BILL 23 – 2008
PUBLIC HEALTH ACT
HER
MAJESTY, by and with the
advice and consent of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of
British Columbia, enacts as follows:
Part 1 — Definitions and
Interpretation
Definitions
1 In this Act:
"communicable
disease" means an illness caused by an infectious agent
or its toxic products;
"contact
information"
means information sufficient to contact a person, including the
person's home and business address, telephone number and email address;
"diagnostic
examination"
includes, for the purposes of determining the existence or identity of
an infectious agent or a hazardous agent, or of managing a health
condition,
(a)
collecting bodily fluids and substances for examination,
(b)
diagnostic imaging examinations,
(c)
skin testing, and
(d)
psychological testing;
"employee",
except in relation to an employee of a local government, includes a
volunteer and a person providing services under contract;
"exposed"
means to have been
(a) in
contact with, or near, a
person or thing that is or may be infected with an infectious agent or
contaminated with a hazardous agent, or
(b) in
an environment contaminated with an infectious agent or a hazardous
agent,
in
such a manner as to be at risk of being infected with the infectious
agent or contaminated with the hazardous agent;
"facility"
includes a laboratory;
"hazardous
agent" means a prescribed thing that
(a) may
cause a risk to health if a person is contaminated with the thing, or
(b)
indicates the presence of a contaminant that could cause a risk to
health;
"health
authority" means a regional health board or a prescribed
body;
"health
hazard" means
(a) a
condition, a thing or an activity that
(i)
endangers, or is likely to endanger, public health, or
(ii)
interferes, or is likely to interfere, with the suppression of
infectious agents or hazardous agents, or
(b) a
prescribed condition, thing or activity, including a prescribed
condition, thing or activity that
(i)
is associated with injury or illness, or
(ii)
fails to meet a prescribed standard in relation to health, injury or
illness;
"health
impediment" means a prescribed condition, thing or
activity
(a) the
cumulative effects of which, over a period of time, are likely to
adversely affect public health,
(b)
that causes significant chronic disease or disability in the population,
(c)
that interferes with or is
inconsistent with the goals of public health initiatives respecting the
prevention of injury or illness in the population, including chronic
disease or disability, or
(d)
that is associated with poor health within the population;
"health
officer" means
(a) an
environmental health officer designated under section 78 [designation
of environmental health officers],
(b) a
medical health officer designated under section 71 [designation
of medical health officers], and
(c) the
provincial health officer, for the purposes of
(i)
section 14 [requesting and disclosing information],
(ii)
section 54 [general emergency powers],
(iii) section 67 [provincial health officer may act as
health officer],
(iv)
section 80 (1) [powers and duties under other enactments or
that overlap],
(v)
Division 2 [Other Matters] of Part 7,
(vi)
Part 8 [Administrative Penalties, Offences and Sentencing],
and
(vii) a regulation made in respect of the provisions listed in
subparagraphs (i) to (vi);
"health
professional" means
(a) a
medical practitioner,
(b) a
person authorized to practise a designated health profession within the
meaning of the Health Professions Act, or
(c) a
person who practises a health profession within the meaning of the Health
Professions Act that is prescribed for the purposes of this
definition;
"infected
person" or "infected thing"
means a person who, or thing that,
(a) is
or is likely infected with, or has been or has likely been exposed to,
a prescribed infectious agent, or
(b) is
or is likely contaminated with, or has been or has likely been exposed
to, a prescribed hazardous agent
regardless
of whether the
person or thing suffers any communicable disease or adverse effect from
the infectious agent or hazardous agent, or exhibits any symptom of
being ill or infected;
"infectious
agent" means a prescribed thing that could give rise to
an illness and that may be transmitted in any manner and at any distance
(a) by
a person who, or thing that, is infected with the thing, or
(b)
through another thing, the environment or any other means;
"laboratory"
means
(a) a
medical or clinical diagnostic laboratory,
(b) a
veterinary laboratory,
(c) a
medical research laboratory,
(d) a
laboratory that tests environmental samples, or
(e) a
laboratory or class of
laboratories as may be designated by order of the minister as a
laboratory for the purposes of this Act and the regulations made under
it;
"local
government" means
(a) a
municipality, including the City of Vancouver,
(b) a
regional district, or
(c) a
prescribed body;
"nurse
practitioner" means a person who is authorized to
practise nursing as a nurse practitioner under the Health
Professions Act;
"operator" means
a person who performs a regulated activity, and includes any person who
assists, directs, supervises or employs that person for the purpose of
doing the regulated activity;
"personal
information" includes
(a)
personal information within the meaning of the Freedom of
Information and Protection of Privacy Act and the Personal
Information Protection Act, and
(b)
contact information;
"population"
includes a subclass within the population;
"preventive
measures" means measures taken for the purpose of
(a)
preventing illness,
(b)
promoting health,
(c)
preventing transmission of an infectious agent, or
(d)
preventing contamination by a hazardous agent
and
includes the measures set out in section 16 (1);
"private
dwelling"
means a place, or part of a place, used exclusively for residential
purposes, but does not include a place where a person resides
temporarily as a result of the person's detention under this or any
other enactment;
"public
body" means a public body within the meaning of the Freedom
of Information and Protection of Privacy Act;
"public
health plan" means a public health plan made under
section 3 [minister may require public health plans];
"regional
health board" means a regional health board designated
under the Health Authorities Act;
"regulated
activity" means an activity that is prescribed as a
regulated activity;
"similarly
designated health officer" means a health officer who
(a) may
exercise powers and perform duties in the same geographic area as a
health officer who has made
(i)
a decision within the meaning of section 21 [reconsideration
of licence and permit decisions],
or
(ii)
an order under Part 4 [Inspections and Orders],
and
(b) has
the power to make the type of decision or order made by that health
officer;
"syndrome"
means a prescribed condition that
(a) is
characterized by or associated with a group of signs and symptoms, and
(b) has
an adverse effect on health;
"thing"
includes
(a)
tangible things, and
(b)
organisms, other than humans;
"vary",
in the
context of a licence, a permit or an order, includes to vary existing
terms and conditions of, and to attach new terms or conditions to, the
licence, permit or order;
"vehicle"
means a
device, whether self-propelled or propelled by other means, designed to
transport people or things on, under or over land, including by rail,
or in or on water, and includes machinery, equipment or an apparatus
mounted on or attached to the device.
Interpretation
2 (1) Unless a contrary
intention is expressed, a reference in this Act or a regulation made
under it to
(a) a
building or structure, includes part of the building or structure, or
(b) a
place, includes part of the
place, any natural or artificial feature on or in the place, and any
building or structure located on the place.
(2) If
the context requires it, a
reference to a person includes a person having authority under the
common law or an enactment to make personal and health care decisions
in respect of the person.
(3) For
the purposes of this Act
and the regulations made under it, a condition, situation or thing is
caused by a person or another thing if the person or other thing
(a)
contributes beyond a minimal extent to the happening or existence of
the condition, situation or thing, or
(b)
directly or indirectly causes the condition, situation or thing.
Part 2 — Public Health
Planning and Reporting
Division 1 — Making
Public Health Plans
Minister
may require public health plans
3
(1) To promote and protect health and well-being, the minister may by
order require a public body to make, in respect of a specific issue or
geographic area, a public health plan.
(2) The
minister may specify one or more of the following as the purposes of
the public health plan:
(a) to
identify and address the health needs of particular groups within the
population, including aboriginal peoples;
(b) to
monitor and assess the
status of the health of the population, including through public health
surveillance and monitoring indicators of, or factors influencing, the
health of the population;
(c) to
prevent and mitigate the
adverse effects of diseases and disabilities, syndromes, psychosocial
disorders, injuries and health hazards;
(d) to
identify, prevent and mitigate the adverse effects of health
impediments;
(e) to
facilitate or plan for the delivery of core public health functions;
(f) to
achieve a prescribed purpose.
(3) An
order under this section
may include a requirement to comply with any written agreement in
respect of public health plans entered into between the minister and
the public body.
(4) Each
regional health board and
local government having jurisdiction in the geographic area to which
the public health plan applies must be consulted on the proposed public
health plan.
(5) The
minister may by order
extend the time for completing the public health plan whether or not
the time previously set has expired.
(6) A
public body subject to an order under this section must comply with the
order.
Approval
of public health plans
4 (1) A public body
required to make a public health plan must
(a)
submit the public health plan to the minister,
(b)
revise the public health plan according to the directions of the
minister, and
(c)
once the minister is satisfied with the public health plan, publish the
public health plan.
(2) If
in the opinion of the minister it would be in the public interest for
section 5 [effect of public health plans on statutory
decisions] or 6 [relationship of public health
plans to other planning processes]
to apply to a public health plan, the minister may place the public
health plan before the Lieutenant Governor in Council for approval by
order.
Division 2 — After
Public Health Plan is Made
Effect
of public health plans
on statutory decisions
5 (1) In this section, "authorization"
includes any licence, permit, approval or other authorization granted
under this or any other enactment.
(2) This
section applies if the Lieutenant Governor in Council approves a public
health plan under section 4 [approval of public health
plans] and, for the purposes of implementing a public
health plan, makes a regulation to do any of the following:
(a)
require persons making decisions under a specified enactment to
consider the public health plan in making those decisions;
(b)
restrict or put conditions on the issuance or amendment of
authorizations under a specified enactment;
(c)
restrict or put conditions on the exercise of a power or the
performance of a duty under a specified enactment.
(3) A
regulation described under
subsection (2) applies to all of the geographic area under the public
health plan, unless otherwise provided in the regulation.
(4)
Despite an enactment specified
in a regulation described under subsection (2), if the regulation
establishes requirements that must be imposed in issuing or amending an
authorization under an enactment, the requirements are deemed to be
imposed under the enactment under which the authorization is issued or
amended.
(5) The
issuance or amendment of
an authorization, or the exercise of a power or the performance of a
duty, contrary to a regulation described under subsection (2) has no
effect.
Relationship
of public health plans
to other planning processes
6 (1) This section
applies if the Lieutenant Governor in Council approves a public health
plan under section 4 [approval of public health plans]
and, for the purposes of implementing a public health plan, makes a
regulation to do any of the following:
(a)
require a specified part of
the government, or a local government, to consider the public health
plan during strategic or operational planning processes;
(b)
require that the results of
specified government or local government strategic or operational
planning processes be consistent with the public health plan;
(c)
despite any other enactment,
provide that specified government or local government strategic or
operational plans, bylaws or other planning documents, or classes of
these, do not have legal effect to the extent of any inconsistency with
the public health plan.
(2) If a
regulation described
under subsection (1) is made, the minister may, for the purposes of
facilitating the implementation of the regulation, make an order
(a)
modifying a provision of the regulation in respect of a local
government, or
(b)
exempting a local government from a provision of the regulation.
Reporting
on public health plans
7
The minister may by order require a health authority to monitor the
implementation of a public health plan in the geographic area for which
the health authority has jurisdiction, and to report in the manner
required by the minister on
(a) the
measures that have been taken to give effect to the public health plan,
(b)
compliance with the objectives of the public health plan, and
(c) any
other matter relevant to the implementation of the public health plan.
Review
and revision of public health plans
8
(1) The minister may by order require a review of a public health plan
in accordance with terms set by the minister, and a person subject to
the order must comply with it.
(2) The
minister may by order vary
the terms of a public health plan, and, if the terms are varied, the
person responsible for the plan must revise the plan to the
satisfaction of the minister.
(3) If a
public health plan that has been approved by the Lieutenant Governor in
Council under section 4 [approval of public health plans]
is revised, the minister must either
(a)
place the revised public health plan before the Lieutenant Governor in
Council for approval by order, or
(b)
request the Lieutenant Governor in Council to rescind the order
approving the public health plan before it was revised.
Division 3 — Reporting
Disease, Health Hazards and Other Matters
Purposes
for collection, use and
disclosure of personal information
9
A person may collect, use or disclose personal information for the
purposes of this Division, but only if it is necessary for one or more
of the following purposes:
(a) to
identify an individual who needs or is receiving health services;
(b) to
provide health services to, or facilitate the care of, an individual;
(c) to
identify a person who is providing health services;
(d) to
prevent or manage chronic conditions, at the individual or population
level;
(e) to
assess and address public health needs;
(f) to
engage in health services planning, maintenance or improvement,
including
(i)
health service development, management, delivery, monitoring and
evaluation,
(ii)
compilation of statistical information, and
(iii) public health surveillance;
(g) to
conduct or facilitate research into health issues;
(h) to
assess and address threats to public health.
Mandatory
reporting of infection or exposure
10
(1) This section applies to a health professional, a person responsible
for administering a hospital or laboratory, and a prescribed person
who, in carrying out his or her duties, becomes aware that a person or
thing
(a) is
an infected person or infected thing, or
(b) has
died or may have died as a result of being an infected person or
infected thing.
(2) If
an infectious agent or a
hazardous agent is prescribed for the purposes of this section, a
person to whom this section applies must promptly report the following
information, to the extent of his or her knowledge, to a prescribed
person:
(a) the
identity and contact information, if known, of a person who
(i)
is or was an infected person, or
(ii)
has custody or control of an infected person or infected thing;
(b) if
the information described
in paragraph (a) is unavailable, or no one has custody or control of
the infected person or infected thing,
(i)
the last known location of the infected person or infected thing, and
(ii)
information that would assist in identifying the infected person or
infected thing;
(c) the
nature of the infectious agent or hazardous agent, including
(i)
any signs or symptoms,
(ii)
any diagnostic examination or other examination that was done or
preventive measures that were taken, and
(iii) the results of any diagnostic examination or other examination
that was done or preventive measures that were taken;
(d) any
prescribed information;
(e) any
other relevant information requested by the person to whom the report
is made.
(3) If
an infectious agent or a
hazardous agent is prescribed for the purposes of this section, a
person to whom this section applies must
(a)
make records and take samples as prescribed, and
(b)
take other prescribed actions.
Mandatory
reporting of health hazards
11
If a prescribed person becomes aware that a prescribed health hazard
exists or may exist, the person must promptly report the following
information, to the extent of his or her knowledge, to a prescribed
person:
(a) the
nature of the health hazard, including its location and cause or source;
(b) the
identity of persons involved in causing or responding to the health
hazard;
(c) the
persons who may be adversely affected by the health hazard;
(d)
prescribed information;
(e) any
other relevant information requested by the person to whom the report
is made.
Mandatory
reporting for other public health purposes
12
If a matter affecting health promotion or health protection is
prescribed for the purposes of this section, a health professional, a
person responsible for administering a hospital or laboratory, and a
prescribed person must
(a)
promptly report, to the extent of his or her knowledge, to a prescribed
person,
(i)
prescribed information, and
(ii)
other relevant information requested by the person to whom the report
is made,
(b)
make records and take samples as prescribed, and
(c)
take other prescribed actions.
Mandatory
sampling and reporting
13
(1) For the purposes of monitoring the incidence and nature of
infectious agents and hazardous agents and controlling their spread, a
medical health officer may, on his or her own initiative or on
receiving a report under this Division, order a laboratory or other
person to perform a diagnostic examination and make a report of
findings.
(2) A
laboratory or person subject to an order under this section must comply
with the order.
Requesting
and disclosing information
14
(1) For the purposes of health promotion or health protection, a health
officer and a prescribed person may, if permitted by the regulations,
request information from, and disclose information to, the following
persons:
(a) a
person who makes or receives a report under this Division;
(b) a
person who is the subject of a report under this Division;
(c)
health professionals, including persons authorized in other
jurisdictions to practise a health profession;
(d)
public officers responsible for health, including public officers
responsible for health in other jurisdictions;
(e)
persons employed by a health authority, hospital or laboratory;
(f)
prescribed persons.
(2) For
greater certainty,
information may be disclosed outside British Columbia for the purposes
of subsection (1) regardless of whether there is a threat to public
health, or a person's health, in British Columbia.
(3) A
person who receives a
request for information under subsection (1) must, if the person has
custody or control of the information, provide the information in the
manner and form requested, and within the time requested.
Part 3 — Preventing Disease
and Other Health Hazards
Division 1 — Preventing
Disease and Other Health Hazards
Must
not cause health hazard
15
A person must not willingly cause a health hazard, or act in a manner
that the person knows, or ought to know, will cause a health hazard.
Preventive
measures
16 (1) Preventive
measures include the following:
(a)
being treated or vaccinated;
(b)
taking preventive medication;
(c)
washing with, applying or ingesting a substance, or having a substance
injected or inserted;
(d)
undergoing disinfection and decontamination measures;
(e)
wearing a type of clothing or
other personal protective equipment, or changing, removing or altering
clothing or personal protective equipment;
(f)
using a type of equipment or implementing a process, or removing or
altering equipment or processes.
(2) A
person subject to a
regulation requiring preventive measures must not be in a place or do a
thing that is prohibited by the regulation until the person has
(a)
taken preventive measures as set out in the regulation, or
(b) if
permitted by the regulation, made an objection under subsection (4).
(3)
Unless a regulation allows an
objection to be made under subsection (4), a prescribed health
professional who attends the birth of a child must provide to the child
any prescribed preventive measures.
(4) A
person subject to a
regulation requiring preventive measures may, if permitted by the
regulation, make an objection to a medical health officer, either in
person or in the prescribed manner, stating that the person
(a)
believes that the preventive measures would be harmful to his or her
health, or
(b)
objects to the preventive measures for reasons of conscience.
(5)
Despite subsection (4), if an
objection is permitted by the regulations to be made for the purposes
of subsection (3), the objection may be made to the health professional
who attends the birth of the child.
(6) A
person who has made an objection must not
(a) be
required to take the preventive measures, and
(b) if
applicable, be in a place or do a thing that is prohibited by the
regulations.
Must
seek advice if infected or exposed
17
(1) If a person is informed by a health professional, or by a person
acting on the instructions of a health professional, that the person
(a) is
an infected person, or has
custody or control of a person who is an infected person or of a thing
that is an infected thing, and
(b) is
required by this section to do the things set out in subsection (2),
the
person must comply with subsection (2).
(2) A
person who receives information under subsection (1) must
(a)
take reasonable steps to avoid transmission of the infectious agent or
hazardous agent,
(b)
promptly seek advice from a
medical practitioner, nurse practitioner, medical health officer or
person specified by a medical health officer, and
(c)
comply with the instructions of a person referred to in paragraph (b),
including instructions respecting
(i)
diagnostic examinations and preventive measures, and
(ii)
prevention of transmission of the infectious agent or hazardous agent.
(3) If,
in the opinion of a person
referred to in subsection (2) (b), a person who receives information
under subsection (1) is not complying with instructions given under
subsection (2) (c), the person referred to in subsection (2) (b) must
report the non-compliance in accordance with the regulations to a
medical health officer.
Division 2 — Regulating
Activities that May Cause Health Hazards
Duties
of operators
18 (1) An operator who
engages in a regulated activity must take reasonable care to
(a)
prevent health hazards from arising in the course of the regulated
activity, and
(b)
respond to health hazards that arise, including mitigating harmful
effects of the health hazard.
(2) An
operator who is an employer
must ensure that employees are adequately trained and sufficiently
equipped to recognize, prevent and respond to health hazards that may
arise when engaging in a regulated activity.
(3) An
operator who engages in a
regulated activity must comply with any requirement or duty set out in
a regulation respecting the regulated activity.
Licences
and permits
19
(1) If an operator is required by regulation to have a licence or
permit to engage in a regulated activity, the operator may apply for
the licence or permit by submitting to a health officer
(a) an
application in the form required by the health officer, and
(b) any
prescribed records and fees.
(2) On
receiving an application for a licence or permit, a health officer may
do one or more of the following:
(a)
request, in writing, from the
applicant or from a person referenced by the applicant further
information, samples, proof of a fact, records or any other thing
necessary to evaluate the application;
(b)
conduct an inspection under Division 1 [Inspections]
of Part 4;
(c)
refer the application to
another health officer, a public officer, an employee of a local
government or a person having special expertise for review and comment;
(d)
issue a temporary licence or permit, with or without terms or
conditions, valid for a period of no more than 3 months;
(e)
issue the licence or permit, with or without terms or conditions;
(f)
reject the application, providing to the applicant, in writing, the
reason for the rejection.
(3) An
operator who has a licence or permit may request a variation of the
licence or permit by
(a)
submitting to a health officer an application in the form required by
the health officer, and
(b)
providing to the health
officer information, samples, proof of a fact, records or any other
thing necessary to evaluate the application.
(4) A
health officer who receives an application under subsection (3) may do
any of the following:
(a)
exercise any of the powers set out in subsection (2) (a) to (c) and (f);
(b)
vary the licence or permit.
Suspending,
cancelling or varying licences
or permits
20 (1) This section
applies if a licence or permit is issued to an operator under
section 19 [licences and permits].
(2) In
addition to any other
action that may be taken under this Act, a health officer may suspend,
cancel or vary an operator's licence or permit if
(a) the
operator has contravened a term or condition of the licence or permit,
or an order made under this Act,
(b) the
operator has contravened a requirement of this Act or the regulations
made under it, or
(c) the
health officer reasonably
believes that the operator, in engaging in a regulated activity, has
caused or is causing a health hazard.
(3)
Before suspending, cancelling or varying an operator's licence or
permit, a health officer must provide to the operator
(a) a
written notice stating
(i)
the action the health officer proposes to take,
(ii)
the reason for taking the action,
(iii) the date the action is to take effect, and
(iv)
how the operator may respond to the proposed action, and
(b) a
reasonable opportunity to respond, in writing, to the proposed action.
(4) If
the operator makes a
response in accordance with the notice provided under subsection (3),
the health officer may do either or both of the following:
(a)
delay the date the action is
to take effect or suspend the action, if satisfied that the delay or
suspension would not be detrimental to public health;
(b)
after considering the response and any supporting records or written
submissions of the operator,
(i)
take the proposed action or a different action, or
(ii)
rescind the notice and take no action.
(5) The
health officer must provide written reasons for a decision made under
subsection (4) (b) (i).
Reconsideration
of licence and permit decisions
21 (1) In this section,
"decision" means a decision of a
health officer to
(a)
reject an application for a licence or permit, or an application to
vary a licence or permit,
(b)
issue a licence or permit subject to terms and conditions, or
(c)
suspend, cancel or vary a licence or permit.
(2) On
receiving notice of a
decision from a health officer, a person may request the health officer
to reconsider the decision if the person has additional relevant
information that was not reasonably available when the person first
(a)
submitted the application under section 19 [licences and
permits], or
(b)
responded under section 20 [suspending, cancelling or
varying licences or permits], if the person responded before
the decision took effect.
(3) A
request for reconsideration must be made
(a) in
the form required by the health officer, and
(b)
within 120 days after receiving notice of the decision.
(4)
After considering a request for reconsideration, a health officer may
do one or more of the following:
(a)
reject the request on the basis that
(i)
the information submitted
in support of the request is not relevant, or was reasonably available
at the time referred to in subsection (2), or
(ii)
the person did not respond under section 20 before the date the
decision took effect;
(b)
delay the date the decision
is to take effect or suspend the decision, if satisfied that the delay
or suspension would not be detrimental to public health;
(c)
take, as applicable, one or more of the actions described in
(i)
section 19 (2) or (4), or
(ii)
section 20 (4) (b).
(5) A
health officer must provide
written reasons for an action taken under subsection (4) (c), and a
person may not request further reconsideration.
(6) If a
health officer is unable
or unavailable to reconsider his or her decision, a similarly
designated health officer may act under this section in respect of the
decision as if the health officer were reconsidering his or her own
decision.
(7)
Following a reconsideration
under this section, the person who requested the reconsideration may
request a review of the rejection or action taken under subsection (4)
(a) or (c) and, for the purposes of a review, section 44 (2) to (5) [review
of orders] applies as if the rejection or action were an
order made under Part 4 [Inspections and Orders].
Division 3 — Regulating
Health Impediments
Duties
respecting health impediments
22 (1) This section
applies to a person who
(a) is
responsible for a condition or thing, or
(b)
engages in an activity,
prescribed
for the purposes of this
section as a condition, a thing or an activity that causes or is
associated with a health impediment.
(2) A
person described in subsection (1) must
(a)
comply with any requirement or duty set out in a regulation respecting
the condition, thing or activity,
(b) not
do anything that is prohibited by the regulation, and
(c)
ensure that employees are
adequately trained and sufficiently equipped to comply with any
requirement or duty set out in the regulation.
Part 4 — Inspections and
Orders
Division 1 — Inspections
When
inspection may be made
23 Subject to section
25 [entering to inspect],
a health officer may stop a person or vehicle, enter a vehicle or place
and inspect a vehicle or place for any of the following reasons:
(a) for
the purposes of determining whether
(i)
the person is an infected person,
(ii)
the person has custody or control of a person who is an infected
person, or of a thing that is an infected thing,
(iii) the vehicle or place is an infected thing, or has an infected
thing in it or on it,
(iv)
a health hazard exists or likely exists in or on the vehicle or place,
or in relation to the activities of the person, or
(v)
a provision of this Act or
a regulation made under it, a term or condition of a licence or permit
issued under this Act or an order made under this Act may have been, is
being or is likely about to be contravened;
(b) if
the person, vehicle or place is described in a report made under
Division 3 [Reporting Disease, Health Hazards and
Other Matters] of Part 2;
(c) to
determine whether
(i)
a licence or permit should be issued, or an order should be made, under
this Act, or
(ii)
a term or condition of a
licence or permit issued under this Act, or an order made under this
Act, should be varied or rescinded;
(d) to
monitor or confirm compliance with
(i)
a provision of this Act or a regulation made under it, or
(ii)
a term or condition of a licence or permit issued under this Act, or an
order made under this Act;
(e) if
a health officer has the
power to monitor or confirm compliance with a provision of another
enactment, to monitor or confirm compliance with that provision;
(f) for
any purpose for which an inspection by a health officer is expressly
authorized under this or any other enactment;
(g) for
a prescribed purpose.
Inspection
powers
24 (1) A health officer
may do one or more of the following for the purposes of an inspection:
(a) be
accompanied or assisted by
a person who has special, expert or professional knowledge of a matter
relevant to the inspection;
(b)
require a person to produce relevant records or things in the person's
possession or control;
(c)
inspect, copy or remove relevant records or things;
(d)
require a person to stop engaging in an activity, or stop the operation
of a thing;
(e)
require a person to
demonstrate a relevant skill, or operate a thing or carry out a
procedure as directed by the health officer;
(f)
make records in respect of a person, place or thing;
(g)
take samples and perform analyses and tests, including tests in which a
sample is destroyed;
(h)
require that a place or thing not be altered or disturbed for a
reasonable period of time;
(i)
question a person whom the health officer reasonably believes to have
relevant information;
(j)
attend a relevant training program;
(k)
make an order necessary for the purpose of exercising a power of
inspection.
(2) If a
health officer removes records or things under subsection (1) (c), the
health officer must
(a)
provide a receipt for the records or things to the person from whom
they were taken, and
(b)
subject to a power under this or any other enactment to order a thing
destroyed, promptly return the records or things
(i)
when they have served the purposes for which they were taken, or
(ii)
if an action or a
proceeding is taken under this or any other enactment as a result of an
inspection, and the records or things are relevant to the action or
proceeding, no later than 3 months after the conclusion of the action
or proceeding.
(3) For
the purposes of an order made under subsection (1) (k), the person who
is subject to the order must comply with it.
Entering
to inspect
25 (1) A health officer
may conduct an inspection at any reasonable hour.
(2)
Before entering a vehicle or place, a health officer must
(a)
take reasonable steps to
notify the owner or occupier of the place of the date and time that the
health officer will be entering, and
(b) if
the place is a private dwelling, obtain either the consent of the owner
or occupier or a warrant to enter.
(3)
Despite subsection (2) (a), a health officer may conduct an inspection
without providing notice if
(a)
providing notice would not be reasonably possible or practical in the
circumstances, or
(b) in
the case of a regulated activity, providing notice would frustrate the
purposes of the inspection.
Division 2 — Order of
the Minister
Minister
may order temporary quarantine facility
26
(1) The minister may by order designate a place as a quarantine
facility if the minister reasonably believes that the temporary use of
the place for the purposes of isolating or detaining infected persons
is necessary to protect public health.
(2) A
person who has control of a
place designated as a quarantine facility must provide the place to the
minister or a medical health officer.
Division 3 — Orders
Respecting Infectious Agents and Hazardous Agents
When
orders respecting infectious agents
and hazardous agents may be made
27
(1) A medical health officer may issue an order under this Division
only if the medical health officer reasonably believes that
(a) a
person
(i)
is an infected person, or
(ii)
has custody or control of an infected person or an infected thing, and
(b) the
order is necessary to protect public health.
(2) An
order may be issued based
on clinical findings or a person's or thing's circumstances or medical
history, even if the person or thing has been examined and the
examination did not reveal the presence of an infectious agent or a
hazardous agent.
(3) For
greater certainty, this
section applies even if the person subject to the order is complying
with all terms and conditions of a licence, a permit, an approval or
another authorization issued under this or any other enactment.
General
powers respecting infectious agents
and hazardous agents
28 (1) If the
circumstances described in section 27 [when orders
respecting infectious agents and hazardous agents may be made] apply,
a medical health officer may order a person to do anything that the
medical health officer reasonably believes is necessary for either or
both of the following purposes:
(a) to
determine whether an infectious agent or a hazardous agent exists, or
likely exists;
(b) to
prevent the transmission of an infectious agent or a hazardous agent.
(2) A
medical health officer may, in respect of an infected thing,
(a)
make any order, with any
necessary modifications, that can be made under this Division as if the
infected thing were an infected person, and
(b)
direct the order to any person having custody or control of the
infected thing.
Specific
powers respecting infectious agents
and hazardous agents
29 (1) An order may be
made under this section only
(a) if
the circumstances described in section 27 [when orders
respecting infectious agents and hazardous agents may be made]
apply, and
(b) for
the purposes set out in section 28 (1) [general powers
respecting infectious agents and hazardous agents].
(2)
Without limiting section 28, a medical health officer may order a
person to do one or more of the following:
(a)
remain in a specified place, or not enter a place;
(b)
avoid physical contact with, or being near, a person or thing;
(c) be
under the supervision or care of a specified person;
(d)
provide to the medical health
officer or a specified person information, records, samples or other
matters relevant to the person's possible infection with an infectious
agent or contamination with a hazardous agent, including information
respecting persons who may have been exposed to an infectious agent or
a hazardous agent by the person;
(e) be
examined by a specified person, including
(i)
going to a specified facility for examination, and
(ii)
being examined before a particular date or according to a schedule;
(f)
submit to diagnostic examination, including going to a specified
facility or providing the results to a specified person;
(g)
take preventive measures, including
(i)
going to a specified facility for preventive measures,
(ii)
complying with preventive
measures set out in the order, specified by a medical practitioner or
nurse practitioner, or both, and
(iii) beginning preventive measures before a particular date, and
continuing until a particular date or event;
(h)
provide evidence of complying with the order, including
(i)
getting a certificate of compliance from a medical practitioner, nurse
practitioner or specified person, and
(ii)
providing to a medical health officer any relevant record;
(i)
take a prescribed action.
Division 4 — Orders
Respecting Health Hazards and Contraventions
When
orders respecting health hazards
and contraventions may be made
30 (1) A health officer
may issue an order under this Division only if the health officer
reasonably believes that
(a) a
health hazard exists,
(b) a
condition, a thing or an activity presents a significant risk of
causing a health hazard,
(c) a
person has contravened a provision of the Act or a regulation made
under it, or
(d) a
person has contravened a term or condition of a licence or permit held
by the person under this Act.
(2) For
greater certainty,
subsection (1) (a) to (c) applies even if the person subject to the
order is complying with all terms and conditions of a licence, a
permit, an approval or another authorization issued under this or any
other enactment.
General
powers respecting health hazards
and contraventions
31 (1) If the
circumstances described in section 30 [when orders
respecting health hazards and contraventions may be made]
apply, a health officer may order a person to do anything that the
health officer reasonably believes is necessary for any of the
following purposes:
(a) to
determine whether a health hazard exists;
(b) to
prevent or stop a health hazard, or mitigate the harm or prevent
further harm from a health hazard;
(c) to
bring the person into compliance with the Act or a regulation made
under it;
(d) to
bring the person into compliance with a term or condition of a licence
or permit held by that person under this Act.
(2) A
health officer may issue an order under subsection (1) to any of the
following persons:
(a) a
person whose action or omission
(i)
is causing or has caused a health hazard, or
(ii)
is not in compliance with the Act or a regulation made under it, or a
term or condition of the person's licence or permit;
(b) a
person who has custody or control of a thing, or control of a
condition, that
(i)
is a health hazard or is causing or has caused a health hazard, or
(ii)
is not in compliance with the Act or a regulation made under it, or a
term or condition of the person's licence or permit;
(c) the
owner or occupier of a place where
(i)
a health hazard is located, or
(ii)
an activity is occurring
that is not in compliance with the Act or a regulation made under it,
or a term or condition of the licence or permit of the person doing the
activity.
Specific
powers respecting health hazards and contraventions
32 (1) An order may be
made under this section only
(a) if
the circumstances described in section 30 [when orders
respecting health hazards and contraventions may be made]
apply, and
(b) for
the purposes set out in section 31 (1) [general powers
respecting health hazards and contraventions].
(2)
Without limiting section 31, a health officer may order a person to do
one or more of the following:
(a)
have a thing examined, disinfected, decontaminated, altered or
destroyed, including
(i)
by a specified person, or under the supervision or instructions of a
specified person,
(ii)
moving the thing to a specified place, and
(iii) taking samples of the thing, or permitting samples of the thing
to be taken;
(b) in
respect of a place,
(i)
leave the place,
(ii)
not enter the place,
(iii) do specific work,
including removing or altering things found in the place, and altering
or locking the place to restrict or prevent entry to the place,
(iv)
neither deal with a thing
in or on the place nor dispose of a thing from the place, or deal with
or dispose of the thing only in accordance with a specified procedure,
and
(v)
if the person has control
of the place, assist in evacuating the place or examining persons found
in the place, or taking preventive measures in respect of the place or
persons found in the place;
(c)
stop operating, or not operate, a thing;
(d)
keep a thing in a specified place or in accordance with a specified
procedure;
(e)
prevent persons from accessing a thing;
(f) not
dispose of, alter or
destroy a thing, or dispose of, alter or destroy a thing only in
accordance with a specified procedure;
(g)
provide to the health officer
or a specified person information, records, samples or other matters
relevant to a thing's possible infection with an infectious agent or
contamination with a hazardous agent, including information respecting
persons who may have been exposed to an infectious agent or hazardous
agent by the thing;
(h)
wear a type of clothing or
personal protective equipment, or change, remove or alter clothing or
personal protective equipment, to protect the health and safety of
persons;
(i) use
a type of equipment or
implement a process, or remove equipment or alter equipment or
processes, to protect the health and safety of persons;
(j)
provide evidence of complying with the order, including
(i)
getting a certificate of compliance from a medical practitioner, nurse
practitioner or specified person, and
(ii)
providing to a health officer any relevant record;
(k)
take a prescribed action.
(3) If a
health officer orders a
thing to be destroyed, the health officer must give the person having
custody or control of the thing reasonable time to request
reconsideration and review of the order under sections 43 and 44 unless
(a) the
person consents in writing to the destruction of the thing, or
(b)
Part 5 [Emergency Powers] applies.
Ordering
others to comply and entering to take action
33
(1) If a health officer is not satisfied that a person is adequately
complying with, or has adequately complied with, an order, the health
officer may
(a) if
the person is the owner of
the place in respect of which the original order was issued, order an
occupier of the place to comply with the original order,
(b) if
the person is an occupier
of the place in respect of which the original order was issued, order
the owner of the place to comply with the original order, or
(c)
take action to prevent or
remove, or mitigate the harmful effects of, the health hazard that is
the subject of the original order, including authorizing a person to
carry out work on behalf of the health officer.
(2)
Subject to subsection (3), a
health officer who has issued an order, or a person acting on behalf of
the health officer, may enter on or into a place that is subject to the
order for the purpose of taking an action under subsection (1) (c).
(3)
Section 25 [entering to inspect]
applies to entry under subsection (2) as if the health officer, or the
person acting on behalf of the health officer, were making an
inspection of the place.
Recovery
of costs by persons other than
health authorities
34 (1) In this section,
"landlord", "rental
unit" and "tenant" each
have the same meaning as in the Residential Tenancy Act.
(2) If a
person is ordered to comply with an order under section 33 (1) (a) or
(b) [ordering others to comply and entering to take action],
the person may, subject to subsection (3) of this section, recover
reasonable costs incurred in complying with the order as a debt due
from the person who was the subject of the original order.
(3) If a
tenant is ordered to comply with an order under section 33 (1) (a) in
respect of a rental unit under the Residential Tenancy Act
or manufactured home site under the Manufactured Home Park
Tenancy Act, the tenant may recover from the landlord
reasonable costs incurred in complying with the order, but must do so
under the Residential Tenancy Act or Manufactured
Home Park Tenancy Act, as applicable, as if the costs were
for emergency repairs to the rental unit or manufactured home site.
Recovery
of costs by health authorities
35 (1) If a health
officer or health authority does work or contracts for work to be done
under section 33 (1) (c) [ordering others to comply and
entering to take action],
the health officer or health authority may recover reasonable costs
from the person who was subject to the original order by filing a
certificate in the prescribed form in the Supreme Court.
(2) A
certificate must be filed within 2 years of the work being done.
(3) A
certificate must be signed
by the health officer or the corporate executive officer of the health
authority or his or her delegate, and must include all the following
information:
(a) the
details of the original order, including the date it was issued;
(b) the
total amount owing;
(c) the
name of the person who was subject to the original order;
(d) the
date the costs were incurred, and the manner in which they were
incurred.
(4)
Subject to the regulations, a
certificate has the same effect, and proceedings may be taken on it, as
if it were a judgment of the Supreme Court for the recovery of a debt
in the amount stated against the person who was subject to the original
order.
(5) A
certificate is
(a)
admissible in any proceedings
to recover the certified debt without proof of the signature or
official position of the person appearing to have signed the
certificate, and
(b)
proof of the certified facts.
(6) A
copy of the filed
certificate must be served in the prescribed manner on the person who
was subject to the original order.
(7) A
person who has been served
with a copy of the filed certificate under subsection (6) may, within
30 days of being served, request the Supreme Court to review, in
accordance with the regulations, the amount owing.
(8)
After reviewing the amount
owing, the Supreme Court may rescind or modify the certificate if
satisfied that the amount owing is not reasonable.
Notice
of orders
36
(1) A health officer who makes an order in respect of land affected by
a health hazard may file in the land title office a written notice
containing
(a) a
description of the land sufficient for the registrar to identify the
land in the records of the land title office, and
(b) a
statement that
(i)
an order has been issued under this Act that affects the land, and
(ii)
any person who acquires an interest in the land before the order ceases
to have effect is subject to the order.
(2) If a
notice is filed under
subsection (1), the registrar must make a notation of the filing in the
proper register against the title to the affected property.
(3) In
the event of any omission,
mistake or misfeasance by the registrar or the staff of the registrar
in relation to the making of a notation of a filing, or the
registration of a transfer or other disposition under this section,
(a)
neither the registrar, nor
the government nor the Land Title and Survey Authority of British
Columbia is liable vicariously, and
(b)
neither the assurance fund
nor the Land Title and Survey Authority of British Columbia, as a
nominal defendant, is liable under Part 19.1 [Land Title and
Survey Authority Assurance Fund] of the Land
Title Act.
(4) If a
notation is made under
subsection (2), the order made by the health officer and, if
applicable, any variation of it is binding on all persons who acquire
an interest in the land that is the subject of the order.
(5) If
(a) a
notation is made under subsection (2), and
(b) a
health officer is satisfied that an order referred to in subsection (1)
has been substantially complied with,
the
health officer may deliver a
notice to that effect to the registrar, and the registrar must cancel
the notation made under subsection (2).
Division 5 — Making and
Reviewing Orders
Application
of this Division
37 (1) Unless a
contrary intention is expressed, this Division applies to every order
made under Division 1, 3 or 4.
(2) For
the purposes of this Division, a person is affected by an order if
(a) the
person is required to comply with the order, or
(b) the
person's privacy or bodily integrity would be adversely affected by
another person's compliance with the order.
May
make written agreements
38
(1) If the health officer reasonably believes that it would be
sufficient for the protection of public health and, if applicable,
would bring a person into compliance with this Act or the regulations
made under it, or a term or condition of a licence or permit held by
the person under this Act, a health officer may do one or both of the
following:
(a)
instead of making an order
under Division 1, 3 or 4, enter into a written agreement with a person,
under which the person agrees to do one or more things;
(b)
order a person to do one or
more things that a person has agreed under paragraph (a) to do,
regardless of whether those things could otherwise have been the
subject of an order under Division 1, 3 or 4.
(2) If,
under the terms of an
agreement under subsection (1), a health officer conducts one or more
inspections, the health officer may use information resulting from the
inspection as the basis of an order under this Act, but must not use
the information as the basis on which to
(a)
levy an administrative penalty under this Act, or
(b)
charge a person with an offence under this Act.
Contents
of orders
39 (1) A health officer
must make an order in writing, and must describe all of the following
in the order:
(a)
subject to subsection (5), who must comply with the order;
(b)
what must be done or not done, and any conditions, including if
applicable the date by which something must be done;
(c) the
date on which, or the circumstances under which, the order is to
expire, if the date or circumstances are known;
(d)
subject to the regulations, information sufficient to enable a person
to contact the health officer;
(e) how
a person affected by the order may have the order reconsidered;
(f) any
prescribed matter.
(2) A
health officer may combine 2 or more orders in a single written notice.
(3) An
order may be made in respect of a class of persons.
(4) If a
provision under this Act
refers to a specified facility, place, person or procedure in respect
of an order, a health officer must specify the facility, place, person
or procedure
(a) in
accordance with an order made under section 63 [power to
establish directives and standards], or
(b) if
no order under section 63 applies, that the health officer reasonably
believes to be appropriate in the circumstances.
(5) If a
medical health officer
publishes an order respecting an infected person, the infected person's
identity must not be disclosed unless disclosure is necessary for the
protection of public health.
(6) A
health officer who makes an order may vary the order
(a) at
any time on the health officer's own initiative, or
(b) on
the request of a person affected by the order, following a
reconsideration under section 43 [reconsideration of orders].
Instructions
to other persons
40
(1) If a medical health officer orders a person to be examined, the
medical health officer must include with the order an instruction to
the examiner to provide a copy of the results of the examination to the
examined person, and may instruct the examiner to provide
(a) a
copy of the results of the examination to one or more of
(i)
a health professional chosen by the examined person, if any,
(ii)
the medical health officer, and
(iii) a person specified by the medical health officer, and
(b) a
report to a person listed in paragraph (a) respecting
(i)
the examiner's recommendations, and
(ii)
the compliance of a person ordered to be examined with that order.
(2)
Despite subsection (1), a
medical health officer may order an examiner not to disclose the
results of an examination to the examined person if the medical health
officer reasonably believes that the disclosure could reasonably be
expected to
(a)
threaten another person's safety or mental or physical health,
(b)
interfere with public safety, or
(c)
result in immediate and grave harm to the examined person's safety or
mental or physical health.
(3) If a
medical health officer
orders a person to be examined, the medical health officer may, to
assist a person in complying with an order or to protect or promote
public health, include with the order instructions to the examiner
respecting an outcome to be achieved.
(4) A
person given instructions under this section must comply with the
instructions.
Service
of orders
41 (1) Orders and
notices of variations of orders must be served in accordance with the
regulations.
(2) If
an order is served by
posting the order in a place, a person other than a health officer must
not remove, deface or alter the posted order.
Duty
to comply with orders
42 (1) A person named
or described in an order made under this Part must comply with the
order.
(2)
Subsection (1) applies
regardless of whether the person leaves the geographic area for which
the health officer who made the order is designated.
Reconsideration
of orders
43
(1) A person affected by an order, or the variance of an order, may
request the health officer who issued the order or made the variance to
reconsider the order or variance if the person
(a) has
additional relevant
information that was not reasonably available to the health officer
when the order was issued or varied,
(b) has
a proposal that was not presented to the health officer when the order
was issued or varied but, if implemented, would
(i)
meet the objective of the order, and
(ii)
be suitable as the basis of a written agreement under section 38 [may
make written agreements], or
(c)
requires more time to comply with the order.
(2) A
request for reconsideration must be made in the form required by the
health officer.
(3)
After considering a request for reconsideration, a health officer may
do one or more of the following:
(a)
reject the request on the basis that the information submitted in
support of the request
(i)
is not relevant, or
(ii)
was reasonably available at the time the order was issued;
(b)
delay the date the order is
to take effect or suspend the order, if satisfied that doing so would
not be detrimental to public health;
(c)
confirm, rescind or vary the order.
(4) A
health officer must provide
written reasons for a decision to reject the request under subsection
(3) (a) or to confirm or vary the order under subsection (3) (c).
(5)
Following a decision made under subsection (3) (a) or (c), no further
request for reconsideration may be made.
(6) An
order is not suspended during the period of reconsideration unless the
health officer agrees, in writing, to suspend it.
(7) For
the purposes of this section,
(a) if
an order is made that
affects a class of persons, a request for reconsideration may be made
by one person on behalf of the class, and
(b) if
multiple orders are made
that affect a class of persons, or address related matters or issues, a
health officer may reconsider the orders separately or together.
(8) If a
health officer is unable
or unavailable to reconsider an order he or she made, a similarly
designated health officer may act under this section in respect of the
order as if the similarly designated health officer were reconsidering
an order that he or she made.
Review
of orders
44
(1) A person affected by an order may request a review of the order
under this section only after a reconsideration has been made under
section 43 [reconsideration of orders].
(2) A
request for a review may be made,
(a) in
the case of an order made by a medical health officer, to the
provincial health officer, or
(b) in
the case of an order made
by an environmental health officer, to a medical health officer having
authority in the geographic area for which the environmental health
officer is designated.
(3) If a
review is requested, the review is to be based on the record.
(4) If a
review is requested, the reviewer may do one or more of the following:
(a)
delay the date the order is
to take effect or suspend the order, if satisfied that doing so would
not be detrimental to public health;
(b)
confirm, vary or rescind the order;
(c)
refer the matter back to the person who made the order, with or without
directions.
(5) A
reviewer must provide
written reasons for an action taken under
subsection (4) (b)
or (c), and a person may not request further review of an order.
Mandatory
reassessment of orders
45
(1) Subject to the regulations, a person affected by an order may
request the health officer who issued the order to re-assess the
circumstances relevant to the order to determine whether the order
should be terminated or varied.
(2) On
receiving a request under
subsection (1), the health officer must re-assess the order in
accordance with the regulations.
(3) If,
following a reassessment,
a health officer reasonably believes that the order is, or conditions
within the order are, no longer necessary to protect public health, the
health officer must immediately terminate the order, or vary or remove
the conditions, as applicable.
Termination
of orders
46
An order ceases to have effect on the date or in the circumstances
stated in the order, or, if no date or circumstances are stated, as
follows:
(a) if
an order is served by posting it in or on a place, on the date the
order is removed by a health officer;
(b) if
an order is served by publishing it, on the date a health officer
publishes notice that the order has been terminated;
(c) in
the case of an order to
take preventive measures, on the date the person subject to the order
receives notice from the person who is responsible for administering or
supervising the preventive measures that the preventive measures are no
longer required;
(d) in
any other case, on the
date a health officer provides notice by any means to the person served
with the order that the order has been terminated.
Division 6 —
Enforcement of Orders
Warrants
47
(1) Without notice to any person, a health officer may apply, in the
manner set out in the regulations, to a justice of the peace for an
order under this section.
(2) A
justice of the peace may
issue a warrant in the prescribed form authorizing a health officer, or
a person acting on behalf of a health officer, to enter and search a
place, including a private dwelling, and take any necessary action if
satisfied by evidence on oath or affirmation that it is necessary for
the purposes of
(a)
taking an action authorized under this Act, or
(b)
determining whether an action authorized under this Act should be taken.
Injunctions
48
(1) Without notice to any person, a health officer may apply, in the
manner set out in the regulations, to a judge of the Supreme Court for
an order under this section.
(2) A
judge of the Supreme Court
may grant an injunction restraining a person from contravening, or
requiring a person to comply, with
(a) a
provision of this Act or a regulation made under it, or
(b) a
term or condition of the person's licence or permit issued under this
Act, or an order made under this Act,
if
satisfied by evidence on oath or
affirmation that there has been or will be a contravention of this Act,
the regulations, the licence, the permit or the order.
(3) A
judge of the Supreme Court
may order a person to do or refrain from doing those things the judge
considers necessary if satisfied by evidence on oath or affirmation
that the person is interfering with or obstructing, or will likely
interfere with or obstruct, a person who is exercising powers or
performing duties under this Act.
(4) A
judge of the Supreme Court
may grant an interim injunction or order until the outcome of an
application commenced under this section.
Application
to court if danger to public health
49
(1) To obtain an order under this section, a medical health officer may
apply, in the manner set out in the regulations and with the approval
of the provincial health officer, to a judge of the Provincial Court.
(2)
Subject to the regulations, a
judge of the Provincial Court, on receiving an application, may make an
order under subsection (3) if satisfied by evidence on oath or
affirmation that
(a) a
person is an infected person,
(b)
either
(i)
the person has contravened an order of the medical health officer to
remain in a place or not enter a place, or
(ii)
an order to remain in a place or not enter a place is not practical in
the circumstances, and
(c) the
person, if not detained, may be a danger to public health.
(3) On
being satisfied of the
matters set out in subsection (2), a judge of the Provincial Court may
do one or both of the following:
(a)
order the detention of the
person, including setting the location of detention, the terms of
detention and expiry of the order, and
(b)
order the person to submit to
an examination, preventive measures, or any other thing necessary to
ensure that the person will not be a danger to public health.
(4) For
the purposes of enforcing
an order made under this section, a judge of the Provincial Court may
issue a warrant in the prescribed form authorizing apprehension of the
person, and transportation of the person to a place.
(5) If a
judge of the Provincial
Court is not available to hear an application for the purposes of this
section, a medical health officer may detain a person by signing a
certificate in the prescribed form stating the reasons why the medical
health officer believes the person to be a person described in
subsection (2).
(6) A
certificate completed under
subsection (5) is authority for anyone to apprehend and detain the
person, and for the transportation of that person to the place of
detention stated in the certificate.
(7) If a
person is detained under
subsections (5) and (6), an application to continue the detention must
be made to a judge of the Provincial Court under
subsection (1) as
soon as reasonably possible, but no later than 7 days from the start of
the detention.
Application
to court if danger to personal health
50
(1) To obtain an order under this section, a medical health officer may
apply, in the manner set out in the regulations and with the approval
of the provincial health officer, to a judge of the Supreme Court.
(2)
Subject to the regulations, a
judge of the Supreme Court, on receiving an application, may make an
order under subsection (3) if satisfied by evidence on oath or
affirmation that
(a) a
person is living under conditions that are a health hazard, and
(b)
continuing to reside in the place may be a danger to the person's
health.
(3) On
being satisfied of the
matters set out in subsection (2), a judge of the Supreme Court may do
one or more of the following:
(a)
order the person to leave a
place in which he or she is residing, including putting conditions on
the person's return to the place;
(b)
order the detention of the person in a facility that will provide care
and maintenance to the person;
(c)
suspend an order made under
paragraph (b) as long as the person subject to it is residing with, and
receiving care and maintenance from, another person;
(d)
require the medical health
officer to provide a copy of an order made under paragraph (b) to an
agency designated under section 61 (a.1) of the Adult
Guardianship Act for the purposes of Part 3 of that Act.
(4)
Section 49 (4) [application to court if danger to public
health] applies for the purposes of an application under
this section.
Part 5 — Emergency Powers
Division 1 —
Application of this Part
Definitions
for this Part
51 In this Part:
"emergency"
means a localized event or regional event that meets the conditions set
out in section 52 (1) or (2) [conditions to be met before
this Part applies], respectively;
"localized
event" means an immediate and significant risk to public
health in a localized area;
"regional
event" means an immediate and significant risk to public
health throughout a region or the province.
Conditions
to be met before this Part applies
52
(1) A person must not exercise powers under this Part in respect of a
localized event unless the person reasonably believes that
(a) the
action is immediately necessary to protect public health from
significant harm, and
(b)
compliance with this Act,
other than this Part, or a regulation made under this Act would hinder
that person from acting in a manner that would avoid or mitigate an
immediate and significant risk to public health.
(2)
Subject to subsection (3), a
person must not exercise powers under this Part in respect of a
regional event unless the provincial health officer provides notice
that the provincial health officer reasonably believes that at least 2
of the following criteria exist:
(a) the
regional event could have a serious impact on public health;
(b) the
regional event is unusual or unexpected;
(c)
there is a significant risk of the spread of an infectious agent or a
hazardous agent;
(d)
there is a significant risk of travel or trade restrictions as a result
of the regional event.
(3) If
the provincial health
officer is not immediately available to give notice under subsection
(2), a person may exercise powers under this Part until the provincial
health officer becomes available.
Part
applies despite other enactments
53 During an emergency,
this Part applies despite any provision of this or any other enactment,
including
(a) in
respect of the collection, use or disclosure of personal information,
the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act
and the Personal Information Protection Act, and
(b) a
provision that would impose a specific duty, limit or procedural
requirement in respect of a specific person or thing,
to the
extent there is any inconsistency or conflict with the provision or
other enactment.
Division 2 — Emergency
Powers
General
emergency powers
54 (1) A health officer
may, in an emergency, do one or more of the following:
(a) act
in a shorter or longer time period than is otherwise required;
(b) not
provide a notice that is otherwise required;
(c) do
orally what must otherwise be done in writing;
(d) in
respect of a licence or permit over which the health officer has
authority under section 55 [acting outside designated terms
during emergencies] or the regulations, suspend or vary the
licence or permit without providing an opportunity to dispute the
action;
(e)
specify in an order a facility, place, person or procedure other than
as required under section 63 [power to establish directives
and standards], unless an order under that section specifies
that the order applies in an emergency;
(f)
omit from an order things that are otherwise required;
(g)
serve an order in any manner;
(h) not
reconsider an order under section 43 [reconsideration of
orders], not review an order under section 44 [review
of orders] or not reassess an order under section 45 [mandatory
reassessment of orders];
(i)
exempt an examiner from providing examination results to an examined
person;
(j)
conduct an inspection at any time, with or without a warrant, including
of a private dwelling;
(k)
collect, use or disclose information, including personal information,
(i)
that could not otherwise be collected, used or disclosed, or
(ii)
in a form or manner other than the form or manner required.
(2) An
order that may be made
under this Part may be made in respect of a class of persons or things,
and may make different requirements for different persons or things or
classes of persons or things or for different geographic areas.
Acting
outside designated terms
during emergencies
55 (1) The provincial
health officer may, in an emergency, make an order authorizing
(a) a
health officer to exercise
a power or perform a duty in a geographic area for which the health
officer has not been designated, and
(b) an
environmental health
officer to exercise a power or perform a duty of environmental health
officers that is not permitted by his or her designation.
(2) A
health officer must act in
accordance with an order of the provincial health officer until the
provincial health officer notifies the health officer that the
emergency that gave rise to the order has passed.
Emergency
preventive measures
56
(1) The provincial health officer or a medical health officer may, in
an emergency, order a person to take preventive measures within the
meaning of section 16 [preventive measures],
including
ordering a person to take preventive measures that the person could
otherwise avoid by making an objection under that section.
(2) If
the provincial health
officer or a medical health officer makes an order under this section,
a person to whom the order applies must comply with the order unless
the person delivers to a person specified by the provincial health
officer or medical health officer, in person or by registered mail,
(a) a
written notice from a
medical practitioner stating that the health of the person who must
comply would be seriously jeopardized if the person did comply, and
(b) a
copy of each portion of
that person's health record relevant to the statement in paragraph (a),
signed and dated by the medical practitioner.
(3) If a
person delivers a notice
under subsection (2), the person must comply with an instruction of the
provincial health officer or a medical health officer, or a person
designated by either of them, for the purposes of preventing infection
with, or transmission of, an infectious agent or a hazardous agent.
(4) The
provincial health officer,
or a medical health officer with the approval of the provincial health
officer, may apply to a judge of the Provincial Court for an order to
detain a person who
(a)
does not comply with an order under this section or an instruction
under subsection (3), or
(b)
delivers a notice under
subsection (2) but in respect of whom an instruction under subsection
(3) would not be reasonably practical in the circumstances.
(5) For
the purposes of subsection (4) of this section,
(a) the
application must be made in the manner set out in the regulations,
(b) a
judge of the Provincial Court, on receiving the application, may make
an order described in section 49 (3) [application to court
if danger to public health] if satisfied by evidence on
oath or affirmation that the circumstances described in subsection (4)
of this section exist, and
(c)
section 49 (4) to (7) applies.
Emergency
powers respecting reporting
57
(1) The provincial health officer may, in an emergency, order that a
specified infectious agent, hazardous agent, health hazard or other
matter be reported under this section.
(2) If
an order is made under this
section, a person required by the order to make a report must promptly
report, to the extent of his or her knowledge, to a medical health
officer the information required by the order.
(3) If a
person is required to
make a report under this Act, the provincial health officer may in an
emergency order the person exempt from the requirement, or vary the
requirement.
Emergency
powers to make regulations
58
(1) The minister may, in an emergency, prescribe an infectious agent or
a hazardous agent for the purposes of a section that refers to an
infected person or an infected thing, and, for this purpose, section
111 (2) [regulations respecting terms] applies.
(2) The
minister may, in an emergency, make regulations as follows:
(a)
exempting a person, place or thing from a provision of this Act or the
regulations made under it;
(b)
modifying a requirement of this Act or the regulations made under it;
(c)
authorizing the provincial
health officer to make an exemption or modify a requirement as
described in paragraphs (a) and (b);
(d)
authorizing persons to exercise powers and perform duties as health
officers, with or without conditions;
(e)
applying or modifying a regulation made under section 118 (b) to (e) [regulations
respecting inspections and enforcement] for the purposes of
applications to the court under section 56 [emergency
preventive measures].
(3) A
person authorized to
exercise powers and perform duties as a health officer under subsection
(2) (d) is deemed to be a health officer designated under this Act,
subject to any conditions set out in the regulations made under that
subsection.
Division 3 — When
Authority to Act under this Part Ends
When
authority to act under this Part ends
59 Unless otherwise
expressed, the authority to act under this Part ends,
(a) in
the case of a localized event, as soon as reasonably practical after
the emergency has passed, or
(b) in
the case of a regional event, when the provincial health officer
provides notice that the emergency has passed.
Duties
when authority to act ends
60
(1) If a person exercises a power under this Part, the person must, as
soon as reasonably practical after the person's authority ends under
section 59 [when authority to act under this Part ends],
take any reasonable action to do the following:
(a)
unless it would serve no
reasonable purpose, do a thing that the person would otherwise have
been required to do under this Act if this Part did not apply;
(b) in
the case of a power exercised under section 54 [general
emergency powers] in respect of a localized event, provide
to affected persons written reasons for exercising the power;
(c)
rescind an order that was
made under this Part and give notice of the rescission to persons
affected by the order, or, if necessary to protect public health,
(i)
reissue the order in accordance with sections 39 [contents
of orders] and 41 [service of orders],
and
(ii)
provide to persons
affected by the order the rights to reconsideration, review or
reassessment available under Parts 3 and 4;
(d)
repeal a regulation made under section 58 [emergency powers
to make regulations].
(2) If a
person was detained under section 56 [emergency preventive
measures], as soon as reasonably practical after the
emergency has passed, the provincial health officer or medical health
officer must
(a)
provide notice to the detained person that the person's detention has
ended,
(b)
order the detained person to remain in a place under section 29 (2) [specific
powers respecting infectious agents and hazardous agents], or
(c)
apply to court for detention of the person under section 49 [application
to court if danger to public health].
(3) The
provincial health officer
may at any time issue instructions to health officers for the purposes
of fulfilling their duties under this section, and health officers must
comply with those instructions.
Part 6 — Health Officials
Division 1 — Minister
Role
of minister
61 The minister must do
all of the following:
(a)
inquire into the status of
the health of the population of British Columbia, including any
differences between regions or classes of persons;
(b)
inquire into health hazards and health impediments faced by the
population of British Columbia;
(c)
make recommendations and engage in planning in respect of health
promotion and health protection, including in respect of
(i)
variations in population health status, and
(ii)
health hazards and health impediments;
(d)
evaluate, and advise the government on, those actions of government
that may impact public health.
General
powers of minister
62
(1) In addition to the minister's power to enter into agreements under
any other Act, the minister may enter into agreements for the purposes
of exercising powers or performing duties in relation to public health
under an enactment, including a federal enactment, that is not under
the minister's administration.
(2) The
minister may by order
require the provincial health officer to report to the minister
respecting matters relevant to public health.
Power
to establish directives and standards
63 (1) The minister may
by order establish
(a)
directives respecting the exercise of powers and the performance of
duties
(i)
by health authorities under this enactment,
(ii)
by local governments under a regulation made under section 120 (2) (a)
or (b) [regulations respecting local governments],
and
(iii) by a person under a regulation made under section 125 (4) [other
regulation-making powers], and
(b)
standards of practice for
environmental health officers in relation to the exercise of their
powers and the performance of their duties under this or any other
enactment.
(2)
Without limiting subsection
(1), in respect of a provision of this Act or a regulation made under
it that refers to a facility, place, person or procedure specified in
an order, the minister may by order do the following:
(a)
require particular facilities, places, persons or procedures to be
specified for the purposes of any section;
(b) set
standards or
qualifications that facilities, places, persons or procedures must meet
before a health officer can specify the facility, place, person or
procedure in an order;
(c)
authorize health authorities
to set standards respecting facilities, places, persons and procedures
that can be specified by health officers in an order.
(3) The
minister may make orders respecting the following:
(a) the
timing and substance of
performance reviews for medical health officers to be conducted by the
provincial health officer;
(b)
training and qualifications for environmental health officers,
including requiring ongoing training.
Division 2 — Provincial
Health Officer
Role
of provincial health officer
64 The provincial
health officer is the senior public health official for British
Columbia.
Appointment
of provincial health officer
65 (1) The Lieutenant
Governor in Council may appoint, under the Public Service Act,
a person as the provincial health officer if the person is a medical
practitioner and who
(a) is
a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada and
holds a certificate in community medicine, or
(b) in
the opinion of the
minister, has equivalent training, knowledge, skills and experience to
a person described in paragraph (a).
(2) If
the Lieutenant Governor in
Council appoints a deputy or a person to act for the provincial health
officer, the appointed person must meet the requirements of subsection
(1).
Duty
to advise on provincial public
health issues
66
(1) The provincial health officer must monitor the health of the
population of British Columbia and advise, in an independent manner,
the minister and public officials
(a) on
public health issues, including health promotion and health protection,
(b) on
the need for legislation, policies and practices respecting those
issues, and
(c) on
any matter arising from
the exercise of the provincial health officer's powers or performance
of his or her duties under this or any other enactment.
(2) If
the provincial health
officer believes it would be in the public interest to make a report to
the public on a matter described in subsection (1), the provincial
health officer must make the report to the extent and in the manner
that the provincial health officer believes will best serve the public
interest.
(3) The
provincial health officer must report to the minister at least once
each year on
(a) the
health of the population of British Columbia, and
(b) the
extent to which population health targets established by the
government, if any, have been achieved,
and may
include recommendations relevant to health promotion and health
protection.
(4) The
minister must lay each
report received under subsection (3) before the Legislative Assembly as
soon as it is reasonably practical.
Provincial
health officer may act as health officer
67
(1) The provincial health officer may exercise a power or perform a
duty of a medical health officer under this or any other enactment, if
the provincial health officer
(a)
reasonably believes that it is in the public interest to do so because
(i)
the matter extends beyond the authority of one or more medical health
officers and coordinated action is needed, or
(ii)
the actions of a medical health officer have not been adequate or
appropriate in the circumstances, and
(b)
provides notice to each medical health officer who would otherwise have
authority to act.
(2)
During an emergency under Part 5 [Emergency Powers],
the provincial health officer may exercise a power or perform a duty of
a health officer under this or any other enactment, and, for this
purpose, subsection (1) does not apply.
(3) If
the provincial health
officer acts under subsection (1), the provincial health officer may
order a health authority to assist the provincial health officer, and
the health authority must ensure that its employees and appointees
comply with the order.
(4) For
the purposes of exercising
a power or performing a duty under this or any other enactment, the
provincial health officer may exercise a power of inspection that a
health officer may exercise under this Act, and, for this purpose,
Division 1 [Inspections] of Part 4
applies.
Review
of medical health officers
68
(1) The provincial health officer may establish standards of practice
for medical health officers in relation to the exercise of their powers
and the performance of their duties under this or any other enactment.
(2)
Without limiting subsection
(1), a standard may include a requirement to make a report or take an
action in addition to a requirement of this or any other enactment.
(3) The
provincial health officer must
(a)
monitor the performance of medical health officers for compliance with
established standards, and
(b)
conduct performance reviews of medical health officers in accordance
with an order of the minister made under section 63 [power
to establish directives and standards].
(4) The
provincial health officer
(a)
must disclose the results of
a performance review to the medical health officer and the medical
health officer's employer, and
(b) may
disclose the results of a performance review to the minister and the
Lieutenant Governor in Council.
Delegation
by provincial health officer
69
The provincial health officer may in writing delegate to a person or
class of persons any of the provincial health officer's powers or
duties under this Act, except the following:
(a) a
power to further delegate the power or duty;
(b) a
duty to make a report under this Act.
Division 3 — Medical
Health Officers
Role
of medical health officers
70
(1) Except as otherwise provided, a medical health officer may exercise
powers granted to, and perform duties imposed on, medical health
officers under this or any other enactment only within the geographic
area of British Columbia for which he or she is designated under this
Division.
(2) A
medical health officer must
act in accordance with the standards of practice established by the
provincial health officer.
Designation
of medical health officers
71
(1) On the recommendation of the provincial health officer, the
Lieutenant Governor in Council may by order designate a person as a
medical health officer if the person is a medical practitioner who
(a) is
a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada and
holds a certificate in community medicine, or
(b) in
the opinion of the
provincial health officer, has sufficient training, knowledge, skills
and experience to exercise the powers and perform the duties of a
medical health officer.
(2) For
the purposes of subsection (1), the provincial health officer must make
a recommendation as follows:
(a) if
(i)
a health authority, either
alone or with another health authority, requests the provincial health
officer to recommend an employee of the health authority for
designation as a medical health officer, and
(ii)
the provincial health officer is satisfied that the employee is
suitable to be a medical health officer,
the
provincial health officer must recommend the employee for designation;
(b) if
no medical health officer
is designated for a geographic area and the criteria set out in
paragraph (a) are not both met, the provincial health officer may
recommend any person whom the provincial health officer reasonably
believes is suitable to be the medical health officer for that
geographic area.
(3) For
the purposes of subsection (2) (a), "employee"
includes a person who has received an offer of employment from a health
authority, including on a conditional basis.
(4) A
designation must describe the geographic area in which the medical
health officer may act, being
(a) all
or part of the area of British Columbia for which the requesting health
authority is responsible, or
(b) if
2 or more health
authorities make a request together, all or part of the area of British
Columbia for which each requesting health authority is responsible.
(5) More
than one medical health officer may be designated for a geographic area.
Temporary
medical health officers
72
(1) The minister may by order designate a medical practitioner as a
temporary medical health officer, for a term of no more than 6 months,
to act in one or more geographic areas.
(2)
Section 71 [designation of medical health officers]
applies to the minister's designation under this section as if it were
a designation under that section.
(3) For
the purposes of this
section, if a person is already designated as a medical health officer,
the minister may designate the person to act in a geographic area that
is different from, or in addition to, the geographic area for which the
person is already designated.
(4) The
minister may renew a designation under this section for up to 2 terms,
each of no more than 6 months.
Advising
and reporting on local public health issues
73 (1) In this section:
"authority"
means a health authority, or a school board or francophone school board
under the School Act, that has full or partial
jurisdiction over a designated area;
"designated
area" means the geographic area for which a medical
health officer has been designated;
"local
government" means a local government that has full or
partial jurisdiction over a designated area.
(2) A
medical health officer must
monitor the health of the population in the designated area and, for
this purpose, may conduct an inspection under Division 1 [Inspections]
of Part 4.
(3) A
medical health officer must
advise, in an independent manner, authorities and local governments
within the designated area
(a) on
public health issues, including health promotion and health protection,
(b) on
bylaws, policies and practices respecting those issues, and
(c) on
any matter arising from
the exercise of the medical health officer's powers or performance of
his or her duties under this or any other enactment.
(4) If a
medical health officer
believes it would be in the public interest to make a report to the
public on a matter described in subsection (2) or (3), the medical
health officer must
(a)
consult with the provincial
health officer and each authority and local government who may
reasonably be affected by the intended report, and
(b)
after consultation under
paragraph (a), make the report to the extent and in the manner that the
medical health officer believes will best serve the public interest.
(5) If
requested by the provincial
health officer, a medical health officer must make a report to the
provincial health officer of advice provided under subsection (3).
(6) A
health authority must do all of the following:
(a)
designate a medical health
officer to report, respecting the geographic area for which the health
authority is responsible,
(i)
on the health of the population within the geographic area, and
(ii)
on the extent to which
population health targets established by the government, if applicable,
or by the health authority, if any, have been achieved;
(b)
require the medical health officer to report to the health authority at
least once each year;
(c)
publish each report made under this subsection.
(7) A
medical health officer who
makes a report under subsection (6) may include in the report
recommendations relevant to health promotion and health protection in
the geographic area for which the health authority is responsible.
Delegation
by medical health officers
74
(1) Subject to subsection (2), a medical health officer may in writing
delegate to a person or class of persons any of the medical health
officer's powers or duties under this or any other enactment, except
the following:
(a) a
power to further delegate the power or duty;
(b) a
power or duty under another enactment, if the other enactment provides
that the power or duty is not delegable;
(c)
powers and duties under section 73 [advising and reporting
on local public health issues].
(2) A
medical health officer must
not delegate a power or duty to a health officer who has not been
designated to act in the geographic area in which the delegated power
or duty is to be exercised or performed.
Coverage
during temporary absence
75 A medical health
officer may act in a geographic area for which he or she has not been
designated if
(a) the
health authority who
employs the medical health officer and the health authority responsible
for the non-designated geographic area agree, in writing,
(b) the
purpose of the agreement
under paragraph (a) is to ensure that a medical health officer is
available in the non-designated geographic area during the absence of a
medical health officer who is designated for the geographic area,
whether the absence is due to leave, illness, ending of employment, or
any other reason, and
(c) the
term of the agreement under paragraph (a) is for a non-renewable period
of 90 days or less.
End
of designation as medical health officer
76 (1) A designation as
a medical health officer ends as follows:
(a) on
the date the designated person is no longer
(i)
an employee of the health authority that requested the designation, or
(ii)
authorized to practise medicine in British Columbia;
(b) if
the Lieutenant Governor in
Council rescinds the designation following a request for rescission
made to the provincial health officer by the health authority that
employs the medical health officer, on the date of the rescission;
(c) if
the Lieutenant Governor in
Council rescinds the designation on the recommendation of the
provincial health officer in circumstances where no request for
rescission has been made by the health authority that employs the
medical health officer, on the date of the rescission.
(2) No
legal proceeding for
damages lies or may be commenced or maintained against the government
or the provincial health officer as a result of a rescission under
subsection (1) (b), except in relation to anything done or omitted in
bad faith.
(3) The
provincial health officer
may not make a recommendation under subsection (1) (c) unless
the
provincial health officer has first consulted with the health authority
that requested the designation.
(4) A
medical health officer whose
designation is rescinded under subsection (1) (b) or (c) is deemed not
to be in violation, by reason of the rescission alone, of any term or
condition of the medical health officer's employment.
Division 4 —
Environmental Health Officers
Role
of environmental health officers
77
(1) Except as otherwise provided, an environmental health officer may
exercise powers granted to, and perform duties imposed on,
environmental health officers under this or any other enactment only
within
(a) the
geographic area of British Columbia for which he or she is designated
under this Division, and
(b) the
limits, if any, set out in his or her designation.
(2) An
environmental health
officer must act in accordance with the standards of practice
established by the minister under section 63 [power to
establish directives and standards].
Designation
of environmental health officers
78 (1) If an employee
of a health authority has the training and qualifications required by
the minister under section 63 [power to establish directives
and standards], the health authority may designate the
employee as an environmental health officer.
(2) A
health authority may by
resolution approve a senior official for the purposes of making
designations under this section on behalf of the health authority.
(3) A
designation must describe
(a) the
geographic area in which the environmental health officer may act, and
(b) the
limits, if any, on the environmental health officer's powers and duties.
(4) More
than one environmental health officer may be designated for a
geographic area.
End
of designation as environmental health officer
79 (1) A designation as
an environmental health officer ends on the date that
(a) the
designated person is no longer an employee of the health authority that
made the designation, or
(b) the
health authority that made the designation rescinds the designation.
(2) If
an environmental health
officer fails to meet requirements respecting training or
qualifications or to comply with a standard of practice established by
the minister under section 63 [power to establish directives
and standards],
the health authority that made the designation must give written notice
of the failure to the environmental health officer and either
(a)
rescind or alter the designation of the environmental health officer, or
(b)
require the environmental health officer to take remedial action
satisfactory to the health authority.
Division 5 — Other
Matters Respecting Health Officers
Powers
and duties under other
enactments or that overlap
80
(1) If a health officer is given powers or duties under another
enactment, the provisions of this Act and the regulations made under it
apply to the exercise of those powers and the performance of those
duties, unless a contrary intention is expressed in the other enactment.
(2) If
multiple health officers
are designated for a geographic area or portion of a geographic area
and each has the same powers and duties, they may act independently or
together, but each remains responsible for performing his or her duties
except to the extent that those duties are permitted to be shared or
divided by a standard of practice established,
(a) in
the case of medical health officers, by the provincial health officer,
or
(b) in
the case of environmental health officers, by the minister.
Directing
response to local public health threats
81
In the event that a medical health officer determines that public
health is threatened by a health hazard, an infectious agent or a
hazardous agent,
(a) the
medical health officer is responsible for directing the local response,
in respect of public health, to the threat, and
(b) for
the purposes of paragraph (a), the health authority that employs the
medical health officer must
(i)
provide the medical health
officer with the staff and other resources that the medical health
officer reasonably believes are necessary for the response, and
(ii)
ensure that its employees and appointees comply with the directions of
the medical health officer.
General
provisions respecting delegation
82 (1) This section
applies in respect of a delegation made under section 69 [delegation
by provincial health officer] or 74 [delegation
by medical health officers].
(2) A
delegation may be made subject to terms and is revocable at any time.
(3) A
delegation does not prevent
the person who delegates the power or duty from exercising the
delegated power or performing the delegated duty at any time.
(4) If
the person who delegates a
power or duty ceases to hold office, a delegation continues in effect
for its term or until revoked,
(a) in
the case of the provincial health officer, by the succeeding provincial
health officer, or
(b) in
the case of a medical
health officer, by another medical health officer having authority over
the same geographic area as the medical health officer who made the
delegation.
(5) If
requested to do so, a
delegate must produce evidence of his or her authority before
exercising a delegated power or performing a delegated duty.
Division 6 — Local
Governments
Role
of local government
83 (1) A local
government must do all of the following:
(a) if
the local government
becomes aware of a health hazard or health impediment within its
jurisdiction, take an action required by a regulation made under
section 120 (1) (a) [regulations respecting local
governments], or, if no regulation applies, either
(i)
report the health hazard or health impediment to a health officer, or
(ii)
take an action the local
government has authority to take under this or another enactment to
respond to the health hazard or health impediment;
(b)
provide health officers with
information the health officers require to exercise their powers and
perform their duties under this Act;
(c)
consider advice or other information provided to the local government
by a health officer.
(2) A
local government must
(a)
designate one of its members,
or an officer or employee of the local government, as the local
government liaison for the purposes of this section, and
(b)
send notice of the
designation to the regional health board having authority over the
geographic area in which the local government is located.
(3) A
local government may
(a)
request a medical health officer to issue an order, under this Act, in
respect of a health hazard, and
(b) if
the medical health officer
refuses to issue the order or to issue the order as requested, request
the provincial health officer to review the decision of the medical
health officer.
(4)
Following a review under subsection (3), the provincial health officer
may
(a)
refer the matter back to the medical health officer, with or without
directions, or
(b)
make any order that, in the opinion of the provincial health officer,
is appropriate in the circumstances.
Local
governments may act cooperatively
84
Anything that a local government is required to do under this Act may
be done by or together with another local government if each local
government
(a)
agrees in writing, and
(b)
forwards a copy of the
agreement to each regional health board having authority over any part
of the geographic area in which each local government is located.
Part 7 — Inquiries and
Other Matters
Division 1 — Inquiries
Definitions
for this Division
85 For the purposes of
this Division:
"commissioner"
means a person appointed to conduct an inquiry;
"inquiry"
means an inquiry under section 86 [inquiry into public
health issues].
Inquiry
into public health issues
86 (1) The minister may
by order
(a)
appoint the provincial health
officer, or any other person, to conduct an inquiry and report on a
matter under this section, and
(b) set
the terms of reference of the inquiry.
(2) An
inquiry may be for one or both of the following purposes:
(a) to
assess the impact on health promotion or health protection of
(i)
a policy, an enactment, a plan, a practice or a procedure of the
government, or
(ii)
an agreement to which the government is or may be a party;
(b) to
inquire into one or more specific issues respecting public health.
(3) For
the purposes of an inquiry, the commissioner may do one or more of the
following:
(a)
gather information, including by use of interviews and surveys;
(b)
meet with one or more persons, privately or in a manner that is open to
the public;
(c)
make an order requiring a
person to attend, in person or by electronic means, before the
commissioner to answer questions on oath or affirmation, or in any
other manner;
(d)
make an order requiring a person to produce for the commissioner a
record or thing in the person's possession or control.
(4) The
commissioner may apply to the Supreme Court for an order
(a)
directing a person to comply with an order made under subsection (3)
(c) or (d), or
(b)
directing directors and
officers of a person to cause the person to comply with an order made
under subsection (3) (c) or (d).
Maintenance
of order
87 (1) At a meeting
under section 86 (3) [inquiry into public health issues],
the commissioner may make orders or provide directions that he or she
considers necessary for the maintenance of order at the meeting.
(2)
Without limiting subsection (1), the commissioner may by order
(a)
impose restrictions on a person's continued participation in or
attendance at a meeting, and
(b)
exclude a person from further participation in or attendance at a
meeting until the commissioner orders otherwise.
Contempt
proceeding for uncooperative person
88 (1) The failure or
refusal of a person subject to an order under section 86 [inquiry
into public health issues]
to do any of the following makes the person, on application to the
Supreme Court by the commissioner, liable to be committed for contempt
as if in breach of an order or a judgment of the Supreme Court:
(a)
attend before the commissioner;
(b)
take an oath or make an affirmation;
(c)
answer questions;
(d)
produce records or things in the person's possession or control.
(2) The
failure or refusal of a person subject to an order or a direction under
section 87 [maintenance of order]
to comply with the order or direction makes the person, on application
to the Supreme Court by the commissioner, liable to be committed for
contempt as if in breach of an order or a judgment of the Supreme Court.
(3)
Subsections (1) and (2) do not limit the conduct for which a finding of
contempt may be made by the Supreme Court.
Inquiry
staff
89 (1) With the
approval of the minister, the commissioner may appoint employees, in
accordance with the Public Service Act, necessary
to exercise powers and perform duties in respect of an inquiry.
(2) With
the approval of the
minister, the commissioner may engage or retain consultants,
investigators, lawyers, expert witnesses or other persons the
commissioner considers necessary for the purposes of an inquiry, and
may determine their remuneration.
(3) The Public
Service Act does not apply to a person engaged or retained
under subsection (2).
Division 2 — Other
Matters
Peace
officer assistance
90
(1) A health officer may call on the assistance of a peace officer for
the purposes of taking an action authorized under this or any other
enactment, including, without limitation, either of the following
purposes:
(a)
making or enforcing an order or carrying out an inspection;
(b)
assisting a person to comply with an order of the health officer.
(2) If
any person disobeys, or fails to comply with, an order or a direction
of a commissioner under Division 1 [Inquiries],
the commissioner may call on the assistance of a peace officer to
enforce the order or direction.
(3) A
peace officer called on
under this section must take any action that is necessary for a purpose
described in subsection (1) or (2), and may use such force as is
reasonably required for that purpose.
Confidentiality
of personal information
91
(1) A person who has custody of, access to or control over personal
information under this Act must not disclose the personal information
to any other person except as authorized under this or any other
enactment.
(2) A
person referred to in
subsection (1) is not, except in a proceeding under this Act,
compellable to disclose or provide evidence about personal information
the person has custody of, access to or control over.
Immunity
from legal proceedings
92
(1) Subject to subsection (2), no legal proceeding for damages lies or
may be commenced or maintained against a health officer, a commissioner
under Division 1 [Inquiries] or a person acting
under the order or direction of either of these, because of anything
done or omitted
(a) in
the exercise or intended exercise of a power under this or any other
enactment, or
(b) in
the performance or intended performance of a duty under this or any
other enactment.
(2)
Subsection (1) does not apply
to a person referred to in that subsection in relation to anything done
or omitted in bad faith.
(3)
Subsection (1) does not
absolve the government or a health authority from vicarious liability
arising out of anything done or omitted by a person referred to in that
subsection for which the government or health authority would be
vicariously liable if this section were not in force.
Immunity
for person required to act
93
(1) Subject to subsection (3), no legal proceeding for damages lies or
may be commenced or maintained against a health professional or other
person who, under this Act,
(a)
makes a report the person is required to make, or
(b)
takes another action that the person is required to take.
(2)
Subject to subsection (3), no
legal proceeding for damages lies or may be commenced or maintained
against an employer of a person described in subsection (1).
(3)
Subsections (1) and (2) do not
apply to a person referred to in those subsections in relation to
anything done or omitted in bad faith.
Protection
against adverse actions
94 (1) In this section,
"adverse action"
means an action that would adversely affect, or that threatens to
adversely affect, the personal, financial or other interests of a
person, or a relative, dependent, friend or business or other close
associate of that person, and includes any prescribed action.
(2) A
person must not take an
adverse action against another person because the other person, acting
in good faith, does any of the following:
(a)
makes a report or takes another action under this Act;
(b)
assists in, or provides information during, an inspection or a
proceeding under this Act;
(c)
complies with, or assists in carrying out, an order made under this Act;
(d)
refuses to take an action that would or may be a contravention of this
Act or a regulation made under it;
(e)
discloses to a health officer
that a person has contravened or is about to contravene this Act or a
regulation made under it.
(3)
Nothing in this section
prevents a health officer from taking enforcement action in respect of
a violation or contravention of
(a)
this Act or a regulation made under it, or
(b) a
term or condition of a licence or permit issued under this Act, or an
order made under this Act.
Test
results as evidence
95 For the purposes of
a proceeding under this Act, a report or certificate from
(a) a
laboratory, or
(b) a
facility specified in an order made under this Act,
stating
the result or
interpretation of a test or an analysis made in the facility is
evidence of the facts stated in the report or certificate.
Part 8 — Administrative
Penalties, Offences
and Sentencing
Division 1 —
Administrative Penalties
Imposing
administrative penalties
96
(1) If by regulation a person is authorized to impose an administrative
penalty, the person may impose an administrative penalty in the amount
permitted by the regulations if satisfied on a balance of probabilities
that a person has done any of the following:
(a)
contravened a prescribed provision of this Act or a regulation made
under it;
(b)
failed to comply with an order of a health officer;
(c)
failed to comply with a requirement of a licence or permit issued under
this Act.
(2) An
administrative penalty may be imposed by serving notice of the
administrative penalty in the prescribed manner.
(3) If a
person is subject to an administrative penalty, the person must do one
of the following within the prescribed time:
(a) pay
the administrative penalty;
(b)
dispute the administrative
penalty in accordance with the regulations, including disputing the
amount of the administrative penalty on any ground permitted by the
regulations;
(c)
agree, in writing, with the
person who imposed the administrative penalty to do one or more things,
including paying a reduced administrative penalty, that the person
imposing the administrative penalty reasonably believes would
(i)
be sufficient for the protection of public health, and
(ii)
if applicable, bring the
person into compliance with this Act, the regulations or an order made
under it, or a term or condition of the person's licence or permit.
(4) If
an administrative penalty
is disputed or made the subject of an agreement under subsection (3),
the person who is subject to the administrative penalty must pay the
administrative penalty or any part of it that remains outstanding
(a)
under the terms of the agreement,
(b) on
receiving notice following a dispute that the person remains subject to
all or part of the administrative penalty, or
(c) on
receiving notice that the
person failed to meet the terms of the agreement to the satisfaction of
the person who imposed the administrative penalty.
(5) If a
corporation contravenes
this Act or a regulation made under it, or fails to comply with a
requirement of a licence or permit issued under this Act or an order
made under this Act, an employee, an officer, a director or an agent of
the corporation who authorized, permitted or acquiesced in the
contravention is also liable under this section even though the
corporation is liable for or pays an administrative penalty.
Person
not to be charged with both
administrative penalty and offence
97
(1) A person subject to an administrative penalty must not be
prosecuted for an offence in respect of the same incident that gave
rise to the administrative penalty.
(2) A
person charged with an
offence must not be subject to an administrative penalty in respect of
the same incident that gave rise to the charge.
Recovery
of administrative penalties
98 (1) An
administrative penalty under this Act may be recovered as a debt due to
the government.
(2) If a
person fails to pay an
administrative penalty as required, the person who imposed the
administrative penalty may file a certificate in a court that has
jurisdiction and, on filing, the certificate has the same force and
effect, and all proceedings may be taken on it, as if it were a
judgment of the court with which it is filed.
(3) A
certificate under subsection
(2) must be in the prescribed form, be signed by the person who imposed
the administrative penalty and contain
(a) the
name of the person who is liable for the administrative penalty,
(b) the
contravention or failure in relation to which the administrative
penalty is imposed, and
(c) the
amount of the administrative penalty.
(4) All
administrative penalties received under this Division must be paid into
the consolidated revenue fund.
Division 2 — Offences
Offences
99 (1) A person who
contravenes any of the following provisions commits an offence:
(a)
section 3 [failure to make a health plan];
(b)
section 4 (1) [failure to submit, revise or publish a public
health plan];
(c)
section 8 (1) or (2) [failure to submit, revise or publish a
public health plan];
(d)
sections 10 to 13 [failure to make reports, make records,
take samples or do other required things; failure to perform diagnostic
examinations];
(e)
section 14 (3) [failure to provide information];
(f)
section 16 [failure to take or provide preventive measures,
or being in a place or doing a thing without having taken preventive
measures];
(g)
section 17 (2) [failure to take steps to avoid transmission,
seek advice or comply with instructions];
(h)
section 24 (3) [failure to comply with orders respecting
inspections];
(i)
section 40 (4) [failure to comply with instructions];
(j)
section 41 (2) [removing, defacing or altering a posted
order];
(k)
section 42 [failure to comply with an order of a health
officer], except in respect of an order made under section
29 (2) (e) to (g) [orders respecting examinations,
diagnostic examinations or preventive measures];
(l)
section 56 (2) or (3) [failure to take emergency preventive
measures or comply with instructions], except in respect of
an order to do a thing described in section 29 (2) (e) to (g);
(m)
section 57 [failure to make a report in an emergency];
(n)
section 94 [taking an adverse action against a person].
(2) A
person who contravenes any of the following commits an offence:
(a)
section 18 [failure to prevent or respond to health hazards,
train or equip employees, or comply with a requirement or duty];
(b)
section 22 [failure to comply with the regulations or train
or equip employees];
(c)
section 91 [unauthorized disclosure of personal information].
(3) A
person who contravenes either of the following commits an offence:
(a)
section 15 [causes a health hazard];
(b)
section 26 [failure to provide a designated quarantine
facility].
(4) A
person who does either of the following commits an offence:
(a)
knowingly provides false or
misleading information to a person who is exercising a power or
performing a duty under this Act, or a person acting under the order or
direction of that person;
(b)
wilfully interferes with, or
obstructs, a person who is exercising a power or performing a duty
under this Act, or a person acting under the order or direction of that
person.
(5) A
person who commits an
offence under this Act may be liable for the offence whether or not an
order is made under this Act in respect of the matter.
(6) A
proceeding for an offence
under this Act may not be commenced in any court more than 2 years
after the facts on which the proceeding is based first come to the
knowledge of the minister.
Offence
by corporation or employee
100
(1) If a corporation commits an offence under this Act, an employee, an
officer, a director or an agent of the corporation who authorized,
permitted or acquiesced in the offence commits the offence whether or
not the corporation is convicted.
(2) If
an employee commits an
offence under this Act, an employer who authorized, permitted or
acquiesced in the offence commits the offence whether or not the
employee is identified or convicted.
Continuing
offences
101 (1) In this
section, "order" means an order that may
be made under this Act by a health officer or the court.
(2) If a
person commits an offence
under this Act and continues to commit the offence, separate penalties
may be imposed in respect of the offence for each day the original
offence continues.
(3) If a
person commits an offence
under this Act and an order is made in respect of the matter that is
the subject of the offence, but the offence continues after the date by
which the order is to be complied with,
(a)
subsection (2) applies from the date by which the order is to be
complied with, and
(b) the
person may be prosecuted both for the original offence and for the
additional offence of contravening the order.
Offence
Act application
102 Sections 4 [general
penalty] and 5 [general offence] of
the Offence Act do not apply in respect of this
Act or the regulations made under it.
Defences
103 A person must not
be convicted of an offence under this Act if the person proves that he
or she
(a)
exercised due diligence by taking all reasonable steps to avoid
committing the offence,
(b)
reasonably believed in the
existence of facts that, if true, would establish that the person did
not contravene this Act or a regulation made under it,
(c)
relied on information or an
instruction provided to the person by a health officer who was
exercising a power or performing a duty under this Act, if the person
had no reason to believe that the information may have been false or
the instruction may have been unauthorized, or
(d)
acted under the order a
health officer who was exercising a power or performing a duty under
this Act, if the person had no reason to believe that the order may
have been unauthorized under this Act or any other enactment.
Violation
of more than one enactment
104
(1) If a person is liable for an offence because of an act or omission
under this Act, and is also liable for an offence under another
enactment because of the same act or omission, a conviction may be had
under either this Act or the other enactment, but not both.
(2)
Nothing in subsection (1) prevents
(a) a
health officer from making an order that could be made under this Act,
or
(b) a
conviction for contravening an order made under this Act.
Division 3 — Sentencing
Determining
sentence
105
(1) Before imposing a sentence, a sentencing judge may request a joint
submission from the offender and the prosecutor setting out any
agreement on
(a) the
circumstances that should be considered by the sentencing judge as
either mitigating or aggravating the offence, and
(b) the
penalty to be imposed.
(2) In
determining the appropriate
sentence, the sentencing judge must consider, in accordance with the
regulations, circumstances that aggravate or mitigate the offence.
(3) In
determining the appropriate sentence, a sentencing judge must
(a)
consider the purposes of sentencing set out in section 106 [purposes
of sentencing], and
(b) to
give effect to those purposes,
(i)
first, consider as a penalty one or more of the orders that may be made
under section 107 [alternative penalties], and
(ii)
second, consider whether a fine or incarceration under section 108 [fines
and incarceration] is also necessary.
Purposes
of sentencing
106 (1) In imposing a
sentence, a sentencing judge may impose one or more penalties that, in
order, achieve the following:
(a)
first,
(i)
if harm was caused, remedy the harm or compensate a person who remedied
or suffered the harm, including the government, or
(ii)
if no harm was caused,
acknowledge the potential harm or further the regulatory objective
underlying the provision that was contravened;
(b)
second, if the offence was
committed in relation to a regulated activity or other activity that
the offender is reasonably likely to continue to engage in,
rehabilitate the offender.
(2) In
addition to a penalty
imposed under subsection (1), a sentencing judge may impose one or more
penalties under subsection (3) or (4), or both, unless it would be
disproportionate to the offence, given the offender, the nature of the
offence and the total of the penalties imposed under this section.
(3) A
sentencing judge may impose
a penalty for the purpose of achieving general deterrence if the
sentencing judge reasonably believes that the additional penalty would
have a deterrent effect, including because
(a) the
penalty imposed under subsection (1) is inadequate to address the
circumstances related to the offence, or
(b) the
nature of the penalty may
(i)
assist others similarly situated to the offender to avoid committing a
similar offence, or
(ii)
educate others similarly situated to the offender respecting the
seriousness of the offence.
(4) A
sentencing judge may impose a penalty for the purpose of punishing the
offender if
(a) the
offender committed the offence knowingly or deliberately, or was
reckless as to the commission of the offence, or
(b)
sufficient aggravating circumstances exist that the offender should be
punished for the offence.
Alternative
penalties
107 (1) To give effect
to the purposes of sentencing as set out in section 106 [purposes
of sentencing], a sentencing judge may order a person
convicted of an offence under this Act to do one or more of the
following:
(a) do
a thing, or not do a thing, as set out in a joint submission under
section 105 [determining sentence];
(b)
take any action the court
considers appropriate to remedy or avoid a health hazard or health
impediment caused by the commission of the offence;
(c) pay
a person an amount of
money as compensation, in whole or in part, for the cost of a remedial
or preventive action taken by or on behalf of the person as a result of
the commission of the offence;
(d)
perform community service for a period of up to 3 years;
(e) not
do any act or engage in
any activity that may, in the opinion of the court, result in the
continuation or repetition of the offence or the commission of a
similar offence under this Act;
(f)
comply with any conditions
that the court considers appropriate for preventing the person from
continuing or repeating the offence or committing a similar offence
under this Act;
(g)
submit to the minister or a
health officer information respecting the activities of the person that
the court considers appropriate in the circumstances, for a period of
up to 3 years;
(h) if
the person is a
corporation, designate a senior official within the corporation as the
person responsible for monitoring compliance with the Act or the
regulations made under it, or the terms or conditions of a licence or
permit held by the corporation under this Act;
(i)
develop guidelines or
standards in respect of a matter, implement a process, or do another
thing, for the purposes of preventing the person from continuing or
repeating the offence, or committing a similar offence;
(j)
make available, either free
of charge or for a fee, to another person or class of persons
guidelines or standards developed under paragraph (i), in any manner
and under any conditions the court considers appropriate, for up to 3
years from the date by which the guidelines or standards must be
developed;
(k)
publish, in any manner the
court considers appropriate, the facts relating to the commission of
the offence and any other information the court considers appropriate;
(l)
post a bond for an amount of
money the court considers appropriate for the purpose of ensuring
compliance with a prohibition, direction or requirement under this
section;
(m)
submit to inspections, submit
samples or analyses, or do any other thing necessary to permit a health
officer or other person specified by the court to monitor compliance,
for a period of up to 3 years, with an order made under this section.
(2) For
the purposes of subsection
(1) (j), the court may set or limit the amount of the fee, or put
conditions on the charging of the fee.
Fines
and incarceration
108 (1) In addition to
a penalty imposed under section 107 [alternative penalties],
a person who commits an offence listed in
(a)
section 99 (1) [offences]
is liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $25 000 or to
imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6 months, or to both,
(b)
section 99 (2) or (4) is
liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $200 000 or to
imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6 months, or to both, or
(c)
section 99 (3) is liable on
conviction to a fine not exceeding $3 000 000 or to
imprisonment for a term not exceeding 36 months, or to both.
(2) In
determining the fine to be
imposed on conviction, a sentencing judge must consider the means and
ability of the offender to pay the fine, and, if the sentencing judge
believes that the offender is unable to pay the amount of the fine that
the sentencing judge would otherwise impose, the sentencing judge may
impose a fine in a lesser amount that the sentencing judge considers
appropriate.
Variation
of orders imposed at sentencing
109 (1) An application
for variation of an order made under section 107 [alternative
penalties] may be made to the court that made the order by
(a) a
health officer, or
(b) the
person against whom the order was made.
(2)
Before hearing an application
for variation, the court may order the applicant to provide notice of
the application in accordance with the directions of the court.
(3) On
an application for
variation, if the court considers variation appropriate because the
circumstances have changed, the court may make an order to do one or
more of the following:
(a)
change the original order or conditions specified in it;
(b)
relieve the person against
whom the order was made absolutely or partially from compliance with
all or part of the original order;
(c)
reduce the period for which the original order is to remain in effect;
(d)
extend the period for which
the original order is to remain in effect, but an extension must not be
for longer than one year.
(4) If
an application for
variation has been heard by a court, no other application for variation
may be made in respect of the order except with leave of the court.
Recovery
of penalties
110 (1) If a person
fails to comply with an order referred to in section 107 (1) (k) [alternative
penalties], the minister or a health authority may publish
those facts and recover the costs of publication from the person.
(2) If
(a) an
order under section 107 directs a person to pay an amount of money as
compensation or for any other purpose, or
(b) the
minister or a health authority incurs publication costs under
subsection (1) of this section,
the
amount and any interest payable
on that amount constitute a debt due to the government or health
authority, as applicable, and may be recovered as such in any court of
competent jurisdiction.
(3)
Except as set out in subsection (2), every penalty imposed under this
Division may be recovered by proceedings under the Offence
Act.
Part 9 — Regulations
Regulations
respecting terms
111 (1) The Lieutenant
Governor in Council may make regulations in respect of defined terms as
follows:
(a)
prescribing additional bodies
for the purposes of the definitions of "health authority" and "local
government", and prescribing the geographic area of British Columbia
for which prescribed health authorities and prescribed local
governments are responsible;
(b)
respecting conditions, things, activities or standards for the purposes
of the definition of "health hazard";
(c)
prescribing conditions,
things or activities that are health impediments for the purposes of a
section that refers to health impediments;
(d)
prescribing health professions for the purposes of the definition of
"health professional";
(e)
prescribing infectious agents
and hazardous agents for the purposes of a section that refers to them
or to an infected person or infected thing;
(f) for
the purposes of the
definition of "regulated activity", prescribing trades, businesses and
activities, whether or not the activities are commercial in nature, that
(i)
may, if they do not meet prescribed standards, endanger health or cause
injury or illness, and
(ii)
are not regulated under
an enactment, or, if regulated, the requirements of the enactment are
not sufficient to prevent or appropriately mitigate or respond to the
risk to health or risk of injury or illness they cause;
(g)
prescribing conditions for the purposes of a section that refers to
syndromes;
(h)
prescribing actions for the purposes of section 94 [protection
against adverse actions].
(2) A
regulation made under
subsection (1) (e) may prescribe, for the purposes of a section, one or
more infectious agents or hazardous agents by providing the names or
other common descriptions of the infectious agents or hazardous agents,
or by
(a)
providing the names or other
common descriptions of one or more communicable diseases or syndromes
associated with an infectious agent,
(b)
describing the characteristics common to a class of
(i)
communicable diseases or syndromes associated with an infectious agent,
or
(ii)
hazardous agents, or
(c)
describing the symptoms or indicators of the presence of an infectious
agent or a hazardous agent.
(3) A
regulation made under subsection (1) (g) may prescribe, for the
purposes of a section, one or more syndromes by
(a)
providing the names or other common descriptions of the syndromes, or
(b)
describing the characteristics common to the class of signs and
symptoms associated with the syndromes.
Regulations
respecting public health plans
112 The Lieutenant
Governor in Council may make regulations respecting public health plans
as follows:
(a)
prescribing the purposes for which a public health plan may be made or
required;
(b)
prescribing terms that must be included in an order to make a public
health plan under section 3 [minister may require public
health plans];
(c)
respecting the matters described in sections 5 [effect of
public health plans on statutory decisions] and 6 [relationship
of public health plans to other planning processes];
(d)
requiring a public body to make a report respecting
(i)
any matter addressed in a public health plan, and
(ii)
actions taken by the public body in respect of health promotion or
health protection generally;
(e)
requiring a public body to make public all or part of a report under
paragraph (d).
Regulations
respecting reporting of
disease, health hazards and other matters
113 (1) The Lieutenant
Governor in Council may make regulations for the purposes of sections
10 to 13 [mandatory reporting], including
regulations respecting the following:
(a) if
applicable, who must make a report and to whom;
(b) the
making of reports, including
(i)
the form of a report and the manner of making the report,
(ii)
information, in addition to anything described in the Act, that must be
reported, and
(iii) records or analyses that must accompany a report;
(c)
actions that must be taken in respect of a matter that must be
reported, including respecting records and samples;
(d) the
circumstances in which
infected persons may request that all or part of their personal
information be omitted from a report.
(2) In
addition to the regulations
made under subsection (1), the Lieutenant Governor in Council may for
the purposes of section 11 [mandatory reporting of health
hazards] make regulations to do the following:
(a)
prescribe health hazards, classes of health hazards, or indicators of
health hazards that must be reported;
(b)
authorize the minister or the
provincial health officer to order that section 11 applies in
respect of a health hazard that meets certain criteria, and prescribing
those criteria.
(3) In
addition to the regulations
made under subsection (1), the Lieutenant Governor in Council may for
the purposes of section 12 [mandatory reporting for other
public health purposes] make regulations requiring any of
the following to be reported under that section:
(a)
diseases or syndromes that are not communicable diseases;
(b)
physical and mental disabilities, congenital or genetic anomalies, and
other health conditions;
(c)
fetal development and stillbirths;
(d) the
provision of preventive
measures and health services, including adverse events caused by the
provision of preventive measures and health services;
(e)
analyses of samples and other things by laboratories;
(f)
maintenance of cultures or organisms by laboratories;
(g)
indicators of public health and other matters respecting health
impediments;
(h)
events such as injuries, poisonings, animal bites and accidents;
(i)
findings resulting from a post-mortem examination;
(j) any
other matters affecting health promotion or health protection.
(4) The
Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations for the purposes of
section 14 [requesting and disclosing information]
as follows:
(a)
prescribing persons who may act under that section;
(b)
respecting the circumstances in which a person may act under that
section;
(c)
respecting requests for, or disclosure of, information, including
(i)
prescribing persons from whom information may be requested, or to whom
information may be disclosed,
(ii)
prescribing the form of a request, and
(iii) respecting a process for complaints to be made respecting
requests for, and disclosure of, information.
Regulations
respecting preventive measures
114 (1) The Lieutenant
Governor in Council may make regulations respecting preventive measures
as follows:
(a)
respecting the circumstances in which a person must take preventive
measures;
(b)
prescribing particular preventive measures for particular purposes;
(c)
respecting objections to preventive measures, including
(i)
the manner in which an objection may be made, and
(ii)
health records that must be submitted to a medical health officer if an
objection is made;
(d)
placing restrictions or
prohibitions on persons who have not taken preventive measures,
including restrictions or prohibitions on entering a place or working
with a class of people or in a class of occupations;
(e)
respecting the provision of preventive measures to children;
(f)
respecting the provision of diagnostic examinations and preventive
measures, either free of charge or for a fee, including
(i)
reimbursing health professionals for services related to diagnostic
examinations or preventive measures, and
(ii)
requiring health
authorities to provide diagnostic examinations and preventive measures
and reimbursement under subparagraph (i);
(g)
respecting fees for the
purposes of paragraph (f), including circumstances in which all or part
of the fee may or must be waived.
(2) The
Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations respecting the
following:
(a)
requiring reports to be made respecting the provision of preventive
measures under section 16;
(b)
respecting reports of non-compliance under section 17 [must
seek advice if infected or exposed].
Regulations
respecting operators and
regulated activities
115 The Lieutenant
Governor in Council may make regulations respecting operators and
regulated activities as follows:
(a)
requiring licences or permits to carry on or engage in regulated
activities;
(b)
respecting applications for licences or permits to carry on or engage
in regulated activities, including prescribing
(i)
records that must accompany an application, and
(ii)
fees in respect of an application;
(c)
prescribing health officers who may issue, suspend, cancel or vary
conditions of a licence or permit;
(d)
respecting standards of
construction, equipment, management, sanitation, operation and
maintenance in relation to regulated activities;
(e)
prohibiting matters in
respect of regulated activities, and restricting or putting conditions
on the performance of a regulated activity;
(f)
respecting the monitoring of
regulated activities for conditions that may cause a health hazard,
including requiring a program of self-monitoring;
(g)
respecting training and qualifications for operators and employees,
including requiring ongoing training;
(h)
respecting records that must be kept;
(i)
respecting the prevention and
removal of health hazards by operators, and the mitigation of harmful
effects of health hazards by operators;
(j)
respecting fees that may be charged for licences and permits, and for
inspections of a regulated activity;
(k)
respecting information that
must be provided by an operator to the government, regional health
boards and the public about a product or service offered by the
operator;
(l)
respecting reports that must be made by an operator;
(m)
respecting standards that must be met in respect of a product or
service offered by an operator.
Regulations
respecting health impediments
116 The Lieutenant
Governor in Council may make regulations respecting health impediments
as follows:
(a)
prescribing conditions, things or activities for the purposes of
section 22 [duties respecting health impediments];
(b)
prohibiting, restricting or putting conditions on matters prescribed
under paragraph (a);
(c)
respecting monitoring of the
matters prescribed under paragraph (a) for indicators of health
impediments, including requiring a program of self-monitoring;
(d)
respecting records that must be kept;
(e)
respecting the prevention or mitigation of a health impediment by a
person described in section 22 (1);
(f)
respecting information that
must be provided by a person described in section 22 (1) to the
government, regional health boards or the public about a product or
service offered by that person;
(g)
respecting reports that must be made by a person described in section
22 (1);
(h)
respecting standards that must be met in respect of a matter prescribed
under paragraph (a).
Regulations
respecting orders
117 The Lieutenant
Governor in Council may make regulations respecting orders under this
Act as follows:
(a)
respecting actions that a health officer may by order require for the
purposes of Part 4 [Inspections and Orders];
(b)
respecting certificates for the recovery of costs related to a review
under section 35 [recovery of costs by health authorities],
including
(i)
service of the certificate, and
(ii)
prescribing that the Rules of Court apply to a review of a certificate,
or modifying those rules;
(c)
respecting the contents of an order for the purposes of section 39 [contents
of orders];
(d)
respecting publication of orders;
(e)
requiring health officers to keep records of orders and make reports in
respect of orders that have been made;
(f)
respecting service of orders,
including service to a class of persons by posting or publishing notice
of the order or by any other means;
(g)
respecting reassessments under section 45 [mandatory
reassessment of orders], including
(i)
prescribing how a request may be made,
(ii)
limiting how often a request may be made, and
(iii) prescribing a schedule of reassessment in response to a request;
(h)
respecting compensation for persons ordered under Part 4 to remain in a
place, or be examined or treated.
Regulations
respecting inspections
and enforcement
118 The Lieutenant
Governor in Council may make regulations respecting inspections and
enforcement matters as follows:
(a)
authorizing further purposes for which an inspection may be made under
section 23 [when inspection may be made];
(b)
respecting the process for making an application to the court,
including
(i)
authorizing applications to be made electronically or by any other
means,
(ii)
respecting the giving of notice of an application, and
(iii) respecting affidavits or other evidence that must accompany an
application;
(c)
prescribing that the Rules of Court apply to the hearing of an
application by the court, or modifying those rules;
(d)
prescribing the form of a warrant for the purposes of Division 6 [Enforcement
of Orders] of Part 4;
(e)
respecting orders that may be made under Division 6 of Part 4.
Regulations
respecting health officers
119
If another enactment relates to a matter that may affect, directly or
indirectly, health promotion or health protection, the Lieutenant
Governor in Council may make regulations under this Act as follows:
(a)
providing health officers with powers, or imposing duties on health
officers, for the purposes of the other enactment;
(b)
applying or modifying
provisions of this Act or the regulations made under it for the
purposes of exercising powers provided, or performing duties imposed,
under paragraph (a).
Regulations
respecting local governments
120
(1) The Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations under this
section in respect of local governments for one or more of the
following purposes:
(a) to
promote or protect the health of the people within the jurisdiction of
the local government;
(b) to
address a condition, thing or activity that could adversely affect a
health promotion or health protection initiative;
(c) to
enforce a memorandum of understanding or other arrangement made under
this section.
(2) The
Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations as follows:
(a)
requiring or authorizing a local government to take one or more actions
for the purposes of
(i)
monitoring its jurisdiction for a health hazard or health impediment,
and
(ii)
responding to a health hazard or health impediment;
(b)
requiring a local government
to deliver a public health function, and, for this purpose, the
Lieutenant Governor in Council may do the things described in section
125 (4);
(c)
authorizing the minister to
order a local government to modify or rescind a bylaw, or an
operational or strategic plan or planning process;
(d)
establishing processes to
resolve disputes between local governments and health authorities in
relation to matters under this Act.
(3) For
the purposes of a
regulation made under subsection (2) (a) or (b), the minister may enter
into a memorandum of understanding or other arrangement with a local
government establishing alternatives to the obligations that would
otherwise be applicable under the regulation.
(4) If,
by a regulation or order under this Act, the Lieutenant Governor in
Council
(a)
imposes a duty on one or more local governments, or
(b)
authorizes the minister to
order one or more local governments to modify or rescind a bylaw, or an
operational or strategic plan or planning process,
the
minister must consult with the affected local governments before the
regulation or order is made.
(5) If a
regulation or order to
which subsection (4) applies affects local governments generally,
consultation with the Union of British Columbia Municipalities is
effective consultation in respect of municipalities and regional
districts.
(6) For
the purposes of subsection (4), the minister must
(a)
provide sufficient information respecting the proposed regulation or
order, and
(b)
allow sufficient time before
the proposed regulation or order is made for the affected local
governments or the Union of British Columbia Municipalities, as
applicable, to consider the proposed regulation or order and provide
comments to the minister.
(7) The
minister must consider any
comments provided under subsection (6) and, if requested by an affected
local government or, if applicable, the Union of British Columbia
Municipalities, must respond to those comments.
(8) The
minister may require an
individual to make an oath or affirmation of confidentiality before the
individual may participate in consultations under this section.
(9)
Nothing in this section
prevents a person who has authority to make an order under this Act to
make the order in respect of a local government.
Regulations
respecting personal information
121 The Lieutenant
Governor in Council may make regulations respecting personal
information as follows:
(a) if
necessary for the
effective operation of a provision of this Act or a regulation made
under it, authorizing the collection, use and disclosure of personal
information for a purpose set out in section 9 [purposes for
collection, use and disclosure of personal information];
(b) if
the collection, use or disclosure of personal information is authorized
under this Act,
(i)
clarifying or limiting the purposes for which collection, use or
disclosure is authorized, and
(ii)
limiting or putting
conditions, in addition to any limits or conditions already provided
for in this Act, on that collection, use or disclosure;
(c)
requiring the keeping of
records or the making of reports respecting the collection, use or
disclosure of personal information under this Act.
Regulations
respecting administrative penalties
122 (1) The Lieutenant
Governor in Council may make regulations respecting administrative
penalties under Division 1 [Administrative Penalties]
of Part 8 as follows:
(a)
authorizing the imposition of administrative penalties by one or more
persons;
(b)
prescribing provisions of
this Act or the regulations made under it in respect of which
administrative penalties may be imposed;
(c)
respecting the administrative
penalty that may be imposed in respect of any provision of this Act or
the regulations made under it, or any failure to comply with a licence
or permit issued under this Act or an order made under this Act,
including
(i)
providing for greater penalties for subsequent contraventions,
(ii)
setting the maximum and minimum penalty that may be imposed,
(iii) if the penalty is
expressed as a range, providing factors to be considered in the
determination of the appropriate penalty, and
(iv)
prescribing the grounds on which a penalty may be reduced;
(d)
respecting notices for the purposes of the Division, including the
form, content and service of the notice;
(e)
prescribing the time in which
an administrative penalty must be paid, disputed, or made the subject
of an agreement, including the time in which the penalty must be paid
following a dispute, an agreement or a failure to meet the terms of an
agreement;
(f)
providing for payment of an administrative penalty by installments;
(g)
respecting disputes of administrative penalties, including
(i)
providing for a reconsideration of the penalty, and
(ii)
authorizing a
reconsideration of the penalty to be considered together with a
reconsideration of an order made under this Act;
(h)
respecting the form of a certificate under section 98 [recovery
of administrative penalties].
(2) A
penalty prescribed under subsection (1) (c) must not be greater than
$25 000.
Regulations
respecting rental accommodations
123 The Lieutenant
Governor in Council may make regulations respecting rental
accommodations as follows:
(a)
defining "rental accommodation" for the purposes of a regulation made
under this section;
(b)
prescribing health and safety standards that must be met by landlords
of rental accommodations.
Regulations
respecting public toilets
124 The Lieutenant
Governor in Council may make regulations respecting public toilets as
follows:
(a)
defining "public toilet" for the purposes of a regulation made under
this section;
(b)
prohibiting persons from demanding or requiring payment for the use of
or access to a public toilet;
(c)
prohibiting persons from installing or having control of a public
toilet that operates only on payment.
Other
regulation-making powers
125
(1) The Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations exempting a
person, place or thing from one or more provisions of the regulations.
(2) To
the extent that
regulation-making authority has not already been provided for in this
Part, the Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations as
follows:
(a)
respecting records to be kept by health officers;
(b)
respecting the form of a record, including authorizing a health
authority to make forms;
(c)
respecting service of a record;
(d)
respecting any other matter for which regulations are contemplated by
this Act.
(3)
Subject to subsection (4), the Lieutenant Governor in Council may make
regulations respecting the application of the Health Care
(Consent) and Care Facility (Admission) Act to anything done
under this Act, including modifying or disapplying one or more
provisions of that Act.
(4) The
Lieutenant Governor in
Council may make regulations authorizing a person to deliver a public
health function, and, for this purpose, may
(a)
delegate a power of inspection, regulation or control, including a
power to
(i)
establish a licence or permit scheme,
(ii)
retain licence or permit fees, and
(iii) issue one or more orders in relation to the delegated power, and
(b)
specify requirements that must be met in
(i)
delivering a public health function, or
(ii)
the exercise of a power delegated under paragraph (a).
(5) The
Lieutenant Governor in
Council may make regulations requiring a health authority to deliver a
public health function, and, for this purpose,
(a) the
Lieutenant Governor in Council may do the things described in
subsection (4), and
(b) the
minister may enter into a
memorandum of understanding or other arrangement with a health
authority establishing alternatives to the obligations that would
otherwise be applicable under the regulation.
General
powers respecting regulations
126 (1) The Lieutenant
Governor in Council may make regulations referred to in
section 41 of the Interpretation Act.
(2) A
person must not read any
section of this Part as limiting the general powers to make regulations
described in subsection (1).
(3) A
regulation made under this Act in respect of a person, facility, place,
procedure or thing may
(a)
establish classes of persons, facilities, places, procedures or things,
and
(b)
make regulations that are different for different classes of persons,
facilities, places, procedures or things.
(4) A
regulation made under this Act may limit the application of the
regulation
(a) to
one or more geographic areas, and
(b) to
one or more classes of persons, facilities, places, procedures or
things.
(5) A
regulation made under this
Act may confer a discretion on the minister, the provincial health
officer or a health officer.
(6) A
regulation made under this
Act may adopt by reference, in whole or in part and with any changes
the Lieutenant Governor in Council considers appropriate, a regulation,
code, standard or rule
(a)
enacted as or under a law of another jurisdiction, including a foreign
jurisdiction, or
(b) set
by a provincial, national or international body or any other body that
may make codes, standards or rules.
(7)
Unless otherwise stated, a code, standard or rule referred to in
subsection (6) is adopted as amended from time to time.
(8) If,
in a regulation made under
this Act, the Lieutenant Governor in Council provides that
contravention of the regulation is an offence, the Lieutenant Governor
in Council may provide that a person who commits the offence is, in
addition to a penalty imposed under section 107 [alternative
penalties],
liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $200 000 or to
imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6 months, or to both.
Part 10 — Transitional
Provisions, Repeals and
Consequential Amendments
Transition
— regulations
127 (1) If an order or
a decision is made under the Health Act
(a)
within 30 days before Part 4 of this Act comes into force, and
(b) a
similar order or decision could be made under this Act,
sections
43, 44 and 45 of this Act
apply to the order or decision as if the order or decision had been
made under this Act, and for the purposes of sections 43
and 44,
the order or decision is deemed to have been made on the day that Part
4 of this Act comes into force.
(2) The
Lieutenant Governor in
Council may make regulations the Lieutenant Governor in Council
considers necessary or advisable for the orderly transition from the Health
Act to this Act.
(3) The
authority to make or amend
a regulation made under subsection (2), but not the authority to repeal
a regulation made under subsection (2), ends 3 years after the date on
which subsection (2) comes into force.
(4) A
regulation made under the Health Act
that is inconsistent with or not authorized to be made under this Act
is deemed to be valid and is given effect until the earliest of
(a) the
regulation's repeal by regulation of the Lieutenant Governor in Council,
(b) the
regulation's amendment in accordance with this Act, and
(c) 3
years from the date this section comes into force.
Repeals
128
The following sections of the Health Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 179, are
repealed:
(a) sections 1 to 8 and 11 to 115;
(b) section 9;
(c) section 10.
129
The Public Toilet Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 389, is repealed.
130
The Venereal Disease Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 475, is repealed.
Consequential Amendments
Chiropractors
Act
131
Section 36 of the Chiropractors Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 48, is repealed
and the following substituted:
Public Health Act
36 Sections 10, 12 and
14 of the Public Health Act, respecting reporting
of communicable diseases, apply to every chiropractor registered under
this Act.
Community
Care and Assisted Living Act
132
Section 1 of the Community Care and Assisted Living Act, S.B.C. 2002,
c. 75, is amended in the definition of "medical
health officer" by striking out "appointed
under the Health Act;"
and substituting "designated under the Public
Health Act;".
Cremation,
Interment and Funeral Services Act
133
Sections 8 (3)
(b) (i), 13 (1) and 19 (1) (a) of the Cremation, Interment and Funeral
Services Act, S.B.C. 2004, c. 35, are amended by striking out "Health
Act" and substituting "Public
Health Act".
134
Section 11 (b) is repealed and the following substituted:
(b)
meets the requirements of the regulations and any requirements under
the Public Health Act.
Drinking
Water Protection Act
135
Section 1 of the Drinking Water Protection Act, S.B.C. 2001, c. 9, is
amended by repealing the definitions of "medical
health officer" and "Provincial
health officer" and substituting the following:
"medical
health officer" has the same meaning as in the Public
Health Act;
"Provincial
health officer" has the same meaning as in the Public
Health Act; .
136
Sections 2 (2) and 4 (1) are amended by striking out "Health
Act" and substituting "Public
Health Act".
137
Section 24 (1) (a) is repealed and the following substituted:
(a) is
required to report under
(i)
section 11 [mandatory reporting of health hazards]
of the Public Health Act in respect of a toxic
spill, or
(ii)
section 79 (5) [spill prevention and reporting]
of the Environmental Management Act, and .
138
Section 25 (10) is repealed and the following substituted:
(10) In
the event of a conflict between an order under this section and an
order of a health officer under the Public Health Act,
the order of the health officer prevails.
139
Section 27 (4) is amended by striking out "section
74 (3) and (4) [recovery of costs and expenses]
of the Health Act," and
substituting "section 35 [recovery
of costs by health authorities] of the Public
Health Act,".
140
Section 40 (1) is amended by striking out "section
61 [inspection authority] of the Health
Act." and substituting "Division
1 [Inspections] of Part 4 of the Public
Health Act."
141
Section 45 (3) is repealed and the following substituted:
(3) If a
person is convicted of an
offence under this Act, a sentencing judge may order the convicted
person to do one or more things described in section 107 (1) of the Public
Health Act, and, for these purposes, section 107 (2) applies.
142
Section 46 is repealed and the following substituted:
Service of documents
46 Service of documents
under this Act must be in accordance with the regulations.
143
Sections 69 and 74 are repealed.
Environmental
Management Act
144
Section 13 (b) of the Environmental Management Act, S.B.C. 2003, c. 53,
is amended by striking out "Health
Act" and substituting "Public
Health Act".
Expropriation
Act
145
Section 2 (3) of the Expropriation Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 125, is
amended by striking out "the Health
Act,".
Farm
Practices Protection (Right to Farm) Act
146
Section 2 (2) (c)
of the Farm Practices Protection (Right to Farm) Act, R.S.B.C. 1996,
c. 131, is amended by striking out "the
Health Act," and
substituting "the Public Health Act,".
Freedom
of Information and Protection of Privacy Act
147
Schedule 1 of the
Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act,
R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 165, is amended by repealing paragraphs (d)
and
(e) of the definition of "health care body".
Health
Authorities Act
148
Section 1 of the Health Authorities Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 180, is
amended by repealing paragraph (a) of the definition of "public
body" and substituting the following:
(a) a
local government acting under the Public Health Act, .
149
Section 19 is amended
(a) in subsection (3) by striking out "Health
Act," and substituting "Public
Health Act,", and
(b) by repealing subsection (5).
Hospital
Act
150
Section 3 of the Hospital Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 200, is amended by
striking out "by the regulations under the Health
Act" and substituting "by
an order made under the Public Health Act".
Local
Government Act
151
Sections 523 (1) and 694 (1) of the Local Government Act, R.S.B.C.
1996, c. 323, are amended by striking out "Health
Act," and substituting "Public
Health Act,".
Milk
Industry Act
152
Section 10 (1) of the Milk Industry Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 289, is
amended by striking out "A
person suffering from or recovering from or who has knowingly been
exposed to any infectious or contagious disease must not, within a time
prescribed by the regulations under the Health Act,"
and substituting "A person who is an infected
person within the meaning of the Public Health Act
must not, until permitted by a medical health officer under that Act,".
Pharmacists,
Pharmacy Operations and Drug Scheduling Act
153
Section 83 of the Pharmacists, Pharmacy Operations and Drug Scheduling
Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 363, is amended
(a) by repealing paragraph (a), and
(b) in paragraph (d) by striking out "Venereal
Disease Act" and substituting "Public
Health Act".
Pharmacy
Operations and Drug Scheduling Act
154
Section 34 of the Pharmacy Operations and Drug Scheduling Act,
S.B.C. 2003, c. 77, is amended
(a) by repealing paragraph (a), and
(b) in paragraph (e) by striking out "Venereal
Disease Act" and substituting "Public
Health Act".
School
Act
155
Section 87.1 of the School Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 412, is repealed and
the following substituted:
Definitions for this
Division
87.1 In this Division:
"minister
of health" means the minister responsible for the
administration of the Public Health Act;
"school
medical officer" means a medical health officer under
the Public Health Act who is designated as a
school medical officer under section 89 (1) of this Act.
156
Section 88 (2) is repealed.
157
Section 89 is amended
(a) by repealing subsection (1) and substituting the following:
(1) Each
regional health board under the Health Authorities Act
must designate a school medical officer for each school district. ,
and
(b) in subsection (3) by striking out "appointed
under subsection (1)" and substituting "designated
under subsection (1)".
Vancouver
Charter
158
Sections 325 and 326 of the Vancouver Charter, S.B.C. 1953, c. 55, are
repealed and the following substituted:
Health Department
325. The Council may
(a)
establish a Health Department,
(b)
appoint a Medical Health Officer, and
(c)
designate duties and powers of the Medical Health Officer for the
purposes of this Act.
Vital
Statistics Act
159
Section 36 (4) (e) of the Vital Statistics Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 479,
is amended by striking out "appointed under
the Health Act" and
substituting "designated under the Public
Health Act".
Workers
Compensation Act
160
Section 108 (2) (c) and (3) of the Workers Compensation Act, R.S.B.C.
1996, c. 492, is amended by striking out "Health
Act" and substituting "Public
Health Act".
Commencement
161 This Act comes into
force by regulation of the Lieutenant Governor in Council.
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