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S.C. 2000, c. 5 [1] Enacted by: Parliament of Canada: Assented to: 13 April 2000: Commenced: Section 1 in force 13 April 2000; Parts 2, 3 and 4 in force 1 May 2000; Part 1 in force 1 January 2001; Part 5 in force 1 June 2009: Legislative history; Bill title: 36th Parliament, Bill C-6: Introduced by: John Manley, Minister of Industry
The bill was introduced on 17 May 2016 by Justin Trudeau's Liberal government as Bill C-16 of the first session of the 42nd Parliament. [1] It passed in the House of Commons by 248–40 votes and in the Senate by 67–11 votes with three abstentions. [2] [3] The bill became law upon receiving royal assent on 19 June 2017, coming into force ...
Commonly known as Bill C-10, the bill was passed in the House of Commons on June 22, 2021, but failed to pass the Senate before Parliament was dissolved for a federal election. It was reintroduced with amendments as the Online Streaming Act during the first session of the 44th Canadian Parliament in February 2022, passed in the House of Commons ...
Strengthening the Canadian Citizenship Act (Bill C-24). Royal Assent: June 19, 2014; Came into force: June 11, 2015 "The Act contains a range of legislative amendments to further improve the citizenship program." An Act to amend the Citizenship Act (Bill C-6) June 19, 2017 (Royal Assent); October 11, 2017 (Came into force)
Bill C-6 was introduced in the House of Commons by federal Minister of Health Monique Bégin in December 1983. The bill passed unanimously in the House of Commons in April 1984, and received royal assent 8 days later. The Canada Health Act was thereby enacted in 1984.
The Affordable Housing and Groceries Act, Bill C-56 (French: Loi sur le logement et l’épicerie à prix abordable) is a proposed legislation tabled in the House of Commons of Canada on 21 September 2023. [1] [2] The legislation has two parts. The first will temporarily remove the goods and services tax (GST) on new residential rental ...
It passed in the House of Commons of Canada on June 20, 2018 [1] and in the Senate of Canada on June 6, 2019. [2] Bill C-69 received royal assent on June 21, 2019. [ 3 ] The Acts were introduced together as Bill C-69 and entitled An Act to enact the Impact Assessment Act and the Canadian Energy Regulator Act, to amend the Navigation Protection ...
While Bill C-60 did not alter the right to make private copies of copyrighted material, it introduced limitations on the use of these private copies. In particular, the bill sought to make selling, renting, trading, distributing, and communicating legally-made private copies of a copyrighted work an infringement of copyrights.