New private-sector privacy regulator to wield broad investigative & order powers, big penalties
Minister of Artificial Intelligence and Digital Innovation Evan Solomon
Evan Solomon, the federal minister of artificial intelligence and digital innovation, said the proposed Protecting Privacy and Consumer Data Act (Bill C-36), which creates new private-sector data protection rules and binding order-making regulatory authority, backed by hefty penalties for non-compliance, ‘will give Canadians more control over their personal information, strengthen protections for children and give businesses clearer rules to innovate responsibly.’

Tuesday, June 16, 2026 @ 3:16 PM

Ottawa has proposed a new legislative regime for private-sector privacy regulation that imposes a raft of obligations on how businesses and other non-governmental organizations handle Canadians’ personal data, with oversight from a robust dual privacy and digital harms regulator armed with audit and binding order-making powers, backed by hefty administrative monetary penalties (AMPs) and fines for the most serious new offences. ... [read more]

B.C. court dismisses application to quash multiple Fisheries Act charges

Tuesday, June 16, 2026 @ 4:58 PM

The British Columbia Supreme Court has dismissed an application arguing that multiple charges stemming from a tailings storage facility failure were duplicative. It found that five affected bodies of water were legally distinct. ... [read more]

Ottawa introduces First Nations clean water bill with $4.6B funding commitment

Tuesday, June 16, 2026 @ 3:39 PM

The federal government has introduced legislation that would establish enforceable drinking water and wastewater standards on First Nation lands and announced a $4.6-billion funding commitment for water and wastewater infrastructure in First Nation communities. ... [read more]

Charter does not impose positive right to reimbursement for out-of-province health care: B.C. court

Tuesday, June 16, 2026 @ 3:30 PM

B.C.’s top court has turned back an argument by a man who went to the United States to receive medical treatment that the province’s failure to reimburse his costs violated his constitutional rights. ... [read more]

Competition Bureau launches study of Canada’s food supply chain

Tuesday, June 16, 2026 @ 3:21 PM

On June 16, the Competition Bureau launched an examination of Canada’s food supply chain, which will “identify how greater competition can help improve outcomes for Canadians at the grocery store.” ... [read more]