Saturday, July 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Liberals move to make pardons more accessible

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Apr, 2021 11:45 PM
  • Liberals move to make pardons more accessible

The Liberal government says it is moving ahead with long-simmering plans to make it easier and less expensive to obtain a criminal pardon.

Proposals outlined in the federal budget Monday could undo measures introduced by Stephen Harper's Conservatives that made people wait longer and pay more to obtain a pardon.

Under the Conservative changes, lesser offenders — those with a summary conviction — must wait five years instead of three before they can apply.

Offenders who have served a sentence for a more serious crime — an indictable offence — must wait 10 years instead of five.

In addition, the cost of applying quadrupled to $631 from $150 to ensure full cost recovery.

The Conservatives said taxpayers should not subsidize the cost of pardons.

The changes came after The Canadian Press revealed that former hockey coach Graham James, a convicted sex abuser, had obtained a pardon.

Critics objected to the moves, which included renaming the pardon a "record suspension," as punitive hurdles for people trying to turn their lives around.

Five years ago, the Liberal government began reviewing the waiting period, fee and new name with a view to considering fairness, proportionality and the role that expunging a criminal record plays in rehabilitation.

In response to a federal consultation, a large majority of participants said the $631 fee, which has since climbed to more than $657, posed a substantial hurdle for people trying to turn their lives around.

Most respondents also felt the application process was long and complicated.

But the Trudeau government did not act on the findings.

The new Liberal budget proposes to provide $88.2 million over five years, starting this fiscal year, with $13 million ongoing, to the Parole Board of Canada, the RCMP and Public Safety Canada.

It says the funding would reduce application fees, create an online application portal and support community organizations that help people navigate the pardon application process.

The government also says it plans to amend the Criminal Records Act to make pardons more accessible to those who have served their sentences and are living law-abiding lives.

"A pardon increases access to jobs, education, stable housing, and makes communities safer by helping to end the cycle of crime," the budget plan says.

"However, fees and difficult-to-navigate processes pose unnecessary barriers to pardons, particularly among marginalized groups."

MORE National ARTICLES

Celebrity Businessman Kevin O'leary, Wife Sued In Deadly Boat Crash

TORONTO - A fatal boat crash on an Ontario lake this summer has prompted a wrongful death lawsuit against celebrity businessman Kevin O'Leary and his wife Linda O'Leary, who was driving their vessel.    

Celebrity Businessman Kevin O'leary, Wife Sued In Deadly Boat Crash

Canada's Down Syndrome Community Helps Teach Google How To Understand Speech

Canada's Down Syndrome Community Helps Teach Google How To Understand Speech
That's what Google estimates people with Down syndrome experience because of speech difficulties associated with physiological differences in their mouths.

Canada's Down Syndrome Community Helps Teach Google How To Understand Speech

RCMP Detectives At Rural B.C. Community Of Anglemont After Two Bodies Found

RCMP Detectives At Rural B.C. Community Of Anglemont After Two Bodies Found
ANGLEMONT, B.C. - RCMP are investigating the discovery of two bodies in a home in British Columbia's southern Interior.

RCMP Detectives At Rural B.C. Community Of Anglemont After Two Bodies Found

Quebec Backtracks On Changes To Immigration Program Aimed At Students

Quebec Backtracks On Changes To Immigration Program Aimed At Students
QUEBEC - The Quebec government is backtracking on proposed changes to a popular immigration program aimed at university students that would've seen many of them sent home.    

Quebec Backtracks On Changes To Immigration Program Aimed At Students

Students And Youth In Victoria, Whistler To Receive Free Transit Passes

VICTORIA - Students in two British Columbia communities will soon be able to ride transit for free.

Students And Youth In Victoria, Whistler To Receive Free Transit Passes

Metro Vancouver Transit Strike Prompts Cancellations As Premier John Horgan Won't Intervene

About 5,000 transit drivers, SeaBus operators and maintenance staff began limited job action last week, including a ban on overtime by maintenance workers.

Metro Vancouver Transit Strike Prompts Cancellations As Premier John Horgan Won't Intervene