[Return to: 2007 (Spring) First Reading Bills Home Page
(3rd session, 38th Parliament)]
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MISCELLANEOUS STATUTES AMENDMENT ACT, 2007 (First Reading) | Mar. 7/07 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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HER MAJESTY, by and with the advice and consent of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of British Columbia, enacts as follows: 1 Sections 6 (3) and 69 (1) (a) of the Architects Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 17, are amended by adding "and Landscape Architecture" after "School of Architecture". 2 Section 8 (1) (c) of the Architects (Landscape) Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 18, is amended (a) in subparagraph (ii) by adding "and Landscape Architecture" after "School of Architecture", and (b) in subparagraph (iii) by striking out "Faculty of Agriculture" and substituting "Faculty of Applied Science". 3 Section 66 (1) of the Assessment Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 20, is amended by striking out "a tax under the School Act" and substituting "a tax under the Police Act, the School Act". 4 Section 26 (2) of the British Columbia Transit Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 38, is amended by adding "the Police Act," after "the School Act,". 5 Section 142.1 (3) (h) of the Business Practices and Consumer Protection Act, S.B.C. 2004, c. 2, as enacted by section 3 of the Miscellaneous Statutes Amendment Act (No. 2), 2005, S.B.C. 2005, c. 35, is repealed. 6 Section 5 (1) of the Child Care Subsidy Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 26, is amended (a) in paragraph (c) by striking out "that person." and substituting "that person or another person;", and (b) by adding the following paragraph: (d) collect from a person information about another person if (i) the information relates to the application for or payment of a child care subsidy, and (ii) the minister has not solicited the information from the person who provides it. 7 Section 3 (1) of the Coal Act, S.B.C. 2004, c. 15, is amended by adding ", in the prescribed form and manner and within the prescribed period," after "first gives notice". 8 Section 26 (2) is amended by adding the following paragraph: (d.1) respecting notices and periods for the purposes of section 3 (1); . 9 Section 244 (1) of the Community Charter, S.B.C. 2003, c. 26, is amended by adding the following paragraph: (d.1) taxes imposed under the Police Act for the current year; . 10 Section 4 (1) of the Correction Act, S.B.C. 2004, c. 46, is amended by repealing paragraph (f). 11 Section 22 is amended (a) in subsection (1) (b) by striking out "the rehabilitation of the inmate." and substituting "the inmate's rehabilitation or reintegration into the community.", (b) by repealing subsections (4) and (5), and (c) by adding the following subsection: (6) During the period of a temporary absence authorized under subsection (1), the inmate is subject to the rules, regulations and discipline of the correctional centre, as applicable, and must obey all instructions given to him or her by the person in charge of the correctional centre. 12 The following section is added: Suspension, cancellation and revocation
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Public Body: | British Columbia Board of Parole | |
Head: | ChairChair .. |
Greater Vancouver Transportation Authority Act
42 Section 34 (3) of the Greater Vancouver Transportation Authority Act, S.B.C. 1998, c. 30, is amended by adding "the Police Act," after "the School Act,".
Islands Trust Act
43 Section 49.3 (4) of the Islands Trust Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 239, is amended by adding the following paragraph:
(c.1) the Police Act; .
Mineral Tenure Act
44 Section 1 of the Mineral Tenure Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 292, is amended in the definition of ' "locate" and "location" ' by adding ", subject to section 24.1 (5)," after "on the ground".
45 Section 7 is repealed and the following substituted:
7 A person, other than the government, must be a free miner to
(a) be registered as a recorded holder of a claim or lease,
(b) hold a claim under section 29, or
(c) revise an expiry date under section 33.1.
46 Section 19 (1) is repealed and the following substituted:
(1) A person must not begin a mining activity unless
(a) the person first serves notice, in the prescribed form and manner, on
(i) the owner, other than the government, of every surface area,
(ii) the holder of a lease of Crown land under section 11 of the Land Act granting the holder exclusive surface rights to the leased land, and
(iii) the holder, under Part 5 of the Land Act, of a disposition of Crown land,
on which the person intends to work or intends to utilize a right of entry for that purpose, and
(b) the prescribed period has elapsed from the date that notice was served under paragraph (a).
(1.1) The chief gold commissioner, in the prescribed circumstances, may exempt a person from the requirements of subsection (1).
47 Section 22 (2) (b) is amended by striking out "locating and recording" and substituting "registering".
48 Section 24.1 (1) is amended by adding "terminated," after "cancelled,".
49 Section 24.1 is amended by adding the following subsection:
(5) The identification on the ground of a legacy claim or legacy placer lease may be made by a map approved for that purpose by the chief gold commissioner, and if there is a difference between the identification of a legacy claim or a legacy placer lease as determined by that map and the identification of the legacy claim or legacy placer lease as determined by stakes, marks or posts, the identification as determined by the map prevails.
50 Section 42 is amended
(a) by repealing subsection (1) and substituting the following:
(1) A recorded holder of a mineral claim who wishes to replace the mineral claim with a lease must do all of the following:
(a) comply with section 6.32 and pay the prescribed fee;
(b) if required to do so by the chief gold commissioner, have the mineral claim over which the mining lease will be issued surveyed by a British Columbia land surveyor and have the survey approved by the Surveyor General;
(c) post a notice in the prescribed form in the office of the chief gold commissioner stating that the recorded holder intends to apply for a mining lease;
(d) publish promptly in one issue of the Gazette, and once each week for 4 consecutive weeks in a newspaper circulating in the area in which the mineral claim is situated, a copy of the notice referred to in paragraph (c). ,
(b) by repealing subsection (2), and
(c) in subsection (4) by striking out "requirements of subsection (2)" and substituting "requirements of subsection (1)".
51 Section 53 (2) (a) (ii) is amended by striking out "section 42 (2) (b) and (c)" and substituting "section 42 (1) (c) and (d)".
52 Section 65 (2) is amended by adding the following paragraph:
(u.1) respecting notices for the purposes of section 19 (1) (a), time periods for the purposes of section 19 (1) (b), and circumstances for the purposes of section 19 (1.1); .
53 Section 68 is amended
(a) in subsection (2) (a) by striking out "legacy title" and substituting "legacy lease, other than a legacy placer lease,",
(b) in subsection (5) by adding "or section 24.1 (5)" after "this section" in both places, and
(c) in subsection (6) by adding "or section 24.1 (5)" after both "enactment of this section" and "function under this section".
Music Teachers (Registered) Act
54 The Music Teachers (Registered) Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 327, may be repealed by regulation of the Lieutenant Governor in Council.
New Relationship Trust Act
55 Section 5 (1), (2) and (3) of the New Relationship Trust Act, S.B.C. 2006, c. 6, is amended by striking out "must be made on or before" and substituting "may be made before or after".
56 Section 6 (2) is amended
(a) by striking out "appointed, in the same manner" and substituting "appointed in the same manner", and
(b) by striking out everything after "director was" and substituting "appointed."
Offence Act
57 Section 94 of the Offence Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 338, is repealed.
Parole Act
58 (1) The Parole Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 346, is repealed.
(2) The Board of Parole for the Province of British Columbia is dissolved and the appointment of each member of that board is rescinded.
Petroleum and Natural Gas Act
59 Section 59 of the Petroleum and Natural Gas Act, R. S.B.C. 1996, c. 361, is repealed and the following substituted:
59 (1) If a lease or part of a lease is continued under section 58 (3) (a) or (b), the petroleum and natural gas rights granted by the lease that are stratigraphically outside the zone or zones known by the director to be capable of production in the lease or part of the lease revert to the government when that continuation begins.
(2) If a lease or part of a lease is continued under section 58 (3) (c) or (d), the petroleum and natural gas rights not continued revert to the government when that continuation begins, subject to the lease or part of the lease being continued under section 58 (3) (a) or (b) and the application of subsection (1) of this section.
Police Act
60 Section 3 (1) (a) of the Police Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 367, is repealed and the following substituted:
(a) rural areas of the Province; .
61 The following Part is added:
Part 9.1 -- Recovering Small Community Policing Costs
66.2 (1) In this Part:
"contributing area", in relation to a taxation year, means
(a) a municipality that is not providing policing and law enforcement under section 3 (2) on April 1 of the taxation year,
(b) an electoral area, or
(c) the area of the Province outside a regional district;
"finance minister" means the minister charged with the administration of the Financial Administration Act;
"owner" means,
(a) with respect to real property in a municipality, an owner as defined in the Community Charter, and
(b) with respect to real property in a rural area, an owner as defined in the Assessment Act;
"police taxes" means taxes levied under this Part;
"revenue minister" means the minister charged with the administration of the Taxation (Rural Area) Act;
"solicitor general" means the minister charged with the administration of Part 2 of this Act.
(2) So far as the terms defined can be applied, the definitions established by or applicable under
(a) the Schedule to the Community Charter, and
(b) section 5 of the Local Government Act
apply for the purposes of this Part.
66.21 (1) The Province may levy a tax in the contributing areas to raise revenue for the cost of providing policing and law enforcement services in all contributing areas.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), the solicitor general must estimate for a taxation year the total cost to the Province of providing policing and law enforcement services to all contributing areas, taking into account the following factors based on the most recent information available to the solicitor general:
(a) the number of general duty and investigative unit members of the provincial police force assigned for the year to provincial police force detachments that provide policing and law enforcement services to the contributing areas;
(b) the average annual cost of a general duty or investigative unit member of the provincial police force to municipalities with populations between 5 000 and 15 000 that provide policing and law enforcement under section 3 (2).
(3) The Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations prescribing parts of contributing areas, or categories of parts of contributing areas, for which the solicitor general must exclude from the estimate under subsection (2) the cost of members described in subsection (2) (a) who provide policing and law enforcement services in those parts or categories of parts.
(4) On or before October 31 of each year, the solicitor general must give notice to the assessment commissioner identifying, for the purposes of completing the assessment roll, the contributing areas for the next taxation year.
(5) On or before April 1 of each taxation year, the solicitor general must provide to the finance minister the estimate under subsection (2) for the taxation year.
66.3 (1) The finance minister must determine the total amount to be raised by police taxes from the contributing areas for a taxation year.
(2) The amount under subsection (1) must not exceed 50% of the amount the solicitor general estimates under section 66.21 (2) for the taxation year.
(3) On or before May 4 of each year, the Lieutenant Governor in Council must
(a) apportion the amount determined under subsection (1) among the contributing areas, and
(b) determine the rates to be applied to the net taxable value of land and improvements in each contributing area in order to recover from each of those contributing areas the amount apportioned to it under paragraph (a).
(4) The apportionment under subsection (3) (a) may take into account, to the extent the Lieutenant Governor in Council considers advisable,
(a) the converted value of land and improvements in each contributing area, and
(b) the population of each contributing area.
(5) The rates determined under subsection (3) (b) may be different for different contributing areas.
(6) On the request of a regional district on or before October 31 of the calendar year before a taxation year, the Lieutenant Governor in Council may
(a) reapportion among the contributing areas of the regional district the total amount apportioned to those areas under subsection (3) (a) for the taxation year, and
(b) determine the rates to be applied to the net taxable value of land and improvements in each contributing area in the regional district in order to recover from each of those contributing areas the amount reapportioned to it under paragraph (a).
66.31 (1) In this section, "variable tax rate system" means a system under which individual tax rates are determined and imposed for each property class.
(2) The Lieutenant Governor in Council must adopt a variable tax rate system for the purpose of determining tax rates under section 66.3 (3) (b) or (6) (b).
(3) The Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations establishing relationships among tax rates for the variable tax rate system.
66.4 (1) On or before May 10 of each year, the revenue minister must send to the collector of each municipality that is a contributing area a notice setting out
(a) the net taxable value of land and improvements in the municipality,
(b) the amount of police taxes apportioned to the municipality under section 66.3 (3) (a) or (6) (a), as applicable, and
(c) the rates determined for the municipality under section 66.3 (3) (b) or (6) (b), as applicable.
(2) On or before May 10 of each year, the revenue minister must send the Surveyor of Taxes a notice setting out
(a) the net taxable value of land and improvements in each electoral area of the Province and in the area of the Province outside a regional district,
(b) the amount of police taxes apportioned to each electoral area in the Province, and to the area of the Province outside a regional district, under section 66.3 (3) (a) or (6) (a), as applicable, and
(c) the rates determined for each electoral area in the Province, and for the area of the Province outside a regional district, under section 66.3 (3) (b) or (6) (b), as applicable.
66.41 (1) If the net taxable values of land and improvements are amended or changed for a taxation year under section 10, 12, 42, 63 or 65 (10) of the Assessment Act, or a supplementary assessment roll is prepared under that Act in respect of which section 228 (5) [taxation of Crown land used by others] of the Community Charter applies, amounts to be raised by police taxes in each contributing area may be adjusted in the current or a subsequent taxation year in the manner directed by the revenue minister.
(2) Property on a supplementary assessment roll prepared under the Assessment Act must be taxed at the same rate as property assessed for police tax purposes in the same contributing area for the taxation year to which the supplementary assessment roll relates.
66.5 An owner of land or improvements in a contributing area must pay police taxes imposed under this Part.
66.51 (1) A municipality collecting police taxes for a taxation year must pay to the finance minister
(a) installments during the calendar year, as prescribed by the Lieutenant Governor in Council, and
(b) on the 5th business day after the calendar year end, all outstanding police taxes, whether or not they have been collected.
(2) A regulation under subsection (1) (a) may prescribe the installment amounts and the manner in which and the times at which installments are to be paid by a municipality, and the amounts, manner and times may be different for different municipalities collecting police taxes.
(3) Despite subsection (1) (b), a municipality may pay to the finance minister, on the 5th business day after a calendar year end and on the last day of each succeeding month until all police taxes imposed for the previous taxation year have been collected, the amount of police taxes it collects by each of those dates.
(4) If a municipality elects to comply with subsection (3), it must also pay to the finance minister all penalties and interest it collects in respect of police taxes.
66.6 (1) In this section, "affected land" means land or improvements to which section 26 of the Assessment Act applies.
(2) If a municipality satisfies the revenue minister that the municipality is unable to collect police taxes in respect of a taxation year on affected land, the revenue minister may write off the amount not collected, whether or not the municipality has forwarded that amount under section 66.51 (1).
(3) If an amount is written off under subsection (2), a corresponding adjustment must be made, in the manner directed by the revenue minister, in the amount of police taxes to be paid by the municipality in respect of that or a subsequent taxation year.
(4) The write off of an amount under subsection (2) does not
(a) relieve the holder or occupier of the affected land from liability for police taxes, or
(b) prejudice the right of the government to collect from that holder or occupier the amount written off.
66.61 (1) A municipality that receives a notice under section 66.4 (1) [requisitioning police taxes] must apply each year to the following for a grant in place of police taxes for the taxation year:
(a) an owner identified by the British Columbia Assessment Authority as
(i) exempt from paying police taxes, and
(ii) authorized to pay a grant in place of taxes;
(b) an owner who is exempt from paying police taxes and has paid a grant in place of taxes to the municipality for the previous taxation year.
(2) On or before February 1 of each year, a municipality must pay to the finance minister the amount that has been received by the municipality in the preceding calendar year as a grant in place of police taxes.
(3) If a municipality does not apply as required under subsection (1) and in the opinion of the Surveyor of Taxes the municipality would have received a grant had the municipality applied for it, the Surveyor of Taxes may disallow all or part of the administration fee that the municipality would otherwise be entitled to retain under section 66.9 [administration fee].
66.7 (1) Subject to this Part and the Assessment Act, Part 7 of the Community Charter applies to the assessment, levy, collection and recovery of police taxes in a municipality, including to the addition of penalties and interest to police taxes that are taxes in arrear or delinquent taxes, as if the police taxes were property value taxes imposed under Part 7 of the Community Charter.
(2) All police taxes collected by a municipality must be accounted for as police taxes.
(3) Subject to this Part and the Assessment Act, the Taxation (Rural Area) Act applies to the assessment, levy, collection and recovery of police taxes in an electoral area or the area of the Province outside a regional district, including to the addition of penalties and interest to delinquent police taxes, as if the police taxes were taxes imposed under the Taxation (Rural Area) Act.
(4) All police taxes collected by the Surveyor of Taxes must be
(a) accounted for as police taxes, and
(b) paid into the consolidated revenue fund.
66.71 (1) In this section, "unpaid taxes" means police taxes and penalties and interest that
(a) a municipality is required to pay to the finance minister under section 66.51, and
(b) have not been paid as required under that section.
(2) A municipality must pay interest on its unpaid taxes to the finance minister.
(3) Interest, at the rate prescribed by the Lieutenant Governor in Council, is payable under subsection (2) from the date on which the amount was due to the finance minister under this Act until the date the amount is received by the finance minister.
(4) The revenue minister may give notice to a municipality of the
(a) amount of the municipality's unpaid taxes,
(b) interest that is payable under this section on the unpaid taxes,
(c) date by which payment of the unpaid taxes and the interest is required, and
(d) power of the Surveyor of Taxes under subsection (5) if that payment is not made as required.
(5) If a municipality to which a notice is sent under subsection (4) does not pay the unpaid taxes and the interest referred to in the notice by the date required, the Surveyor of Taxes may disallow all or part of the administration fee that the municipality would otherwise be entitled to retain under section 66.9.
66.8 (1) For the purpose of ensuring compliance with this Part and the regulations related to this Part, the Surveyor of Taxes or a person authorized in writing by the Surveyor of Taxes may
(a) at any reasonable time enter the premises where one or more records of a municipality are kept,
(b) request production of records or things that may be relevant to the inspection, and
(c) inspect records or things relevant to the inspection.
(2) Subsection (1) (a) does not authorize entry to a room actually used as a dwelling without the consent of the occupier.
(3) A person conducting an inspection under this section is entitled to free access to all the records of every description of the municipality referred to in subsection (1) (a) that touch on any of the matters in respect of which an inspection may be conducted under this section.
66.81 (1) A municipality that receives a notice under section 66.4 (1) and the Surveyor of Taxes must act as the agent for the Province for the collection of police taxes.
(2) The collector of each municipality that receives a notice under section 66.4 (1) and the Surveyor of Taxes must prepare and mail to each person named on the real property tax roll or assessment roll as an assessed owner in the municipality, electoral area or area outside a regional district, as applicable, a notice setting out the police taxes payable for a taxation year.
(3) A notice under subsection (2) forms part of the taxation notices under the Community Charter or the Taxation (Rural Area) Act, as applicable, and separate notices must not be prepared and given solely in respect of police taxes.
(4) The notice under subsection (2) must set out the total amount of police taxes imposed on each property.
(5) Despite subsections (2), (3) and (4), with the written agreement of a taxpayer, the Surveyor of Taxes may
(a) send a notice under subsection (2) to the taxpayer other than by mail, and
(b) provide the information required to be contained in a taxation notice by means of electronic information storage or electronic data transmission.
(6) Subject to section 66.9, a municipality must not, directly or indirectly, charge a fee to a taxpayer or the government to cover the cost of
(a) assessment and collection of police taxes, or
(b) losses that have occurred through the failure to collect taxes.
66.9 On or before April 10 of each year, the revenue minister may, by order, authorize the amount of an administration fee that may be retained by a municipality from police taxes collected by the municipality.
Public Sector Employers Act
62 The Schedule to the Public Sector Employers Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 384, is amended by striking out "Board of Parole (Parole Act)".
Sex Offender Registry Act
63 Section 1 of the Sex Offender Registry Act, S.B.C. 2001, c. 21, is amended in paragraph (h) of the definition of "personal information" by striking out "under an order of the court, the National Parole Board or the Board of Parole for the Province of British Columbia," and substituting "under an order of the court or the National Parole Board,".
Victims of Crime Act
64 Section 1 of the Victims of Crime Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 478, is amended in the definition of "justice system personnel" by striking out ", officers and employees appointed or employed under section 4 of the Parole Act".
65 Section 7 (1) is amended by striking out "designate of the minister or the chair of the Board of Parole for the Province of British Columbia or the designate of the chair must give" and substituting "designate of the minister must give".
66 (1) The definitions in section 1 of the Parole Act, as they read immediately before its repeal, apply in this section.
(2) A person who, on the date this section comes into force, is absent from a correctional centre under a parole granted by the board in relation to the person's detention in the correctional centre, pursuant only to a conviction for an offence against an enactment of British Columbia, is deemed to be absent from that correctional centre under a temporary absence authorized under section 22 (1) (b) of the Correction Act.
(3) A temporary absence referred to in subsection (2) expires on the earlier of the following:
(a) 60 days after the coming into force of this section;
(b) the date the parole certificate would have expired but for section 58 of this Act.
(4) An application for parole that
(a) was received by the board on or before March 31, 2007,
(b) is made by or on behalf of an inmate who is detained in a correctional centre pursuant only to a conviction for an offence against an enactment of British Columbia, and
(c) has not been decided by the board,
is deemed to be an application for a temporary absence under section 22 (1) (b) of the Correction Act and must be forwarded to the person in charge of the correctional centre of which the applicant is an inmate.
(5) Records of the board relating to offenders of federal enactments,
(a) despite the Document Disposal Act, may be transferred to the National Parole Board, and
(b) otherwise, are transferred to the minister.
(6) Records of the board not referred to in subsection (5) are transferred to the minister.
(7) On the date of a transfer under subsection (5) or (6), the records of the transferor become the records of the transferee.
67 (1) In this section, "the Act" means the Petroleum and Natural Gas Act.
(2) Despite section 59 of this Act, section 59 of the Act as it was before the coming into force of section 59 of this Act continues to apply to a lease
(a) that was issued under section 64 or 71 of the Act before the coming into force of section 59 of this Act,
(b) that is issued from a permit or a drilling licence that was issued before the coming into force of section 59 of this Act, if the location of the lease is within or coincides with the location of the permit or the drilling licence, or
(c) that is issued under section 64 of the Act from a lease described in paragraph (a) or (b) of this subsection.
68 (1) Subject to subsection (2), the appointment of each person who was appointed as a director of the New Relationship Trust before the coming into force of this section is conclusively deemed to have been a valid appointment made in compliance with the New Relationship Trust Act.
(2) The term of office of a person whose appointment as director is referred to in subsection (1) terminates, or, if the director is no longer in office, terminated,
(a) on the expiry of the director's term of office,
(b) on the effective date of the resignation of the director, or
(c) at the end of the day on November 30, 2008,
whichever is earliest.
(3) This section is retroactive to the extent necessary to give it full force and effect and must not be construed as lacking retroactive effect in relation to any matter because it makes no specific reference to that matter.
69 The provisions of this Act referred to in column 1 of the following table come into force as set out in column 2 of the table:
Item | Column 1 Provisions of Act |
Column 2 Commencement |
1 | Anything not elsewhere covered by this table | The date of Royal Assent |
2 | Sections 3 and 4 | December 31, 2006 |
3 | Section 5 | The date the Music Teachers (Registered) Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 327, is repealed |
4 | Sections 7 and 8 | By regulation of the Lieutenant Governor in Council |
5 | Section 9 | December 31, 2006 |
6 | Sections 10 to 14 | April 1, 2007 |
7 | Sections 15 and 16 | By regulation of the Lieutenant Governor in Council |
8 | Section 18 | By regulation of the Lieutenant Governor in Council |
9 | Sections 20 to 40 | By regulation of the Lieutenant Governor in Council |
10 | Section 41 | April 1, 2007 |
11 | Sections 42 and 43 | December 31, 2006 |
12 | Section 46 | By regulation of the Lieutenant Governor in Council |
13 | Section 49 | By regulation of the Lieutenant Governor in Council |
14 | Sections 52 and 53 | By regulation of the Lieutenant Governor in Council |
15 | Sections 57 and 58 | April 1, 2007 |
16 | Sections 60 and 61 | December 31, 2006 |
17 | Sections 62 to 66 | April 1, 2007 |
Architects Act
(Ministry of Advanced Education)
SECTION 1: [Architects Act, sections 6 and 69] updates the name of the school.
Architects (Landscape) Act
(Ministry of Advanced Education)
SECTION 2: [Architects (Landscape) Act, section 8] updates the name of the school and the faculty which houses the school.
Assessment Act
(Ministry of Small Business and Revenue)
SECTION 3: [Assessment Act, section 66] makes a consequential amendment requiring the assessment commissioner to provide information to the government for the purposes of police taxes.
British Columbia Transit Act
(Ministry of Transportation)
SECTION 4: [British Columbia Transit Act, section 26] makes a consequential amendment adding the Police Act to the list of other taxing statutes.
Business Practices and Consumer Protection Act
(Ministry of Public Safety and Solicitor General)
SECTION 5: [Business Practices and Consumer Protection Act, section 142.1] is consequential to repeal of the Music Teachers (Registered ) Act.
Child Care Subsidy Act
(Ministry of Children and Family Development)
SECTION 6: [Child Care Subsidy Act, section 5] authorizes the minister to require a person to or for whom a child care subsidy is paid, or who applies for a child care subsidy, to provide personal information that enables the minister to verify information received by the minister from third parties, and permits the minister to collect third party tips about an application for or payment of a subsidy under this Act.
Coal Act
(Ministry of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources)
SECTION 7: [Coal Act, section 3] requires that notices under this section be given in the prescribed form and manner and within the prescribed period.
SECTION 8: [Coal Act, section 26] specifically authorizes the Lieutenant Governor in Council to make regulations respecting the notices to be sent, and the periods, under section 3.
Community Charter
(Ministry of Community Services)
SECTION 9: [Community Charter, section 244] makes a consequential amendment adding police taxes to the ranking for crediting of taxes received by a municipal collector.
Correction Act
(Ministry of Public Safety and Solicitor General)
SECTION 10: [Correction Act, section 4] removes reference to the Parole Act consequential to its repeal.
SECTION 11: [Correction Act, section 22]
SECTION 12: [Correction Act, section 22.1] adds a power to suspend, cancel or revoke a temporary absence and to issue a warrant or notice for the arrest of an inmate whose temporary absence has been suspended, cancelled or revoked.
SECTION 13: [Correction Act, section 28] removes reference to the Parole Act consequential to its repeal.
SECTION 14: [Correction Act, section 31.1] enacts a provision required by section 108 (3) of the Corrections and Conditional Release Act (Canada) so that the National Parole Board is authorized to make parole decisions in respect of inmates of provincial correctional centres who are serving sentences for offences against both a provincial and a federal enactment, and is consequential to the repeal of the Parole Act.
Employment and Assistance Act
(Ministry of Employment and Income Assistance)
SECTION 15: [Employment and Assistance Act, section 22] authorizes the chair of the Employment and Assistance Tribunal to appoint panels of up to 3 members of the tribunal.
SECTION 16: [Employment and Assistance Act, section 24] is consequential to authorizing two-member panels.
SECTION 17: [Employment and Assistance Act, section 30] makes a housekeeping amendment.
Employment and Assistance for Persons with Disabilities Act
(Ministry of Employment and Income Assistance)
SECTION 18: [Employment and Assistance for Persons with Disabilities Act, section 2]substitutes "prescribed professional" for "health professional" and moves the definition from the Act to the regulations.
SECTION 19: [Employment and Assistance for Persons with Disabilities Act, section 21]makes a housekeeping amendment.
Engineers and Geoscientists Act
(Ministry of Advanced Education)
SECTION 20: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 3] clarifies that the association has the powers of a natural person and provides that the Business Corporations Act does not apply unless the Lieutenant Governor in Council orders that specified provisions apply.
SECTION 21: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 4] is consequential to section 3 of the Act as enacted by this Bill.
SECTION 22: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 4.1] sets out that the association's duty to protect the public interest, exercise its powers, functions and duties under the Act and enforce the Act is paramount to the association's object of protecting its members and licensees and describes the other objects of the association.
SECTION 23: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 9]
(a) removes the requirement that 2 councillors must be appointed each year, and
(b) removes the requirement that the association conduct a letter ballot for the election of councillors and allows the council to determine the method of balloting.
SECTION 24: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 10]
(a) clarifies that late fees and reinstatement fees for members, licensees and certificate holders are not set by bylaw,
(b) adds the power to make bylaws establishing and enforcing professional development requirements and establishing alternative complaint resolution processes, and
(c) removes the power to make bylaws respecting the method of balloting.
SECTION 25: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 11] removes the requirement that a bylaw must be ratified by a letter ballot.
SECTION 26: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 12] removes the requirement that the association must use a letter ballot to take a vote of the members.
SECTION 27: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 13] clarifies that the council can refuse registration or a licence to a person who has contravened the Act or the bylaws.
SECTION 28: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 14]
SECTION 29: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 19] allows the registrar to enter in the register the name and address of licensees and certificate holders as well as the date the licence or certificate of authorization was issued.
SECTION 30: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 20] allows the use of electronic seals.
SECTION 31: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, sections 21 and 21.1 to 21.3]
SECTION 32: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 27] increases to $25 000 the amount of exemplary damages payable to the association.
SECTION 33: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 30]
SECTION 34: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 32] is consequential to section 30 (9) and (10) of the Act as added by this Bill.
SECTION 35: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, sections 32.1 and 32.2]
SECTION 36: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 33]
(a) makes the language in the Act consistent, and
(b) clarifies that a suspended certificate of authorization is deemed to be cancelled for the period of the suspension.
SECTION 37: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 34] makes the language in the Act consistent.
SECTION 38: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 34.1] is consequential to the repeal of section 14 (9) of the Act by this Bill.
SECTION 39: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 35] makes the language in the Act consistent.
SECTION 40: [Engineers and Geoscientists Act, section 39] is consequential to section 14 of the Act as amended by this Bill.
Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act
(Ministry of Labour and Citizens' Services)
SECTION 41: [Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, Schedule 2] removes reference to the Board of Parole consequential to the repeal of the Parole Act.
Greater Vancouver Transportation Authority Act
(Ministry of Transportation)
SECTION 42: [Greater Vancouver Transportation Authority Act, section 34] makes a consequential amendment adding the Police Act to the list of other taxing statutes.
Islands Trust Act
(Ministry of Community Services)
SECTION 43: [Islands Trust Act, section 49.3] makes a consequential amendment adding the Police Act to the list of other taxing statutes.
Mineral Tenure Act
(Ministry of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources)
SECTION 44: [Mineral Tenure Act, section 1] amends the definition of '"locate" and "location" ' consequential to the amendment to section 24.1 of the Act by this Bill.
SECTION 45: [Mineral Tenure Act, section 7] clarifies that a person must be a free miner to be registered as a recorded holder of a claim or lease, to hold a claim under section 29 of the Act, or to revise an expiry date under section 33.1 of the Act.
SECTION 46: [Mineral Tenure Act, section 19] expands the notice requirements imposed on persons before beginning a mining activity to include requirements to notify certain disposition holders under the Land Act and to wait a prescribed period of time after sending notice.
SECTION 47: [Mineral Tenure Act, section 22] substitutes words that were to have been substituted by a previous amendment found to be inoperative.
SECTION 48: [Mineral Tenure Act, section 24.1] corrects a previous error of omission.
SECTION 49: [Mineral Tenure Act, section 24.1] provides that the identification of a legacy claim or legacy placer lease may be made by reference to a map approved for that purpose by the chief gold commissioner rather than by stakes, marks or posts.
SECTION 50: [Mineral Tenure Act, section 42] amends the section so that a recorded holder must have a survey regarding a mineral claim completed only if the chief gold commissioner requires it, and may register an application for a mining lease before or after complying with the other requirements of this subsection.
SECTION 51: [Mineral Tenure Act, section 53] replaces a cross-reference consequential to the amendment to section 42 of the Act by this Bill.
SECTION 52: [Mineral Tenure Act, section 65] is consequential to the amendment to section 19 of the Act by this Bill.
SECTION 53: [Mineral Tenure Act, section 68] amends a transition provision consequential to the amendment to section 24.1 of the Act by this Bill.
Music Teachers (Registered) Act
(Ministry of Advanced Education)
SECTION 54: [Music Teachers (Registered) Act] allows the Act to be repealed by regulation of the Lieutenant Governor in Council.
New Relationship Trust Act
(Ministry of Aboriginal Relations and Reconciliation)
SECTION 55: [New Relationship Trust Act, section 5] allows replacement directors for the New Relationship Trust to be appointed before or after the expiry of the term of the directors being replaced.
SECTION 56: [New Relationship Trust Act, section 6] removes the time lines within which replacement directors are to be appointed to fill vacancies in the board of directors of the New Relationship Trust.
Offence Act
(Ministry of Attorney General)
SECTION 57: [Offence Act, section 94] removes an obsolete provision assigning jurisdiction to the National Parole Board.
Parole Act
(Ministry of Public Safety and Solicitor General)
SECTION 58: [Parole Act]
Petroleum and Natural Gas Act
(Ministry of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources)
SECTION 59: [Petroleum and Natural Gas Act, section 59] amends section 59 to provide that petroleum and natural gas rights under a lease continued under section 58 of the Act revert to the government if the rights are stratigraphically outside the zones known by the director to be capable of production.
Police Act
(Ministry of Public Safety and Solicitor General)
SECTION 60: [Police Act, section 3] makes a housekeeping amendment.
SECTION 61: [Police Act, Part 9.1] enacts a property value tax scheme to raise money towards the cost to the Province of providing policing and law enforcement services to municipalities with populations less than 5 000, electoral areas and the Stikine.
Public Sector Employers Act
(Ministry of Finance)
SECTION 62: [Public Sector Employers Act, Schedule] removes a reference to the Board of Parole consequential to the repeal of the Parole Act.
Sex Offender Registry Act
(Ministry of Public Safety and Solicitor General)
SECTION 63: [Sex Offender Registry Act, section 1] removes a reference to the Board of Parole consequential to the repeal of the Parole Act.
Victims of Crime Act
(Ministry of Public Safety and Solicitor General)
SECTION 64: [Victims of Crime Act, section 1] removes a reference to the Parole Act consequential to its repeal.
SECTION 65: [Victims of Crime Act, section 7] removes references to the Board of Parole consequential to the repeal of the Parole Act.
SECTION 66: [Transitional -- Parole Act]
SECTION 67: [Transitional--Petroleum and Natural Gas Act] provides that section 59 of the Act, as it was before being amended by this Act, continues to apply to certain leases issued before the amending of section 59 or issued after that amendment but originating in leases, permits or drilling licences issued before that amendment.
SECTION 68: [Validation -- appointments to New Relationship Trust] validates the appointments
of the directors of the New Relationship Trust before the coming into
force of this Bill.
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(3rd session, 38th Parliament)]