Cabinet Directive
on Law-making
March 1999
Privy Council Office
Government of Canada
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
2. Fundamentals of the Government's Law-making
Activity
3. Preparation of the Government's Legislative
Program
4. Preparation of Government Bills
5. Parliamentary Processes and Amendments
6. Coming into Force
7. Regulation-making
8. Conclusion
The making of law is arguably the most important activity of
government. This Directive describes the framework for this activity and the principles
that govern it. It is of the utmost importance that Departments embarking on law-making
initiatives plan and manage them in accordance with this Directive and the supporting
documents issued by the Clerk of the Privy Council.
This Directive replaces the Directive entitled The Preparation of
Legislation, approved by the Cabinet on April 16, 1981. Its main objectives are to:
ensure that the Cabinet has the information and other support it needs
to make sound decisions about proposed laws,
outline the relationship between Acts and regulations and ensure that
they are viewed as products of a continuous process of making law,
ensure that proposed laws are properly drafted in both official
languages and that they respect both the common law and civil law legal systems,
make it clear that law-making initiatives can be very complex and must
be properly planned and managed, and
ensure that Government officials who are involved in law-making
activities understand their roles and have the knowledge and skills they need to perform
their roles effectively.
This Directive sets out principles and general directions on how these
objectives are to be met.
Constitutional Considerations
The Constitution Act, 1867, distributes the legislative powers of
Canada between the Parliament of Canada and the legislatures of the provinces (Part VI,
sections 91 to 95). The legislatures of the territories exercise legislative authority
through delegation from the Parliament of Canada.
Canada's system of responsible parliamentary government is based on the
rule of law. This means that laws must be made in conformity with the Constitution. The
Crown retains very few regulatory powers that are not subject to the legislative or
law-making process. For example, regulations governing the issuance of passports or medals
and honors are still made under the royal prerogative.
Parliament may delegate regulatory authority to Cabinet (the Governor in
Council), a person (such as a Minister of the Crown) or a body (such as the Atomic Energy
Control Board). However, this authority remains subject to the will of Parliament and
regulations made under this delegated authority are referred to as subordinate
legislation.
Law-making authority in Canada is subject to a number of constraints.
Parliament and the provincial legislatures are limited by the constitutional distribution
of powers. They are further constrained in their law-making powers by the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, by the existing Aboriginal and treaty rights
recognized and affirmed by section 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982, and by certain
other constitutional provisions, such as the language rights and obligations that apply to
Québec and Manitoba.
Parliament consists of three elements: the Crown, the Senate and the House
of Commons. Parliament makes laws in the form of statutes or "Acts". All three
elements must assent to a bill (draft Act) for it to become law. The assent of the Crown
is always the last stage of the law-making process.
All money bills must, according to the Constitution Act, 1867,
originate in the House of Commons:
53. Bills for appropriating any Part of the Public Revenue, or for
imposing any Tax or Impost, shall originate in the House of Commons.
Money bills are to be introduced by a Minister of the Crown. Non-money
bills may originate in the Senate.
The Cabinet, which consists of the Prime Minister and the other Ministers
of the Crown, plays a significant role in Parliament's law-making activity, both
collectively by approving bills for introduction in Parliament, and individually by
sponsoring bills through the stages of the parliamentary process. Cabinet Ministers are in
turn supported by the officials who work in government departments.
Deciding Whether a Law is Needed
Making a new law, whether by obtaining Parliament's assent to a bill or by
making regulations, is just one of several ways of achieving governmental policy
objectives. Others include agreements and guidelines or, more generally, programs for
providing services, benefits, or information. In addition, a law may include many
different kinds of provisions, ranging from simple prohibitions through a wide variety of
regulatory requirements such as licensing or compliance monitoring. Law should be used
only when it is the most appropriate. When a legislative proposal is made to the Cabinet,
it is up to the sponsoring Minister to show that this principle has been met, and there
are no other ways to achieve the policy objectives effectively.
The decision to address a matter through a bill or regulation is made by
Cabinet on the basis of information developed by a Minister's departmental officials. The
information must be accurate, timely and complete. To provide it, a department should:
analyze the matter and its alternative solutions,
engage in consultation with those who have an interest in the matter,
including other departments that may be affected by the proposed solution,
analyze the impact of the proposed solution, and
analyze the resources that the proposed solution would require,
including those needed to implement or enforce it.
In the case of a bill, the principal means for conveying this information
is a Memorandum to Cabinet, which a minister must present to obtain Cabinet approval for
the bill to be drafted by the Legislation Section of the Department of Justice.
When a legislative initiative is being considered, and where it is
appropriate and consistent with legislative drafting principles, related matters should be
combined in one bill, rather than being divided among several bills on similar subjects. A
single bill allows parliamentarians to make the most effective and efficient use of their
time for debate and study in committee.
Finally, caution should be taken when considering whether to include a
"sunset" or expiration provision in a bill, or a provision for mandatory review
of the Act within a particular time or by a particular committee. Alternatives to these
provisions should be fully explored before proposing to include them in a bill.
Relationship between Acts and Regulations
Although Acts and regulations are made separately, they are linked in
several ways:
Parliament creates Acts and through them authorizes regulations,
a regulation must strictly conform to the limits established by the Act
that authorizes it, and
most legislative schemes depend on regulations to make them work, so an
Act and the regulations should be developed together to ensure a good match.
When developing a proposal for a bill that will authorize regulations,
departments should carefully consider:
who is to have authority to make the regulations,
which matters are to be dealt with in the bill, and
which matters are to be dealt with in the regulations.
Ordinarily, the Governor in Council is authorized to make regulations. A
rationale for departures from this practice needs to be provided in the relevant
Memorandum to Cabinet. Matters of fundamental importance should be dealt with in the bill
so that parliamentarians have a chance to consider and debate them. The bill should
establish a framework that limits the scope of regulation-making powers to matters that
are best left to subordinate law-making delegates and processes. The following principles
should also be observed:
The power to make regulations must not be drafted in unnecessarily wide
terms.
Certain regulation-making powers are not to be drafted, unless the
Memorandum to the Cabinet specifically requests drafting authority for the power and
contains reasons justifying the power that is sought. In particular, specific drafting
authority is required for powers that:
substantially affect personal rights and liberties,
involve important matters of policy or principle,
amend or add to the enabling Act or other Acts,
exclude the ordinary jurisdiction of the Courts,
make regulations having a retroactive effect,
subdelegate regulation-making authority,
impose a charge on the public revenue or on the public, other than fees
for services, or
set penalties for serious offences.
Acts and regulations are interdependent and should be developed in
conjunction with one another. Regulations may be drafted at the same time as the
authorizing bill or after, depending on the situation. However, if regulations are an
important part of a new legislative scheme, it may be helpful to begin developing draft
regulations or at least a summary of the regulations at the same time as the bill to
ensure consistency with the framework being established in the bill. When regulations are
developed under an existing Act, care must be taken to ensure that they fall within the
authority granted by that Act.
Importance of bilingual and bijural drafting
The Constitution Act, 1867 requires federal laws to be enacted in
both official languages and makes both versions equally authentic. It is therefore of
primary importance that bills and regulations be prepared in both official languages. It
is not acceptable for one version to be a mere translation of the other. For this reason,
sponsoring departments and agencies must ensure that they have the capability to develop
policy, consult, and instruct legislative drafters in both official languages. Both
versions of legislation must convey their intended meaning in clear and accurate language.
It is equally important that bills and regulations respect both the common
law and civil law legal systems since both systems operate in Canada and federal laws
apply throughout the country. When concepts pertaining to these legal systems are used,
they must be expressed in both languages and in ways that fit into both systems.
Planning and Managing Law-making Activity
The Government's law-making activity is to be planned and managed on three
levels:
At the first level, there is a government-wide process to coordinate and
set priorities among proposals for bills from different departments. The Minister
responsible for the Government's legislative program is the Leader of the Government in
the House of Commons, who is also a Minister of State. For the public service, the Privy
Council Office supports the Leader of the Government in the House of Commons in this
activity. In addition, a committee of Cabinet, called the Special Committee of Council,
and then full Cabinet review issues requiring decisions by Cabinet as a whole. For
example, the Leader of the Government in the House of Commons seeks delegated authority
from Cabinet for the introduction of Government bills.
In the case of regulations, departments and regulation-making agencies
must plan their regulatory agendas for coming years and prepare reports on planning and
priorities. In the fall, they must also prepare performance reports. These reports are to
be tabled in the House of Commons as part of the Estimates and referred to the appropriate
committees of that House.
At the second, departmental level, each department manages the legislative
proposals in its areas of responsibility. It must ensure that it has allocated the
resources necessary to carry its proposals through each stage in the law-making process,
plan for such things as consultation, and ensure that it has the capacity to formulate
policy and instruct legislative drafters in both official languages. Finally, it must also
plan and allocate resources for the implementation of new laws.
At the third, project level, departments must plan their law-making
activities as they relate to particular bills or regulations. These activities are to be
managed as projects with tools for determining what resources are needed, what tasks must
be performed and what time-frames are appropriate.
Planning the Legislative Program
Planning the Government's legislative program begins up to one year before
the opening of the session of Parliament in which the various legislative items are to be
introduced. Experience has shown that the planning and preparation process should be
spread over the whole year, as opposed to a short period immediately before a session.
This stems in part from the established procedure for the approval of individual bills.
This procedure involves three separate steps:
Cabinet approval of the policy is sought,
if Cabinet approves, the bill is drafted, which in many cases proves to
be a lengthy and difficult process in itself, and
approval of the Minister of State and Leader of the Government in the
House of Commons is sought for introduction of the bill.
As part of the Prime Minister's June 1997 changes to the Cabinet
decision-making system, the Special Committee of Council was given new responsibilities as
a ministerial forum at the Cabinet committee level for discussing the Government's overall
legislative planning and for specific legislative issues requiring decisions by Cabinet.
The Minister of State and Leader of the Government in the House of Commons
is responsible for the Government's legislative program in the House of Commons including
examining in detail all draft bills.
Accordingly, departments and agencies whose Ministers are bringing forward
legislative proposals are urged to keep in close contact with the Legislation and House
Planning Secretariat of the Privy Council Office, which provides support to the Leader of
the Government in the House of Commons and to the Special Committee of Council. In
particular, it is important to inform them of any significant changes in the timing of
Ministers' plans to bring bills forward.
Request for Legislative Proposals
Immediately after the Speech from the Throne at the opening of each
session of Parliament, the Assistant Secretary to the Cabinet (Legislation and House
Planning) will write to all Deputy Ministers and some Agency heads asking them to submit a
list of the legislation that their Minister plans to propose to Cabinet for introduction
in the next session. Subsequently, this legislative "call letter" will be sent
twice a year (June and November) in order to deal with new or changing priorities.
The response to the request for legislative proposals should be submitted
to the Assistant Secretary to the Cabinet within one month after receiving the request, or
by a date specified in the request.
Review by Cabinet
The proposals are prioritized by the Leader of the Government in the House
of Commons and a tentative outline of the legislative program for the next sitting,
together with the assignment of priorities for the various proposals, are reviewed by the
Special Committee of Council. The Leader of the Government in the House of Commons
normally advises the Special Committee of Council and the full Cabinet of the updated
legislative program twice a year.
Cabinet Approval of Policy
As soon as is feasible after Cabinet has determined that a bill is to be
introduced as part of its legislative program, the responsible department should arrange
for the submission of a Memorandum to the Cabinet (MC) seeking policy approval and an
authorization for the Legislation Section of the Department of Justice to draft the bill.
The MC is to be prepared in accordance with supplementary documents issued by the Clerk of
the Privy Council and is to be submitted to the appropriate policy committee of Cabinet
and then to Cabinet. It should be submitted far enough in advance of the projected date
for introducing the bill to allow sufficient time to draft it.
An MC should address the type of public consultation, if any, that the
sponsoring Minister has held or expects to hold and should specify whether the Minister
intends to consult on the basis of the draft bill. By tradition, draft bills have been
treated with strict confidence before they are introduced in Parliament. However, in
keeping with the Government's commitment to openness and consultation, sponsoring
Ministers may wish to consult on the basis of draft bills. This consultation is intended
to ensure that bills take into account the views of those concerned and it must not
pre-empt Parliament's role in passing bills. Also, there may be cases where it would not
be appropriate to do so for reasons such as the risk of giving the consulted party an
unfair economic advantage. So, if a draft bill is intended to be used in
consultation before it is tabled in Parliament, the MC should state that intention and ask
for the Cabinet's agreement. In the case of a draft bill involving changes to the
machinery of government, the approval to consult should generally be sought in a letter to
the Prime Minister from the sponsoring Minister.
Drafting instructions should be annexed to the MC. However, they should
not be in the form of a draft bill. Their purpose is to facilitate a policy discussion of
a legislative proposal and to provide a framework for drafting a bill. Except in very rare
instances, drafting instructions in the form of proposed draft legislation are not
helpful. Substantial time may be required to assemble the relevant material required as
part of drafting instructions. The policy discussion at this stage will make it possible
to develop reasonable estimates of the time likely to be required for drafting the
legislation. These estimates are essential to planning and managing the Government's
legislative agenda.
Drafting Bills
It is essential that both the Legislation and House Planning Secretariat
and the Secretariat to the appropriate policy Committee of Cabinet be informed by the
sponsoring department as to any significant departures from the approach to the bill
agreed to by Cabinet.
As stated above, both language versions of legislation are equally
authentic and must respect the bijural nature of Canada's legal system. Draft legislation
must be prepared in both official languages and sponsoring departments must ensure that
they have the capability:
to instruct in both languages,
to respond to technical questioning from drafting officers in either
language and relating to each legal system, and
to critically evaluate drafts in both languages.
It is not sufficient for a drafting officer and the instructing officer to
reach full agreement on the technical adequacy of one language version of a draft bill.
Both versions must meet the same standard of technical adequacy in the eyes of those
qualified to critically evaluate them and the legislation must be capable of operating in
both legal systems. This requirement can be particularly onerous when a legislative
proposal is based on a precedent from another jurisdiction where legislation and related
information, often of a very technical nature, is available in one language only. In such
circumstances, it may be necessary to build into the planning and drafting process a
significant time factor to allow for the development, testing and finalization of
appropriate terminology for both versions.
Another important consideration relates to the drafting of preambles and
purpose clauses. Preambles can often provide important background information needed for a
clear understanding of the bill, or to explain matters that support its constitutionality.
However, when a bill amends existing legislation, the preamble is normally excluded from
consolidated versions of the legislation. In order to ensure public awareness of, and
access to, background information for an amending bill, a purpose clause may be considered
as an alternative because it can be integrated into the consolidated legislation. Both
preambles and purpose clauses must be carefully reviewed by the Department of Justice for
appropriate language and content.
Review of Bills by the Leader of the Government in the House of Commons
Once a bill has been drafted and approved by the responsible Minister, the
Legislation Section of the Department of Justice will arrange for its printing and for
copies to be sent to the Legislation and House Planning Secretariat (L&HP) before the
bill is reviewed by the Leader of the Government in the House of Commons.
At this stage the sponsoring department:
prepares material for use in explaining the bill to Parliamentarians and
members of the public or for distribution,
prepares a draft statement to be used by the Minister when the bill is
referred to Committee,
submits a revised and updated communication plan if the original
attached to the MC is no longer appropriate.
The Leader of the Government in the House of Commons reviews the bill and
its consistency with relevant Cabinet decisions. The Leader reports to Cabinet on this
review and seeks delegated authority to arrange for introduction of the bill in either the
House of Commons or the Senate.
Following Cabinet approval, L&HP submits the bill in its final form to
the Prime Minister or the Leader of the Government in the House of Commons for signature,
together with the royal recommendation in the case of bills that require expenditure. The
preparation of royal recommendations is the responsibility of L&HP.
Introduction and Readings
Government bills are usually introduced by the sponsoring Minister. They
proceed through three readings in both the Senate and the House of Commons and are studied
by committees of each House. Detailed information on these proceedings can be found by
consulting publications such as the Précis of Procedure, published by the House of
Commons, and in The Senate Today and Rules of the Senate of Canada,
published by the Senate.
The timing and place of introduction are decided either by the Cabinet on
the recommendation of the Leader of the Government in the House of Commons, or by the
Leader of the Government in the House of Commons under authority delegated by Cabinet.
Notice of introduction in the House of Commons is given to the Clerk of
the House by the Assistant Secretary to the Cabinet (Legislation and House Planning) only
when instructed to do so by the Leader of the Government in the House of Commons. When
introduction is in the Senate, the timing of introduction is decided by the Leader of the
Government in the House of Commons in consultation with the Leader of the Government in
the Senate. In both cases, the Assistant Secretary informs the sponsoring Minister of the
timing of introduction.
Timing of the Second Reading debate, Report Stage, and Third Reading in
the House of Commons is the responsibility of the Leader of the Government in the House of
Commons. The timing of the stages of debate in the Senate is the responsibility of the
Leader of the Government in the Senate.
During a committee's consideration of a bill, whether in the House of
Commons or the Senate, the sponsoring Minister or the Parliamentary Secretary attends the
committee meetings to assist the deliberations by ensuring that the Government's position
is expressed. This is of particular importance in situations where amendments to the bill
may be proposed.
Amendments
If the sponsoring Minister wishes to move or accept an amendment after
introducing a bill, the following procedure should be followed before the amendment is
moved:
amendments that are merely technical may be agreed to by the sponsoring
Minister with no need for Cabinet approval,
amendments that have an impact on the policy approved by Cabinet or that
raise policy considerations not previously considered by Cabinet are subject to the same
procedure as the initial proposal, namely, the submission of an MC for consideration by
the original policy Committee of Cabinet and approval by the Cabinet.
urgent major amendments need not follow the full procedure referred to
above, but may be approved by the Prime Minister and the Chair of the relevant policy
committee of Cabinet together with other interested Ministers.
All amendments moved or accepted by the Government must be drafted or
reviewed by the Legislation Section of the Department of Justice.
Royal Assent
The final stage in the enactment of a bill by Parliament is royal assent.
The timing of royal assent ceremonies is arranged by the Leader of the Government in the
House of Commons in consultation with the Leader of the Government in the Senate.
An Act has the force of law upon royal assent, unless it provides
otherwise. Quite frequently, an Act provides that it, or any of its provisions, comes into
force on a day or days to be fixed by order of the Governor in Council. These orders are
prepared by officials in the department that administers the Act and are submitted to the
Special Committee of Council by the responsible Minister. If approved, they are sent to
the Governor General for signature and published in the Canada Gazette. Draft
orders should be submitted for approval well in advance of the day or days that they
propose for provisions to come into force.
The main elements of the regulation-making process are established
by the Statutory Instruments Act. They include requirements that:
draft regulations be examined by the Clerk of the Privy Council in
consultation with the Deputy Minister of Justice,
regulations be transmitted to the Clerk of the Privy Council to be
registered and published in the Canada Gazette,
regulations be referred to the Standing Joint Committee of the Senate
and the House of Commons for the Scrutiny of Regulations.
These elements are supplemented by the analytical and procedural
requirements of the Government's Regulatory Policy.
This Directive sets out the objectives and expectations of the
Cabinet in relation to law-making activities of the Government. Departmental officials
involved in these activities are expected to be aware of the Directive and to follow the
instructions it contains. They are also expected to use the supplementary documents that
the Clerk of the Privy Council may issue to provide detailed guidance on planning and
managing the development of legislation to ensure that the Cabinet's objectives and
expectations are met.
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