Part INoticeVolume 160, Number 29Published: July 18, 2026

Standing Order 130 — Private Bills Notice

Canada Gazette, Part I, Volume 160, Number 29: PARLIAMENT

A House of Commons notice records that Standing Order 130 (rules on notices of intended applications for private bills) was previously published in the Canada Gazette on May 24, 2025. The July 18, 2026 notice lists the Private Members’ Business Office (West Block, Room 314‑C, Ottawa; 613‑992‑9511) as the contact and names Eric Janse, Clerk of the House of Commons, as the official.

Published
July 18, 2026
Department
Unavailable
Section
HOUSE OF COMMONS
Comment deadline
Unavailable
Effective date
Unavailable
Publication part
Part I

Summary

Summary#

This Canada Gazette entry (Part I, Volume 160, Number 29) records a short notice from the House of Commons about private bills. It says Standing Order 130 (about notices of intended applications for private bills) was published in the Canada Gazette on May 24, 2025, and the notice itself appeared on July 18, 2026.

What it does#

  • Notes that Standing Order 130 (rules on notices for intended private-bill applications) was previously published in the Canada Gazette.
  • Gives a contact for more information: the Private Members’ Business Office, West Block, Room 314‑C, Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0A6, phone 613‑992‑9511.
  • Lists Eric Janse, Clerk of the House of Commons, as the official who posted the notice.
  • The Gazette item does not include the full text of the standing order or additional procedural detail in this short notice.

Who's affected#

  • Members of Parliament who plan to introduce or handle private bills.
  • House of Commons staff who manage notices and applications for private bills.
  • Others interested in private bills (organizations or individuals) may want the contact above to ask for details. The notice itself does not spell out further steps or requirements.

Why it matters#

  • It tells people where to get official information about applying for or notifying Parliament about a private bill.
  • For the public, it is mainly a routine parliamentary administration notice — important to those directly involved in private-bill work, but not a broad policy change.

Key topics

Standing Order 130House of CommonsPrivate Members’ Business OfficePrivate billsnotices of intended applicationsparliamentary procedureparliamentary administrationEric JanseClerk of the House of CommonsCanada GazetteMembers of Parliament

Source: Canada Gazette

Official source