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Update Laws for Trade, Safety, Innovation

Full Title: An Act respecting regulatory modernization

Summary#

This federal bill updates many laws to remove outdated rules, align with current practice, and support innovation and trade. It changes how notices are published, allows more electronic and flexible administration, and gives ministers targeted powers to act faster in emergencies or to meet international standards. It also modernizes rules for surveyors, agriculture marketing, food and animal safety, fisheries enforcement, immigration data sharing, and trade implementation.

  • Notice of bankruptcy may be published as directed by the Superintendent, not in local newspapers (Part 1, Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act s.102(4)).
  • The Minister may let traders temporarily use unapproved measuring devices; meter verification can use sampling plans (Part 1, Weights and Measures Act s.8.1; Electricity and Gas Inspection Act s.28(1)(d)).
  • Offshore safety rules align with Hazardous Products Act labels and safety data sheets; employers must share SDS in emergencies (Part 2, Atlantic Accord Acts ss.205.022, 205.023; ss.210.022, 210.023).
  • Wildlife trade and species-at-risk processes are streamlined; some schedules are updated or repealed and timelines clarified (Part 3, WAPPRIITA s.6–7; SARA ss.42, 68, Schedule provisions).
  • Marketing boards get powers by being named in a Schedule; levies continue with clearer access to rules (Part 4, Agricultural Products Marketing Act ss.1.1–9; Schedule).
  • CFIA laws add conditions on approvals, regulate releases of certain seeds/supplements/biologics, expand electronic administration, and extend emergency order tools (Part 5).
  • New offence for breaching a fisheries licence condition; alternative measures agreements made more accessible (Part 6).
  • Immigration can disclose personal information within the department and to other governments under written agreements and regulations (Part 7).
  • Customs regulations can more easily implement free trade agreements; Transport Minister can issue interim orders to meet international obligations (Parts 8–9).

What it means for you#

  • Households

    • If someone declares bankruptcy, required public notice will follow the Superintendent’s directives, not local newspaper ads (takes effect on order-in-council) (Part 1).
    • A bankrupt person can be discharged faster if certain limited objections are withdrawn (Part 1, Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act new withdrawal process).
    • Food safety actions taken by interim order can be extended up to 2 additional years by Cabinet, which may affect recalls or import rules during emergencies (Part 5, Safe Food for Canadians Act s.56(2.1)).
    • Rules to curb illegal wildlife trade are maintained but updated; prohibitions are explicitly “subject to the regulations,” which may adjust details (Part 3, WAPPRIITA s.6–7).
    • Species-at-risk planning timelines are clarified; some outdated lists are repealed or updated (Part 3, SARA ss.42, 68; Schedule changes).
  • Workers

    • Offshore oil and gas workers see alignment to national hazardous product labelling and safety data sheets, and emergency access to SDS by health professionals (Part 2, Atlantic Accord Acts ss.205.022–205.023; ss.210.022–210.023).
    • Canada Lands Surveyors face a modernized complaints and discipline system, possible temporary suspensions with published decisions, and improved labour mobility (Part 2, Canada Lands Surveyors Act ss.24–31; s.21(3)).
    • Fishery workers should note that violating a licence condition is now an offence under the Coastal Fisheries Protection Act (Part 6, s.17(1)(e)).
  • Businesses

    • Retailers and fuel/utility companies may temporarily use unapproved measuring devices if the Minister permits; devices can still be withdrawn if terms are breached (Part 1, Weights and Measures Act s.8.1).
    • Electricity and gas meters may be verified using sampling plans set by the director, if authorized (Part 1, Electricity and Gas Inspection Act s.28(1)(d)).
    • Federal corporations, co-ops, and not-for-profits send an “annual update statement” to the Director, replacing “annual return” terminology (Part 1, CBCA s.263; Canada Cooperatives Act s.374; NFP Act s.278).
    • Agricultural producers remain subject to marketing board levies and rules, now set via a Schedule; boards must make requirements accessible online or by other means (Part 4, ss.3–8; Schedule).
    • Feed, fertilizer, seed, and veterinary biologics makers and importers face explicit conditions on approvals/registrations, and limits on releasing novel supplements/seeds/biologics unless regulations allow (Part 5, Feeds Act s.5.31; Fertilizers Act ss.5.31–5.32; Seeds Act s.3.3; Health of Animals Act s.11.1).
    • CFIA and associated Acts allow electronic filings, signatures, decisions (including automated), and proof-of-delivery notices (Part 5, CFIA Act ss.11.1–11.3; multiple Acts’ notice provisions).
    • Fisheries participants may access alternative measures agreements without a previous time limit; enforcement discretion is confirmed (Part 6, Fisheries Act s.86.2(1)(g) and new clause).
  • Importers/Exporters and Transportation

    • Customs regulations can be made to uniformly implement free trade agreements, potentially smoothing compliance (Part 8, Customs Act s.164(1.1)).
    • Transport Minister can issue interim orders to implement international standards or ensure compliance with international obligations for up to 3 years, with publication and enforcement rules (Part 9).
  • Privacy and Immigration Clients

    • The Immigration Minister may disclose personal information within the department and to other federal/provincial bodies under written agreements that define limits and purposes; regulations can set conditions (Part 7, Department of Citizenship and Immigration Act new disclosure sections; IRPA s.150.1(1)(f)).
  • Timing

    • Many sections take effect on dates set by the Governor in Council; some took effect at Royal Assent. Check orders-in-council for exact dates (multiple “Coming into Force” clauses across Parts).

Expenses#

  • Estimated net cost: Data unavailable.

  • Key notes:

    • No explicit appropriations or new fees are set in the bill text (multiple Parts).
    • Departments and agencies may face implementation and IT costs to enable electronic systems, new oversight processes, and regulatory updates; public estimates are not provided in the bill (Data unavailable).
    • Potential administrative savings from repealing outdated orders/regulations and consolidating authorities (Parts 2–5); quantification is not published (Data unavailable).

Proponents' View#

  • Reduces red tape and modernizes administration, e.g., shifting bankruptcy notices from newspapers to Superintendent-directed methods and allowing electronic CFIA processes (Part 1; Part 5, CFIA Act ss.11.1–11.3).
  • Supports innovation by permitting temporary use of new measuring devices in trade under controlled terms and by recognizing comparable foreign safety systems for feeds/seeds (Part 1, Weights and Measures Act s.8.1; Part 5, Feeds Act s.5(1)(h.3); Seeds Act s.4(1)(j.4)).
  • Speeds response to health and safety risks by enabling interim orders and extending their duration where needed, while maintaining publication safeguards (Part 5, Safe Food for Canadians Act s.56(2.1); Health of Animals Act interim orders).
  • Aligns with national and international standards, aiding trade and compliance: hazardous product labelling/SDS offshore; Customs regs for FTAs; Transport interim orders to implement international standards (Part 2, Atlantic Accord Acts; Part 8, Customs Act s.164(1.1); Part 9).
  • Improves professional oversight and labour mobility for Canada Lands Surveyors with clearer complaints, discipline tools, and alignment with the Canadian Free Trade Agreement (Part 2, Canada Lands Surveyors Act ss.21(3), 24–31).
  • Clarifies wildlife trade and species-at-risk processes, updating schedules and timelines to reduce duplication and focus on current assessments (Part 3, WAPPRIITA s.6–7; SARA ss.42, 68, Schedule changes).

Opponents' View#

  • Transparency and oversight concerns: removing some Canada Gazette pre-publication steps for petroleum regulations and using ministerial interim orders may reduce public input and parliamentary scrutiny (Part 2, Canada Oil and Gas Operations Act s.15 repeal; Part 9).
  • Consumer protection risk: temporary use of unapproved weighing/measuring devices, even under conditions, could lead to accuracy disputes affecting buyers and sellers (Part 1, Weights and Measures Act s.8.1).
  • Privacy risk: broader immigration data sharing within and across governments, even with written agreements, could increase exposure of personal information if safeguards fail (Part 7, Department of Citizenship and Immigration Act new disclosure sections).
  • Environmental and species protection worry: making prohibitions “subject to regulations” and altering SARA schedules and timelines could enable regulatory changes that delay or weaken protections if not managed carefully (Part 3, WAPPRIITA s.6–7; SARA ss.42, 68; Schedule changes).
  • Compliance burden: agricultural producers and agri-businesses must track conditions on approvals, new “release” rules for seeds/supplements/biologics, and accessible board requirements; small operators may face new administrative tasks (Part 4; Part 5 across CFIA statutes).
  • Implementation risk: many changes activate by order-in-council and require new regulations and IT systems; uneven rollout could create confusion over effective dates and obligations (multiple “Coming into Force” clauses).

Timeline

Jun 14, 2022 • Senate

Consideration in committee

Jun 15, 2022 • Senate

Report stage

Jun 20, 2022 • Senate

Third reading

Jun 22, 2022 • House

First reading

Jun 19, 2024 • House

Second reading

Trade and Commerce
Technology and Innovation
Economics
Healthcare
Labor and Employment
Criminal Justice
Immigration
Climate and Environment