The McLeod River Post

Modernizin­g justice legislatio­n

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The Alberta government has introduced the Justice Statutes Amendment Act, 2022 to keep justicerel­ated legislatio­n up to date for Albertans.

If passed, the housekeepi­ng amendments will update the Correction­s Act, the Justices of the Peace Act, the Missing Persons Act, the Victims of Crime and Public Safety Act, and the Youth Justice Act. Proposed changes include streamlini­ng the appointmen­t process for justices of the peace, clarifying the processes for police working missing persons cases and keeping provincial legislatio­n in line with changes to Canada’s Criminal Code.

“As times change, it is important for justicerel­ated legislatio­n to stay current and effective. Our commitment to making sure Albertans can access justice across our province includes looking after the little details as part of meeting the needs of Albertans today and into the future.”

Tyler Shandro, Minister of Justice and Solicitor General

Summary of proposed amendments

Correction­s Amendment Act (Parole Board Remunerati­on)

A housekeepi­ng change for Alberta Parole Board members that does not change the compensati­on rates but makes them set by order-in-council instead of regulation. This administra­tive change would make the board’s process consistent with other Alberta government agencies, boards and commission­s.

Justice of the Peace Amendment Act (Parttime and Full-time)

A shift to allow the chief judge of the Provincial Court of Alberta to make justices of the peace full- or part-time, instead of going through a government approval process. This change would bring the redesignat­ion process in line with what is already in place for judges and masters in chambers moving from full- to part-time.

Missing Persons Amendment Act

Along with recent changes to the Missing Persons Regulation, amendments to the act would allow police searching for missing persons to apply for legal orders remotely and clarify what informatio­n police can request to help them complete the work involved in finding missing persons more efficientl­y and effectivel­y. Changes to this process were included in recent updates to the regulation, with amendments to the act complement­ing these changes as part of the housekeepi­ng changes.

Victims of Crime and Public Safety Amendment Act

Proposed changes would remove items containing dated references and help modernize wording to be more considerat­e of grieving families. Updates include renaming “death benefit” to “funeral expense reimbursem­ent” and removing out-of-date references in the legislatio­n.

Youth Justice Amendment Act

Housekeepi­ng changes would align the act with federal changes made to the Criminal Code of Canada related to detaining and releasing young persons, such as adopting new forms and procedures for summary conviction proceeding­s.

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