Saskatoon StarPhoenix

RM leaders pleased to see new trespass laws enacted

- MICHAEL OLEKSYN Michael Oleksyn is a Local Journalism Initiative reporter who works out of the Prince Albert Daily Herald. The Local Journalism Initiative is funded by the Government of Canada.

Local rural municipali­ties welcomed news that the provincial government had formalized new trespassin­g laws approved during a special meeting in August following complaints about federal employees accessing private land without authorizat­ion.

The provincial government formalized the changes on Wednesday. Reeves in local rural municipali­ties are happy to see the law introduced. RM of Prince Albert Reeve Eric Schmalz said the idea is a good one.

“I think that given the crime rate currently in the rural areas there is a lot of anxiety around strange vehicles and people appearing on people's property,” Schmalz said. “It could create a tense situation and typically this is not an area where the federal government should be treading.

“This is provincial jurisdicti­on and the provincial government provides a ministry to cover this area and it should be handled by the provincial government who can share the informatio­n with the federal government,” he added. “It's not a place of federal jurisdicti­on, from what I understand and my reading of the incidents that caused the concern that are being dealt with through this new law.”

RM of Buckland Reeve Don Fyrk has similar thoughts.

“I think they (federal employees) should be treated like anybody else, you know. If you want to go on somebody's property, get permission,” Fyrk said.

The Trespass to Property Act prohibits a person from entering premises except with the consent of the occupier or while acting under legal authority. Failure to comply with the rules of the act will constitute an offence that could incur fines of up to $200,000.

Schmalz said that he thinks the province is more than capable of handling concerns.

“I want to make sure that our residents of rural Saskatchew­an have the right to feel secure in their homes and not be alarmed by strange vehicles and individual­s trespassin­g on their property without knowledge or informed consent or otherwise,” Schmalz said.

Saskatchew­an Justice Minister and Attorney General Bronwyn Eyre said the legislatio­n introduced Wednesday formalizes and reinforces the change to trespass regulation­s, made earlier in 2022.

Those changes require federal employees to comply with the act, which prohibits individual­s from entering private land without the owner's consent.

NDP Justice Critic Nicole Sarauer said the legislatio­n was redundant. “What this bill appears to be doing is simply duplicatin­g the regulation that was already passed this summer,” Sarauer said in a statement.

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