater Vancouver Transportation Authority
Act
109 Section 1 (1) of the Greater Vancouver Transportation Authority
Act, S.B.C. 1998, c. 30, is amended in the definitions of
"highway" and "provincial highway
system" by striking out "Highway Act;" and
substituting "Transportation Act;".
110 Section 1 (1) is amended by repealing the definitions of
"construction" and
"maintenance" and substituting the following:
"construction" includes the original construction
of a new highway and also the work of reconstructing or putting a highway or any
section in repair by general and continuous regrading or remetalling of its
surface, or by building, rebuilding or enlarging bridges, or by executing other
highway work of improvement or protection classified by the minister as
substantial;
"maintenance" means the work, after the
construction of a highway, of preserving and keeping it in repair, including the
making, cleaning and keeping open of ditches, gutters, drains, culverts and
watercourses, and the repairing of retaining walls, cribs, river protection
works and other works necessary to keep open and maintain the highway for use by
the traffic for which it is required; .
111 Section 21 (6) is amended by striking out "Highways
Act;" and substituting "Transportation
Act;".
112 Section 23 (3) is amended by striking out "Despite section
30 of the Highway Act," and substituting "Despite section 2
of the Transportation Act,".
113 Section 44 (1) is amended by striking out "Highway
Act," and substituting "Transportation
Act,".
Highway Act
114 The Highway Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 188, is repealed.
Highway Scenic Improvement Act
115 The Highway Scenic Improvement Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 190, is
repealed.
Industrial Roads Act
116 The Industrial Roads Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 189, is amended in the
definition of "highway" by striking out "Highway
Act;" and substituting "Transportation
Act;".
Insurance (Motor Vehicle) Act
117 Section 30.1 of the Insurance (Motor Vehicle) Act, R.S.B.C. 1996,
c. 231, is amended by repealing paragraph (g) (v) of the definition of
"motor vehicle indebtedness" and substituting the following:
(v) the Highway Act or the Transportation
Act, .
Land Act
118 Section 7 (5) (a) of the Land Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 245, is
amended by adding "the Transportation Act," after
"the Highway Act,".
119 Section 50 (1) (c) is amended by striking out
"Highway Act," and substituting
"Transportation Act,".
120 Section 106 (5) is repealed and the following
substituted:
(5) Subsection (3) does not apply to a disposition made by
the Lieutenant Governor in Council under section 59 of the Transportation
Act.
Land Title Act
121 Section 1 of the Land Title Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 250, is amended
(a) in the definition of "explanatory plan" by
repealing paragraph (b) and substituting the following:
(b) is certified correct in accordance with the records of
the land title office by a British Columbia land surveyor or by
(i) a person designated under section 121 (7) of the
Forest Act for the purpose of that section, or
(ii) the minister charged with the administration of
the Transportation Act; , and
(b) in the definition of "Ministry of Transportation"
by striking out "Highway Act" and substituting
"Transportation Act".
122 Sections 76 (3) and (5), 77.1 (2), 77.2 (1) (a), 80 (a) and (b),
115 (1), (2) and (6), 125 (2) (c) and (d), 133, 142 (1) and (2) and 373.52 (6)
(a) are amended by striking out "Highway Act"
wherever it appears and substituting "Transportation
Act".
123 Section 80 is amended by striking out "as defined in Part 6
of the Highway Act," and substituting "as designated under
section 48 of the Transportation Act,".
124 Section 121 (1) is amended by repealing the definition of
"arterial highway" and substituting the
following:
"arterial highway" means a public area designated
as an arterial highway under the Transportation Act; .
Libby Dam Reservoir Act
125 Section 3 of the Libby Dam Reservoir Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 262, is
amended
(a) by repealing subsection (2) and substituting the
following:
(2) If the ministry or agency appointed under section 2 is
not empowered by another Act to acquire land, it has and may exercise, for
acquiring land for the purposes set out in section 2, the same powers that are
conferred by the Transportation Act on the minister charged with the
administration of that Act for the purposes set out in section 8 (2) of that
Act, and has and may exercise, in relation to the acquisition of land, all other
and incidental powers that the Minister of Transportation may exercise under
that Act. , and
(b) in subsection (3) by striking out "The Ministry of
Transportation and Highways Act" and substituting "The
Transportation Act".
Local Government Act
126 Sections 551 (1), 908 (1), 924 (2) and 938 (3.1) (a) of the Local
Government Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 323, are amended by striking out
"Highway Act" wherever it appears and substituting
"Transportation Act".
127 Sections 924 (1) and 930 (4) are amended by striking out
"section 54 (2) of the Highway Act," and substituting
"section 52 (4) of the Transportation Act,".
128 Section 966 (6) (b) is amended by striking out "section 54
(2) of the Highway Act;" and substituting "section 52 (3)
of the Transportation Act;".
Mining Right of Way Act
129 Section 11 of the Mining Right of Way Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 294,
is repealed and the following substituted:
Not highway
11 Despite the Transportation Act, a road
built or maintained under this Act is not a highway within the meaning of the
Transportation Act unless the Lieutenant Governor in Council orders that
it is a highway within the meaning of that Act.
Ministry of Transportation and Highways Act
130 Sections 1 to 33 and 35 to 51 of the Ministry of Transportation and
Highways Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 311, are repealed.
131 The Supplement to the Ministry of Transportation and Highways Act
is repealed.
132 The title of the Ministry of Transportation and Highways Act is
repealed and the following substituted:
GOVERNMENT BUILDINGS ACT .
Motor Carrier Act
133 Section 1 of the Motor Carrier Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 315, is
amended by repealing the definition of "arterial highway"
and substituting the following:
"arterial highway" means a highway that is
designated as an arterial highway under the Transportation Act;
.
134 Section 8 (1) (d) (v) is repealed and the following
substituted:
(v) the Highway Act or the Transportation
Act, .
135 Section 66 is amended by striking out "Highway
Act" in both places and substituting "Transportation
Act".
Motor Fuel Tax Act
136 Section 13 (1) and (2) of the Motor Fuel Tax Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c.
317, is amended
(a) by adding "or the Transportation Act" after
"prescribed under the Build BC Act", and
(b) by striking out "section 19 of the Build BC
Act" and substituting "section 34 of the Transportation
Act".
Motor Vehicle Act
137 Section 1 of the Motor Vehicle Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 318, is
amended in paragraph (a) of the definition of "highway" by
striking out "Highway Act," and substituting
"Transportation Act,".
138 Section 26 (1) (c) (v) is repealed and the following
substituted:
(v) the Highway Act or the Transportation
Act, .
139 Section 83 (2) is amended by striking out "Highway
Act" and substituting "Transportation
Act".
140 Section 84 (1) is amended by striking out "Highway
Act," and substituting "Transportation
Act,".
141 Section 116.1 (3) (a) is amended by striking out
"Highway Act," and substituting
"Transportation Act,".
142 Section 119 (1) is amended in the definition of "controlled
access highway" by striking out "Part 6 of the Highway
Act;" and substituting "Division 3 of Part 4 of the
Transportation Act;".
143 Section 124 (13) is amended by striking out "Highway
Act" and substituting "Transportation
Act".
144 Section 189 (4) is amended by striking out "section 13.2 of
the Highway Act." and substituting "section 62 (2) or (6)
of the Transportation Act."
145 Section 209 (1) is amended by striking out "section 27 of
the Highway Act," and substituting "the Transportation
Act,".
146 Section 209 (2) (d) is repealed and the following
substituted:
(d) the granting of permits or authorizations by the
Minister of Transportation and Highways, in the minister's discretion, or
subject to conditions that may be prescribed, for the doing of anything that is
by or under the Commercial Transport Act, the Transportation Act
or this Act prohibited or made unlawful without a permit or authorization;
.
147 Section 210 (3) (n) is amended by striking out
"Highway Act," and substituting
"Transportation Act,".
148 Section 45 of the Supplement to the Motor Vehicle Act is
repealed.
Motor Vehicle (All Terrain) Act
149 Section 1 of the Motor Vehicle (All Terrain) Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c.
319, is amended in the definition of "all terrain vehicle"
by striking out "Highway Act," and substituting
"Transportation Act,".
150 Section 4 (3) is amended by striking out "Highway
Act" and substituting "Transportation
Act".
Municipal Aid Act
151 Section 1 of the Municipal Aid Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 324, is
amended in paragraph (d) of the definition of "Provincial
land" by striking out "Highway Act," and
substituting "Transportation Act,".
Petroleum and Natural Gas Act
152 Section 3 (2) of the Petroleum and Natural Gas Act, R.S.B.C. 1996,
c. 361, is amended by striking out "Highway Act,"
and substituting "Transportation Act,".
Protected Areas of British Columbia Act
153 Schedule C of the Protected Areas of British Columbia Act, S.B.C.
2000, c. 17, is amended
(a) by striking out "Section 4 Highway Act road"
wherever it appears and substituting "section 42 Transportation
Act highway", and
(b) by striking out "Section 4, Highway Act road"
wherever it appears and substituting "section 42 Transportation
Act highway".
154 Schedule D is amended
(a) by striking out "Section 4 Highway Act road"
wherever it appears and substituting "section 42 Transportation
Act highway", and
(b) by striking out "Section 4, Highway Act road"
and substituting "section 42 Transportation Act
highway".
Social Service Tax Act
155 Section 26 (1) of the Social Service Tax Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c.
431, is amended by striking out "established under the Build BC
Act," and substituting "continued under the Transportation
Act,".
Transportation Investment Act
156 Section 1 of the Transportation Investment Act, S.B.C. 2002, c. 65,
is amended in paragraph (a) of the definition of "highway"
by striking out "Highway Act," and substituting
"Transportation Act,".
157 Sections 3 (g) (iii), 11 (3) and 12 (1) (a) (iii) are amended by
striking out "under the Highway Act or the Ministry of
Transportation and Highways Act" and substituting "under the
Transportation Act".
158 Section 7 (2) (b) is amended by striking out "one or both
of the Highway Act and the Ministry of Transportation and Highways
Act." and substituting "the Transportation
Act."
159 Section 40 is repealed.
Vancouver Charter
160 Section 289 (1) of the Vancouver Charter, S.B.C. 1953, c. 55, is
amended by striking out "section 3 of the Highway
Act" and substituting "section 57 of the
Transportation Act".
161 Section 317 (1) (u) (i) and (ii) is amended by striking out
"Highway Act," and substituting
"Transportation Act,".
Weed Control Act
162 Section 12 (1) of the Weed Control Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 487, is
amended by striking out "Highway Act." and
substituting "Transportation Act."
Commencement
163 This Act comes into force by regulation of the
Lieutenant Governor in Council.