PROPOSALS TO AMEND THE PARLIAMENT OF CANADA
ACT (ETHICS COMMISSIONER) AND OTHER ACTS AS A CONSEQUENCE
R.S., c. P-1
Parliament of Canada Act
1. Sections 14 and 15 of the Parliament of Canada Act
are repealed.
2000, c. 12, s. 210
2. Sections 34 to 40 of the Act are replaced by the
following:
Disqualification
35. If any member of the House of Commons accepts any
office or commission that, by virtue of this Division, renders a person
incapable of being elected to, or of sitting or voting in, the House of Commons,
the seat of the member is vacated and the member's election becomes void.
3. The Act is amended by adding the following after the
heading "GENERAL" of Part V:
Ethics Commissioner
Appointment
72.1 The Governor in Council shall, by commission
under the Great Seal, appoint an Ethics Commissioner.
Tenure
72.2 (1) The Ethics Commissioner holds office during
good behaviour for a single term of five years, but may be removed by the
Governor in Council on address of the Senate and House of Commons.
Interim appointment
(2) In the event of the absence or incapacity of the Ethics
Commissioner, or if that office is vacant, the Governor in Council may appoint a
qualified person to hold that office in the interim for a term not exceeding six
months.
Remuneration
72.3 (1) The Ethics Commissioner shall be paid the
remuneration set by the Governor in Council.
Expenses
(2) The Ethics Commissioner is entitled to be paid reasonable
travel and living expenses incurred in the performance of his or her duties or
functions while absent from the Ethics Commissioner's ordinary place of work.
Carrying out functions
(3) The Ethics Commissioner shall engage exclusively in the
duties and functions of the Ethics Commissioner and may not hold any other
office under Her Majesty or engage in any other employment for reward.
Deputy head
72.4 (1) The Ethics Commissioner has the rank of a
deputy head of a department of the Government of Canada and has the control and
management of the Office of the Ethics Commissioner.
Powers to contract
(2) The Ethics Commissioner may, in carrying out the work of
the Office of the Ethics Commissioner, enter into contracts, memoranda of
understanding or other arrangements.
Staff
(3) The Ethics Commissioner may employ any officers and
employees and may engage the services of any agents, advisers and consultants
that the Ethics Commissioner considers necessary for the proper conduct of the
work of the Office of the Ethics Commissioner.
Authorization
(4) The Ethics Commissioner may, subject to the conditions he
or she sets, authorize any person to exercise any powers under subsection (2) or
(3) on behalf of the Ethics Commissioner that he or she may determine.
Salaries
(5) The salaries of the officers and employees of the Office
of the Ethics Commissioner shall be fixed according to the scale provided by
law.
Payment
(6) The salaries of the officers and employees of the Office
of the Ethics Commissioner, and any casual expenses connected with the office,
shall be paid out of moneys provided by Parliament for that purpose.
Estimates to be prepared
(7) Prior to each fiscal year, the Ethics Commissioner shall
cause to be prepared an estimate of the sums that will be required to pay the
charges and expenses of the Office of the Ethics Commissioner during the fiscal
year.
Inclusion in Government estimates
(8) The estimate referred to in subsection (7) shall be
considered by the Speakers of the Senate and House of Commons and then
transmitted to the President of the Treasury Board, who shall lay it before the
House of Commons with the estimates of the Government for the fiscal year.
Functions in Relation to Parliamentarians
Governing conduct
72.5 (1) The Ethics Commissioner shall perform the
duties and functions assigned by the Houses of Parliament for governing the
conduct of members of the Senate and House of Commons. Those duties and
functions are carried out within the institution of Parliament.
General direction of committee
(2) The Ethics Commissioner shall carry out the duties and
functions referred to in subsection (1) under the general direction of
committees of the Senate and the House of Commons, or a committee of both Houses
of Parliament, that may be designated or established for that purpose.
Clarification
(3) For greater certainty, this section shall not be
construed as limiting in any way the powers, privileges, rights and immunities
of both Houses of Parliament and of their members.
Functions in Relation to Public Office Holders
Definition of "public office holder"
72.51 For the purposes of sections 72.6 to 72.71,
"public office holder" means
(a) a minister of the Crown, a minister of state or
a parliamentary secretary;
(b) a person, other than a public servant, who works
on behalf of a minister of the Crown or a minister of state;
(c) a Governor in Council appointee, other than the
following persons, namely,
(i) a lieutenant governor,
(ii) officers and staff of the Senate, House of Commons
and Library of Parliament,
(iii) a person appointed or employed under the Public
Service Employment Act who is a head of mission as defined in subsection
13(1) of the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade Act,
(iv) a judge who receives a salary under the Judges
Act, and
(v) an officer of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, not
including the Commissioner; and
(d) a full-time ministerial appointee designated by
the appropriate Minister of the Crown as a public office holder.
Mandate
72.6 The mandate of the Ethics Commissioner in
relation to public office holders is
(a) to administer ethical principles, rules or
obligations established by the Prime Minister for public office holders;
(b) to provide confidential advice to the Prime
Minister with respect to those ethical principles, rules or obligations and
ethical issues in general; and
(c) to provide confidential advice to a public
office holder with respect to the application to him or her of those ethical
principles, rules or obligations.
Request from parliamentarian
72.7 (1) Any member of the Senate or House of Commons
may request that the Ethics Commissioner inquire into the observance by a
minister of the Crown or a minister of state of ethical principles, rules or
obligations established by the Prime Minister for public office holders.
Discontinuance
(2) The Ethics Commissioner may, having regard to all the
circumstances of the case, discontinue his or her examination of the request.
Report
(3) The Ethics Commissioner shall provide the Prime Minister
with a report setting out the facts in question as well as the Ethics
Commissioner's analysis and conclusions in relation to the request, including
when the Ethics Commissioner discontinues his or her examination under
subsection (2).
Making report available
(4) The Ethics Commissioner shall, when providing the report
under subsection (3), provide a copy of it to the member who made the request
and to the minister of the Crown or minister of state who is the subject of the
request, and make the report available to the public.
Confidentiality
(5) A report provided under this section shall not reveal any
information that the Ethics Commissioner is required to keep confidential.
Presentation of views
72.71 Before providing confidential advice under
paragraph 72.6(b) or a report under subsection 72.7(3), the Ethics
Commissioner shall provide the public office holder concerned with a reasonable
opportunity to present his or her views.
Powers
72.8 (1) For the purposes of paragraph 72.6(b)
and section 72.7, the Ethics Commissioner has the power of summoning witnesses
and requiring them to
(a) give evidence orally or in writing and on oath
or, if they are persons entitled to affirm in civil matters, on solemn
affirmation; and
(b) produce any documents and things that the
Commissioner considers necessary.
Enforcement
(2) The Ethics Commissioner has the same power to enforce the
attendance of witnesses and to compel them to give evidence as a court of record
in civil cases.
Powers carried out in private
(3) The powers referred to in subsections (1) and (2) shall
be carried out in private.
Inadmissibility
(4) Information given by a person under this section is
inadmissible against the person in a court or in any proceeding, other than in a
prosecution of a person for an offence under section 131 of the Criminal Code
(perjury) in respect of a statement made to the Ethics Commissioner.
Confidentiality
(5) The Ethics Commissioner, and every person acting on
behalf of or under the direction of the Ethics Commissioner, shall not disclose
any information that comes to their knowledge in the performance of their duties
and functions under this section, unless
(a) the disclosure is, in the opinion of the Ethics
Commissioner, essential for the purposes of this section; or
(b) the information is disclosed in the course of a
prosecution for an offence under section 131 of the Criminal Code
(perjury) in respect of a statement made to the Ethics Commissioner.
General
No summons
72.9 (1) The Ethics Commissioner or any person acting
on behalf or under the direction of the Ethics Commissioner is not a competent
or compellable witness, in respect of any matter coming to the knowledge of the
Ethics Commissioner or the person as a result of exercising any powers or
performing any duties or functions of the Ethics Commissioner under this Act.
Protection
(2) No criminal or civil proceedings lie against the Ethics
Commissioner, or against any person acting on behalf or under the direction of
the Ethics Commissioner, for anything done, reported or said in good faith in
the course of the exercise or performance or purported exercise or performance
of any power, duty or function of the Ethics Commissioner under this Act.
Clarification
(3) The protection provided under subsections (1) and (2)
does not limit any powers, privileges, rights and immunities that the Ethics
Commissioner may otherwise enjoy.
Annual report
72.91 (1) The Ethics Commissioner shall, within three
months after the end of each fiscal year, submit a report on his or her
activities under sections 72.5 to 72.7 for that year to the Speaker of the
Senate and the Speaker of the House of Commons, who shall each table the report
in the House over which he or she presides.
Confidentiality
(2) The report shall not reveal any information that the
Ethics Commissioner is required to keep confidential.
Consequential Amendments
R.S., c. A-1
Access to Information Act
1995, c. 12, s. 8
4. Schedule I to the Access to Information Act is
amended by striking out the following under the heading "Other
Government Institutions":
Ethics Counsellor
Conseiller en éthique
R.S., c. C-10
Canada Post Corporation Act
5. Subsection 35(2) of the Canada Post Corporation Act
is amended by striking out the word "or" at the end of paragraph (b),
by adding the word "or" at the end of paragraph (c) and by
adding the following after paragraph (c):
(d) the Ethics Commissioner
R.S., c. F-11
Financial Administration Act
R.S., c. 1 (4th Supp.), s. 25
6. (1) Paragraph (c) of the definition
"appropriate minister" in section 2 of the Financial Administration
Act is replaced by the following:
(c) with respect to the Senate, the Speaker, with
respect to the House of Commons, the Board of Internal Economy, and with
respect to the Library of Parliament and the Office of the Ethics
Commissioner, the Speakers of the Senate and the House of Commons,
(2) Paragraph (c) of the definition
"department" in section 2 of the Act is replaced by the following:
(c) the staffs of the Senate, the House of
Commons, the Library of Parliament and the Office of the Ethics
Commissioner, and
R.S., c. G-2
Garnishment, Attachment and Pension Diversion Act
7. The heading "Senate, House of Commons and Library
of Parliament" before section 16 of the Garnishment, Attachment and
Pension Diversion Act is replaced by the following:
Senate, House of Commons, Library of Parliament and Office of
the Ethics Commissioner
8. The portion of paragraph (b) of the definition
"salary" in section 16 of the Act before subparagraph (i) is replaced
by the following:
(b) in the case of the staff of the Senate, House
of Commons, Library of Parliament or Office of the Ethics Commissioner or
the staff of members of the Senate or House of Commons, or in the case of
any other person paid out of moneys appropriated by Parliament for use by
the Senate, House of Commons, Library of Parliament or Office of the Ethics
Commissioner,
9. The portion of section 17 of the Act before paragraph (a)
is replaced by the following:
Garnishment of salaries, remuneration
17. The Senate, House of Commons, Library of
Parliament and Office of the Ethics Commissioner are, subject to this Division
and any regulation made thereunder, bound by provincial garnishment law in
respect of
1997, c. 1, s. 29
10. Sections 18 and 19 of the Act are replaced by the
following:
Service binding
18. (1) Subject to this Division, service on the
Senate, House of Commons, Library of Parliament or Office of the Ethics
Commissioner of a garnishee summons, together with a copy of the judgment or
order against the debtor and an application in the prescribed form, binds the
Senate, House of Commons, Library of Parliament or Office of the Ethics
Commissioner, as the case may be, fifteen days after the day on which those
documents are served.
When service is effective
(2) A garnishee summons served on the Senate, House of
Commons, Library of Parliament or Office of the Ethics Commissioner is of no
effect unless it is served on the Senate, House of Commons, Library of
Parliament or Office of the Ethics Commissioner, as the case may be, in the
first thirty days following the first day on which it could have been validly
served on the Senate, House of Commons, Library of Parliament or Office of the
Ethics Commissioner, as the case may be.
Place of service
19. (1) Service of documents on the Senate, House of
Commons, Library of Parliament or Office of the Ethics Commissioner in
connection with garnishment proceedings permitted by this Division must be
effected at the place specified in the regulations.
Method of service
(2) In addition to any method of service permitted by the law
of a province, service of documents on the Senate, House of Commons, Library of
Parliament or Office of the Ethics Commissioner under subsection (1) may be
effected by registered mail, whether within or outside the province, or by any
other method prescribed.
Where service by registered mail
(3) Where service of a document on the Senate, House of
Commons, Library of Parliament or Office of the Ethics Commissioner is effected
by registered mail, the document shall be deemed to be served on the day of its
receipt by the Senate, House of Commons, Library of Parliament or Office of the
Ethics Commissioner, as the case may be.
1997, c. 1, s. 30
11. Paragraphs 21(a) and (b) of the Act are
replaced by the following:
(a) in the case of a salary,
(i) the salary to be paid on the last day of the second
pay period next following the pay period in which the Senate, House of
Commons, Library of Parliament or Office of the Ethics Commissioner, as the
case may be, is bound by the garnishee summons, and
(ii) where the garnishee summons has continuing effect
under the law of the province, the salary to be paid on the last day of each
subsequent pay period; or
(b) in the case of remuneration described in
paragraph 17(b),
(i) the remuneration payable on the fifteenth day
following the day on which the Senate, House of Commons, Library of
Parliament or Office of the Ethics Commissioner, as the case may be, is
bound by the garnishee summons, and
(ii) either
(A) any remuneration becoming payable in the thirty days
following the fifteenth day after the day on which the Senate, House of
Commons, Library of Parliament or Office of the Ethics Commissioner, as the
case may be, is bound by the garnishee summons that is owing on that
fifteenth day or that becomes owing in the fourteen days following that
fifteenth day, or
(B) where the garnishee summons has continuing effect
under the law of the province, any remuneration becoming payable subsequent
to the fifteenth day after the day on which the Senate, House of Commons,
Library of Parliament or Office of the Ethics Commissioner, as the case may
be, is bound by the garnishee summons.
1997, c. 1, s. 30
12. The portion of section 22 of the Act before paragraph (b) is
replaced by the following:
Time period to respond to a garnishee summons
22. The Senate, House of Commons, Library of
Parliament or Office of the Ethics Commissioner has the following time period
within which to respond to a garnishee summons:
(a) in the case of a salary, fifteen days, or such
lesser number of days as is prescribed, after the last day of the second pay
period next following the pay period in which the Senate, House of Commons,
Library of Parliament or Office of the Ethics Commissioner is bound by the
garnishee summons; or
1997, c. 1, s. 31
13. Section 23 of the Act is replaced by the following:
Method of response
23. (1) In addition to any method of responding to a
garnishee summons permitted by provincial garnishment law, the Senate, House of
Commons, Library of Parliament or Office of the Ethics Commissioner may respond
to a garnishee summons by registered mail or by any other method prescribed.
Where response is by registered mail
(2) Where the Senate, House of Commons, Library of Parliament
or Office of the Ethics Commissioner responds to a garnishee summons by
registered mail, the receipt issued in accordance with regulations relating to
registered mail made under the Canada Post Corporation Act shall be
received in evidence and is, unless the contrary is shown, proof that the
Senate, House of Commons, Library of Parliament or Office of the Ethics
Commissioner, as the case may be, has responded to the garnishee summons.
Effect of payment into court
(3) A payment into court by the Senate, House of Commons,
Library of Parliament or Office of the Ethics Commissioner under this section is
a good and sufficient discharge of liability, to the extent of the payment.
Recovery of overpayment to debtor
(4) Where, in honouring a garnishee summons, the Senate,
House of Commons, Library of Parliament or Office of the Ethics Commissioner,
through error, pays to a debtor by way of salary or remuneration an amount in
excess of the amount that it should have paid to that debtor, the excess becomes
a debt due to the Senate, House of Commons, Library of Parliament or Office of
the Ethics Commissioner, as the case may be, by that debtor and may be recovered
from the debtor at any time by set-off against future moneys payable to the
debtor as salary or remuneration.
14. Paragraph 24(a) of the Act is replaced by the
following:
(a) specifying the place where service of documents
on the Senate, House of Commons, Library of Parliament or Office of the Ethics
Commissioner must be effected in connection with garnishment proceedings
permitted by this Division;
15. Section 26 of the Act is replaced by the following:
No execution
26. No execution shall issue on a judgment given
against the Senate, House of Commons, Library of Parliament or Office of the
Ethics Commissioner in garnishment proceedings permitted by this Part.
R.S., c. G-5
Government Employees Compensation Act
16. Paragraph (e) of the definition
"employee" in section 2 of the Government Employees Compensation
Act is replaced by the following:
(e) any officer or employee of the Senate, the
House of Commons, the Library of Parliament or the Office of the Ethics
Commissioner;
R.S., c. 44 (4th Supp.)
Lobbyists Registration Act
1995, c. 12, s. 1(2)
17. The definition "Ethics Counsellor" in
subsection 2(1) of the Lobbyists Registration Act is repealed.
1995, c. 12, s. 5
18. Section 10.1 of the Act is repealed.1995, c. 12, s. 5
19. (1) Subsection 10.2(1) of the Act is replaced by the
following:
Lobbyists' Code of Conduct
10.2 (1) The registrar shall develop a Lobbyists' Code
of Conduct respecting the activities described in subsections 5(1), 6(1) and
7(1).
1995, c. 12, s. 5
(2) Subsection 10.2(2) of the English version of the Act
is replaced by the following:
Consultation
(2) In developing the Code, the registrar shall consult
persons and organizations that the registrar considers are interested in the
Code.
1995, c. 12, s. 5
20. Sections 10.4 to 10.6 of the Act are replaced by the
following:
Investigation of breaches
10.4 (1) Where the registrar believes on reasonable grounds that a person
has breached the Code, the registrar shall investigate to determine whether a
breach has occurred.Powers of investigation
(2) For the purpose of conducting the investigation, the
registrar may
(a) in the same manner and to the same extent as a
superior court of record,
(i) summon and enforce the attendance of persons before
the registrar and compel them to give oral or written evidence on oath, and
(ii) compel persons to produce any documents or other
things that the registrar considers necessary for the investigation,
including any record of a payment received, disbursement made or expense
incurred by an individual who is required to file a return under subsection
5(1) or 6(1) or by an individual who, in accordance with paragraph 7(3)(f),
is named in a return filed under subsection 7(1), in respect of any matter
referred to in any of subparagraphs 5(1)(a)(i) to (vi) or paragraphs
6(1)(a) to (e) or 7(1)(a) to (e), as the case
may be; and
(b) administer oaths and receive and accept
information, whether or not it would be admissible as evidence in a court of
law.
Investigation in private
(3) The investigation shall be conducted in private.
Evidence in other proceedings
(4) Evidence given by a person in the investigation and
evidence of the existence of the investigation are inadmissible against the
person in a court or in any other proceeding, other than in a prosecution of a
person for an offence under section 131 of the Criminal Code (perjury) in
respect of a statement made to the registrar.
Opportunity to present views
(5) Before finding that a person has breached the Code, the
registrar shall give the person a reasonable opportunity to present their views
to the registrar.
Confidentiality
(6) The registrar, and every person acting on behalf of or
under the direction of the registrar, shall not disclose any information that
comes to their knowledge in the performance of their duties and functions under
this section, unless
(a) the disclosure is, in the opinion of the
registrar, necessary for the purpose of conducting an investigation under this
section or establishing the grounds for any findings or conclusions contained
in a report under section 10.5; or
(b) the information is disclosed in a report under
section 10.5 or in the course of a prosecution for an offence under section
131 of the Criminal Code (perjury) in respect of a statement made to
the registrar.
Report
10.5 (1) After conducting an investigation, the
registrar shall prepare a report of the investigation, including the findings,
conclusions and reasons for the registrar's conclusions, and submit it to the
Registrar General of Canada who shall cause a copy of it to be laid before each
House of Parliament on any of the first fifteen sitting days on which that House
is sitting after it is received.
Contents of report
(2) The report may contain details of any payment received,
disbursement made or expense incurred by an individual who is required to file a
return under subsection 5(1) or 6(1) or by an individual who, in accordance with
paragraph 7(3)(f), is named in a return filed under subsection 7(1), in
respect of any matter referred to in any of subparagraphs 5(1)(a)(i) to
(vi) or paragraphs 6(1)(a) to (e) or 7(1)(a) to (e),
as the case may be, if the registrar considers publication of the details to be
in the public interest.
Annual report
10.6 The registrar shall, within three months after
the end of each fiscal year, prepare a report with regard to the exercise of the
powers, duties and functions conferred on the registrar under this Act during
the fiscal year and submit the report to the Registrar General of Canada who
shall cause a copy of it to be laid before each House of Parliament on any of
the first fifteen sitting days on which that House is sitting after it is
received.
R.S., c. 15 (4th Supp.)
Non-smokers' Health Act
1989, c. 7, s. 1
21. Paragraph (c) of the definition
"employer" in subsection 2(1) of the Non-smokers' Health Act is
replaced by the following:
(c) the Senate, House of Commons, Library of
Parliament or Office of the Ethics Commissioner, in relation to employees
thereof or employees of a committee of the Senate or House of Commons, as
the case may be, or
R.S., c. 31 (4th Supp.)
Official Languages Act
22. The definition "federal institution" in
subsection 3(1) of the Official Languages Act is amended by adding the
following after paragraph (c):
(c.1) the Office of the Ethics Commissioner,
23. Section 33 of the Act is replaced by the following:
Regulations
33. The Governor in Council may make such regulations
as the Governor in Council deems necessary to foster actively communications
with and services from offices or facilities of federal institutions, other than
the Senate, the House of Commons, the Library of Parliament or the Office of the
Ethics Commissioner, in both official languages, where those communications and
services are required under this Part to be provided in both official languages.
24. (1) The portion of subsection 38(1) of the Act before
paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:
Regulations
38. (1) The Governor in Council may make regulations
in respect of federal institutions, other than the Senate, the House of Commons,
the Library of Parliament or the Office of the Ethics Commissioner,
(2) Paragraph 38(2)(b) of the Act is replaced by
the following:
(b) substituting, with respect to any federal
institution other than the Senate, the House of Commons, the Library of
Parliament or the Office of the Ethics Commissioner, a duty in relation to the
use of the official languages of Canada in place of a duty under section 36 or
the regulations made under subsection (1), having regard to the equality of
status of both official languages, where there is a demonstrable conflict
between the duty under section 36 or the regulations and the mandate of the
institution.
25. Subsection 46(1) of the Act is replaced by the
following:
Responsibilities of Treasury Board
46. (1) The Treasury Board has responsibility for the
general direction and coordination of the policies and programs of the
Government of Canada relating to the implementation of Parts IV, V and VI in all
federal institutions other than the Senate, the House of Commons, the Library of
Parliament and the Office of the Ethics Commissioner.
26. Paragraph 93(a) of the Act is replaced by the
following:
(a) prescribing anything that the Governor in Council
considers necessary to effect compliance with this Act in the conduct of the
affairs of federal institutions other than the Senate, the House of Commons, the
Library of Parliament or the Office of the Ethics Commissioner; and
R.S., c. 33 (2nd Supp.)
Parliamentary Employment and Staff Relations Act
27. The long title of the Parliamentary Employment and
Staff Relations Act is replaced by the following:
An Act respecting employment and employer and employee
relations in the Senate, the House of Commons, the Library of Parliament and the
Office of the Ethics Commissioner
28. Paragraph 2(a) of the Act is replaced by the
following:
(a) the Senate, the House of Commons, the Library of
Parliament or the Office of the Ethics Commissioner, and
29. The definition "employer" in section 3 of
the Act is amended by striking out the word "or" at the end of
paragraph (b), by adding the word "or" at the end of paragraph
(c) and by adding the following after paragraph (c):
(d) the Office of the Ethics Commissioner as
represented by the Ethics Commissioner;
30. Section 85 of the Act is amended by striking out the
word "or" at the end of paragraph (c) and by adding the
following after paragraph (c):
(c.1) the Office of the Ethics Commissioner as
represented by the Ethics Commissioner; or
R.S., c. P-21
Privacy Act
1995, c. 12, s. 11
31. The schedule to the Privacy Act is amended by
striking out the following under the heading "Other Government
Institutions":
Ethics Counsellor
Conseiller en éthique
R.S., c. P-36
Public Service Superannuation Act
1996, c. 18, s. 21
32. The definition "Public Service" in
subsection 3(1) of the Public Service Superannuation Act is replaced by
the following:
"Public Service"
« fonction publique »
"Public Service" means the several positions in
or under any department or portion of the executive government of Canada,
except those portions of departments or portions of the executive government
of Canada prescribed by the regulations and, for the purposes of this Part, of
the Senate and House of Commons, the Library of Parliament, the Office of the
Ethics Commissioner and any board, commission, corporation or portion of the
public service of Canada specified in Schedule I;
R.S., c. R-2; 1989, c. 17, s. 2
Radiocommunication Act
1989, c. 17, s. 4
33. (1) Subsection 3(1) of the Radiocommunication Act
is replaced by the following:
Application to Her Majesty and Parliament
3. (1) Subject to subsection (2), this Act is binding
on Her Majesty in right of Canada, on the Senate, the House of Commons, the
Library of Parliament and the Office of the Ethics Commissioner and on Her
Majesty in right of a province.
1989, c. 17, s. 4
(2) The portion of subsection 3(2) of the Act before
paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:
Exemptions
(2) The Governor in Council may by order exempt Her Majesty
in right of Canada, or the Senate, House of Commons, Library of Parliament or
Office of the Ethics Commissioner, as represented by the person or persons named
in the order, from any or all provisions of this Act or the regulations, and
such an exemption may be
Coming into Force
Order
34. The provisions of this Act come into force on a day or
days to be fixed by order of the Governor in Council.
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