Today
Today

Concerns about the proposed Public Complaints and Review Commission

  • February 28, 2023

Bill C-20 seeks to establish a Public Complaints and Review Commission to review and investigate complaints against Royal Canadian Mounted Police and Canada Border Services Agency personnel. The Immigration Law Section of the Canadian Bar Association says the Bill represents an important reform of mechanisms to make complaints but it has 11 key concerns about the Bill as it relates to the CBSA. The most salient are summarized below.

Approved applicants should not wait months for their PR cards

  • February 28, 2023

The Immigration Law Section of the Canadian Bar Association, in a letter to Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, or IRCC, says it’s time to speed up the process of issuing cards to approved applicants for permanent residence.

For a better consultation process

  • January 30, 2023

Two letters from the Canadian Bar Association propose improvements to the Immigration Refugee Board’s stakeholder consultations and offer comments on the review of specific principles guiding adjudicating and managing cases.

Preparing for practice the right way

  • January 30, 2023

The Canadian Bar Association, in a letter signed by Policy Committee Chair Thomas Ullyett, asks the Federation of Law Societies to add family law to the National Requirement and shares with the federation feedback from recent calls and individuals pursuing the requirements to be called to the bar on whether the requirements reflect the skills needed to be successful in the profession.

Don’t go overly broad on gun control amendments

  • January 30, 2023

The Criminal Justice Section of the Canadian Bar Association supports gun control generally, as well as the objectives of Bill C-21. But as it explains in a letter to the Chair of the Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security, there are reasons certain elements of An Act to amend certain Acts and to make certain consequential amendments (firearms) should be redrafted to better achieve those objectives.

Protecting the rights of French-speaking people

  • January 30, 2023

Much more needs to be done to ensure the rights of French-speaking people in Canada are respected in the country’s legal system. That’s the gist of the message the French Speaking Common Law Members Section of the Canadian Bar Association sent to the Standing Committee on Official Languages about Bill C-13, An Act for the Substantive Equality of Canada’s Official Languages, introduced in the House of Commons March 1, 2022.