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Canada Recognizes Women’s Entrepreneurship Day

Full Title: An Act to establish National Women’s Entrepreneurship Day

Summary#

This bill would make November 19 of every year “National Women’s Entrepreneurship Day” across Canada. It is a commemorative designation only. The bill does not create programs, funding, taxes, or rules. It states the date and the name of the day (Bill, Designation section).

  • Sets November 19 each year as National Women’s Entrepreneurship Day (Bill, Designation section).
  • Aligns Canada with an existing international day recognized by the United Nations and observed in 140+ countries (Preamble).
  • Contains no new rights, duties, or enforcement provisions (Bill text).
  • Contains no funding, grants, or tax changes (Bill text).

What it means for you#

  • Households and consumers:

    • The federal law would recognize November 19 as National Women’s Entrepreneurship Day each year. This does not change services, benefits, or holidays (Bill, Designation section).
  • Women entrepreneurs and workers:

    • Recognition of the day in law. No direct changes to permits, financing, procurement, or program eligibility (Bill text).
  • Businesses and employers:

    • No closures, compliance steps, or reporting. Regular operations continue. The day is a designation only (Bill text).
  • Federal departments and agencies:

    • No legal requirement to hold events or issue materials. The bill does not mandate activities or spending (Bill text).
  • Provinces, territories, and municipalities:

    • No new obligations. The designation is federal and symbolic. Subnational governments are not required to act (Bill text).

Expenses#

Estimated net cost: Data unavailable.

  • No fiscal note publicly available.
  • The bill only designates a commemorative day and includes no appropriations, fees, taxes, or mandates (Bill, Designation section).
  • No ongoing administrative duties are created in the bill text.

Proponents' View#

  • Formal recognition can celebrate and support women in business, consistent with the bill’s stated purpose (Preamble).
  • Aligns Canada with a United Nations–recognized observance already marked in over 140 countries, creating a common date for acknowledgment (Preamble).
  • Symbolic designation involves no new spending or regulations, making it a low-cost action (Bill text).
  • Could provide a focal point for voluntary outreach by governments, schools, and industry groups; this assumes organizations choose to participate (assumption noted).

Opponents' View#

  • The bill is symbolic and does not address concrete barriers to starting or growing a business, such as access to capital, childcare, or procurement (Bill text).
  • No measurable outcomes or performance targets are included; impact on entrepreneurship is uncertain (Bill text).
  • Government communications tied to the day could still use staff time, with no budget line or evaluation plan; scale and costs are unspecified (assumption noted).
  • Adding another commemorative day may dilute attention among many observances, limiting practical effect; the bill provides no coordination mechanism (Bill text).

Timeline

Nov 17, 2022 • House

First reading

Economics
Labor and Employment
Social Issues