Go to » Web - QA - Dictionary - Encyclopedia - Images
 Web Opens New Window. Results 1 - 10 of about 152,000,000 for Transport Canada 



Transport Canada

  
Provides Acts and Regulations, Safety and Security and other information related to transportation.
http://www.tc.gc.ca/

Transport, Infrastructure and Communities Portfolio

  
Welcome page - Transport Canada ... Canada concludes historic air transport negotiations with European Union - December 9, 2008. Transport Canada Media Room ...
http://www.tc.gc.ca/en/menu.htm

Transport Canada - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  
Significant cuts to Transport Canada at that time resulted in CN Rail being ... Perhaps, the biggest challenge for Transport Canada came in the aftermath of the ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_Canada

Transport Canada: Information from Answers.com

  
Transport Canada Departments of the Government of Canada Transport Transports Minister [ John Baird ] Established 1935 Responsibilities Transportation
http://www.answers.com/topic/transport-canada

Argus Transport Canada

  
Argus Transport Canada Inc. 1115 St-Amour. St-Laurent (Quebec) H4S 1T4. Administration ... for yourself why Argus Transport Canada is truly miles ahead of ...
http://argustransport.com/index.htm

Free Transport Reports And Canadian Public Record, From The Largest And ...

  
Free Transport Canada public record searches, criminal records and sex offender, ... Transport Canada Database for Balloon flight training units ...
http://www.publicrecordcenter.com/canada_transport.htm

Aviation Photos: Transport Canada

  
Largest aviation website in the world ... 10. Crash victims to remain on mountain until spring ... Emirates set to take delivery of fourth A380 ...
http://www.airliners.net/search/photo.search?airlinesearch=Transport+Canada&distinct_entry=true

Transportation in Canada - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  
Transport Canada oversees and regulates most aspects of transportation within ... Transport Canada is under the direction of the federal government's Minister ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transportation_in_Canada

US CANADA AutoTransport (800) 466-6935 :: Homepage

  
We specialize in the following types of auto transport scenarios: ... Copyright © 2008 US CANADA Auto Transport Inc. All rights reserved. ...
http://www.uscanadaautotransport.com/

Transport Canada PSTAR, Private Pilot & Recreational Pilot Written Exam ...

  
Transport Canada PSTAR, Private Pilot & Recreational Pilot Written Exam Preparation Software ... Plus! Current Transport Canada PSTAR quiz. Windows 95/98/ME/XP/Vista ...
http://privatepilotcanada.com/
 MORE WEB RESULTS »  

 Questions 'n' Answers about 'Transport Canada' Opens New Window.

Q.How does Canada transport these items to different countries?Related Search:
Homework Help
 How does Canada transport : minerals, motor vehicles, lumber and energy? please list a site that you found your information from (: THANKS
A.HARD SUBJECT TO FIND DEFINED THIS WAY, but you might wanna try this site, look for economic factors [Link] >
  

Q.What is the best way to transport a corn snake from the UK to Canada?Related Search:
Reptiles
 My corn snake showed up after being lost for a year in my parent's back garden, in that time I have moved to Canada. I now want to get my snake transported to Canada. Does anyone know the best way to do this? Do airlines offer pet transport services, or should I go with a private company? If so, what are the details/things I should know?
A.You will need to apply for a Canadian importation license first, and the process will give you the basic requirements you have to meet before shipping, along with the approved methods for doing so. The UK may require an export license. Do not try to simply sneak it through, it will be caught at the airport and cause you a lot of trouble. If it wasn't caught, then being shipped like any other piece of mail could be very hard on the snake. Just please don't try to sneak it through. A hassle, I know, but they don't play around with moving animals from country to country.
  

Q.What would be the best way to transport dj equipment from Canada to Ireland ?Related Search:
Other - Canada
 I am going from Canada to Ireland shortly and will be needing my decks and mixer once I arrive. What is the most secure and cost worthy method for me to transport them. Canada Post and UPS are too expensive. Ok you guys, you have rather gotten away with your basic knowledge of the industry. You do not sell equipment that has cost a pretty penny when in fact I have found out that they can be stored in the cargo of the plane I will be travelling on. I do hope that you research your answers and don't assume.
A.You certainly left out a lot your options. First they will have rental music stores in Dublin and Belfast. Look it up online. If you are doing a music tour contact the booker. They should have a list of rental places. If you are doing this professionally I would fire your agent/manager, this is their job description. You get them to work on this. If you are going permanently or as an amateur sell them off and buy new/used/rent in Dublin or Belfast. Do carry your music instrument. And remember, if you are doing this professionally, a lease or rent is a 100% cost writeoff off the top of your taxes. You diminish the value of your equipment by moving them onto an aircraft, truck or whatever. I don't care what insurance you put on that equipment, you don't get 100% recovery. The only tax benefit if you use your own equipment is an annual depreciation. If you are a DJ then same goes. Just bring your music. Rent the equipment there. Its a tax write-of.
  

Q.Does Greyhound Canada transport boxes or suitcases to another province ?Related Search:
Packing & Preparation
 Hello I am relocating to another province and wondered if Greyhound Canada transports boxes or suitcases without me travelling on the coach ? Has anyone done this ? Have looked on their website and it only has a section for xpress courier. Looking to find the cheapest way to transport my things over. Thanks
A.Try Greyhound Courier Express, they ship packages, but not sure what they may have in the way of size/weight restrictions [Link] 
  

Q.Building a pipeline above ground to transport Canada's oil and mineral resources?Related Search:
Other - Science
 A) creates barriers to the migration of Arctic animals. B) causes acid rain. C) disrupts the permafrost of the fragile environment. D) permanently damages the natural vegetation. Thanks in advance!
A.That sounds like a question from a program of politically biased social engineering, not from a program of education. Meeting the conflicting needs of human society and environmental preservation is not simple. Simplistic answers are a harmful distortion.
  

Q.Desperately need to find the minimum age requirement of a transport truck driver in Ontario, Canada?Related Search:
Other - Cars & Transportation
 I am in great need to find out how old you must be at least to be allowed to drive a transport truck in Ontario, Canada. (In 2005. If it was changed and you no longer presently know the age, that is fine as long as it was the age from 2004-2005). I searched in google and in getting a lot of conflicting answers, if anyone knows for sure please tell me, it is very important that I find out. Thank you very much to whoever can help.
A.it used to be that the insurance companys wouldnt cover you unless you were 25 yrs. old
  

Q.how to get a Transport Canada Restricted Area Pass?Related Search:
Other - Canada
 can you please provide me the link and also do we have to live in canada at least 5 years to get it? I lived in netherlands for 5 years and immgrate to canada and I need this pass in order to get a job.
A.Here is the information on living and working in Canada:
  
 Dictionary Opens New Window.

Click on the word below to see the definition:
 
 Encyclopedia Opens New Window.

Departments of the Government of Canada

Transport
Transports
Minister [John Baird]
Established 1935
Responsibilities Transportation
Employees 5,476
Department Website

Transport Canada is the department within the government of Canada which is responsible for developing regulations, policies and services of transportation in Canada.

Contents

[edit] History

The Department of Transport was created in 1935 by the government of Mackenzie King in recognition of the changing transportation environment in Canada. It merged two historic departments the former Department of Railways and Canals and the Department of Marine under one dynamic minister Clarence Decatur Howe who would use the portfolio to rationalize the governance and provision of all forms of transportation (air, water and land). He created a National Harbours Board and Trans-Canada Airlines. The Department of Transport Act came into force November 2, 1936.

Prior to a 1994 federal government reorganization, Transport Canada had a wide range of responsibilities including the Canadian Coast Guard, the St. Lawrence Seaway, airports and seaports, as well as VIA Rail and CN Rail. Significant cuts to Transport Canada at that time resulted in CN Rail being privatized, the coast guard being transferred to Fisheries and Oceans and the seaway and various ports and airports being transferred to local operating authorities; Transport Canada emerged from this process as a fundamentally different organization focused on policy and regulation as opposed to transportation operation.

Perhaps, the biggest challenge for Transport Canada came in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks. After the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration closed down U.S. airspace as a result of the terrorist attacks, Transport Canada shut down Canadian airspace, to take in U.S.-bound international flights, launching Operation Yellow Ribbon.

The current Minister of Transport is the Honourable John Baird.

The Registrar of Imported Vehicles is a private contractor to Transport Canada. All motor vehicles being imported into Canada must meet certain criteria set by the Government of Canada and administered by the Registrar of Imported Vehicles. The Registrar of Imported Vehicles does not have any process for appeals of their decisions, particularly relating the acceptability of documentation relating to "Recall Clearances". The RIV has in some instances decided to only accept certain documents for which vehicle manufacturers may or may not charge any fee they wish.

Transport Canada's headquarters are located in Ottawa, at Place de Ville, Tower C. Transport Canada also has regional headquarters in:

  • Vancouver - Civil Aviation and Marine Safety 620-800 Burrard Street at Robson
  • Winnipeg - Macdonald Building
  • Toronto - Government of Canada Building 4900 Yonge Street
  • Dorval - Pierre Elliot Trudeau Airport, 700 Place Leigh Capreol (which ironically has no public transit access)
  • Moncton - Heritage Building (old Eaton's catalogue building)

[edit] Current Structure of Transport Canada

  • Minister of Transport, Infrastructure and Communities John Baird
    • Deputy Minister, Transport, Infrastructure and Communities and Deputy Head Infrastructure and Communities Louis Ranger Deputy Minister
      • Assistant Deputy Minister, Safety and Security, Marc Grégoire
      • Assistant Deputy Minister, Programs, Mary Komisarky
      • Assistant Deputy Minister, Policy, Kristine Burr
      • Assistant Deputy Minister, Corporate Services, André Morency
      • Director General, Communications and Marketing, Jean Valin
      • Regional Director General, Atlantic Region, Michel Doiron
      • Regional Director General, Quebec Region, André Lapointe
      • Regional Director General, Ontario Region, Debra Taylor
      • Regional Director General, Prairie and Northern Region, Sylvain Giguère
      • Regional Director General, Pacific Region, Michael Henderson
      • Departmental General Counsel, Jules Pigeon

Transport Canada org chart

[edit] Road

The Motor Vehicle Safety Act was established in 1971 in order to create safety standards for cars in Canada. The department also acts as the federal government's funding partner on jointly-funded provincial transportation infrastructure projects for new highways.

[edit] Rail

Transport Canada's role in railways include:

  • railway safety
  • strategies for rail travel accessibility
  • safety of federally regulated railway bridges
  • Inspecting and testing traffic control signals, grade crossing warning systems
  • rail operating rules
  • regulations, standards and services for safe transport of dangerous goods
  • Canadian Transport Emergency Centre to assist emergency response and handling dangerous goods emergencies

Following allegations by shippers of service level deterioration, on April 7, 2008, the federal government of Canada launched a review of railway freight service within the country. Transport Canada, which is managing the review, plans to investigate the relationships between Canadian shippers and the rail industry, especially with regards to the two largest railroad companies in the country, Canadian Pacific Railway and Canadian National Railway. The review period is expected to last more than a year and could lead to new regulations for carriers.[1]

[edit] Marine

Transport Canada is responsible for the waterways inside and surrounding Canada. These responsibilities include:

  • responding and investigating marine accidents within Canadian waters
  • enforcing marine acts and regulations
  • establishing and enforcing marine personnel standards and pilotage
  • Marine Safety
  • Marine Security
  • regulating the operation of marine vessels in Canadian waters
  • As of 2003 the Office of Boating Safety and the Navigable Waters Protection Act were transferred back to Transport Canada. As was certain regulatory aspects of Emergency Response (Oil pollution)

[edit] Aviation

Transport Canada's role in aviation seems to be the most detailed, and also the most controversial. Until 1996, Transport Canada was responsible for both regulation of aviation and the operation of air traffic services, similar to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) in the United States, as well as the operation of most major airports. On November 1, 1996, these responsibilities were split: Transport Canada remains responsible for regulation, but a new regulated non-profit company, NAV CANADA, took over responsibility for all civilian air traffic services. This change was (and remains) controversial because NAV CANADA began charging for services that were previously funded through general tax revenue. In 2005, the United States was discussing a similar delegation of the FAA's air traffic services to an "arm's-length" government corporation.

During the 1990s, Transport Canada also began privatizing the operation of large airports, and divesting itself of small airports altogether (typically handing them over to municipalities). Following the 1994 National Airports Policy, Transport Canada retains ownership of most airports with 200,000 or more annual passenger movements, as well as the primary airports serving the federal, provincial, and territorial capitals, but leases most of these airports (which make up the National Airports System) to outside operators; currently, there are 26 airports in the system.

In 2003, Transport Canada launched its Electronic Collection of Air Transportation Statistics (ECATS) program to collect passenger and cargo data in real-time from air carriers flying in Canada. ECATS will expand into the field of General Aviation during 2008.

Transport Canada continues to be responsible for licensing pilots and other aviation specialists (such as dispatchers and mechanics) as well as registering and inspecting aircraft. It is also responsible for the safety certification of most forms of commercial operations. These responsibilities are carried out by 6 regions, Atlantic, Quebec, Ontario, Prairie & Northern and Pacific. The other region based in Ottawa (National Capital Region) is responsible for air operators operating international flights and certain types of large aeroplanes.

[edit] Controversies

Transport Canada has been the centre of a number of controversies in recent years. The first involved criticism of its move to Safety Management Systems in its management and regulation of civil aviation. Whistleblower Hugh Danford, an inspector at Transport Canada, went on record[2] criticizing this approach, indicating that it would increase risk to the flying public as currently envisioned, and was ultimately forced to resign. In another, several Transport Canada senior executives, including Assistant Deputy Minister, Safety and Security, Marc Grégoire, were sued for reprisals against another whistleblower, Ian Bron, who reported that the Marine Security framework was riddled with gaps.[3]

More recently, Transport Canada has been criticised for its refusal to approve electrical cars manufactured in Canada.[4]

The Canadian Association of Journalists[5] nominated Transport Canada for its Secrecy Award for a second time in 2008, indicating that a Bill to amend the Aeronautics Act will cause "a veil of secrecy [to] fall over all information reported by airlines about performance, safety violations, aviation safety problems and their resolution."[6] This shows the challenge of having to be transparent to the public and at the same time encouraging a culture of openess with reporting safety-oriented issues.

[edit] Related

[edit] See also

The provinces also have their own transportation departments, namely to deal with roads and vehicle licensing and regulations:

[edit] References



All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.)
Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.
Privacy policy - About Wikipedia - Disclaimers - Fundraising
 
 Images Opens New Window.
File Size: 13.599609375k
Dimensions: 273 x 200 pixels
File Format: jpeg
File Size: 13.099609375k
Dimensions: 198 x 300 pixels
File Format: jpeg
File Size: 205.3994140625k
Dimensions: 1500 x 662 pixels
File Format: jpeg
File Size: 17.7998046875k
Dimensions: 240 x 257 pixels
File Format: jpeg
File Size: 848.19921875k
Dimensions: 1536 x 2048 pixels
File Format: jpeg
File Size: 60.7998046875k
Dimensions: 425 x 590 pixels
File Format: jpeg
File Size: 30.5k
Dimensions: 383 x 459 pixels
File Format: jpeg
File Size: 31.099609375k
Dimensions: 340 x 425 pixels
File Format: jpeg
File Size: 17.2998046875k
Dimensions: 298 x 374 pixels
File Format: jpeg
File Size: 27k
Dimensions: 640 x 427 pixels
File Format: jpeg
File Size: 25.099609375k
Dimensions: 340 x 340 pixels
File Format: jpeg
File Size: 19.19921875k
Dimensions: 298 x 383 pixels
File Format: jpeg
 
 MORE IMAGES »  
Go to » Web - QA - Dictionary - Encyclopedia - Images