Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Lots Of Hurdles Before Feds Can Legislate Medical Assistance In Dying

Darpan News Desk, 26 Feb, 2016 11:39 AM
    OTTAWA — The highly anticipated report of a special joint parliamentary committee on medically assisted dying is far from the final word on the subject.
     
    The Supreme Court of Canada, which last year struck down the ban on doctor-assisted death, has given the federal government until June 6 to come up with a new law that recognizes the right of clearly consenting adults who are enduring intolerable physical or mental suffering to seek medical help in ending their lives.
     
    There are numerous hurdles the government must yet scale as it scrambles to meet that deadline:
     
    1. Justice Department lawyers must craft a proposed law giving effect to the court ruling and addressing some of the thorny issues the ruling has raised, such as whether to allow advance requests for medical aid in dying by those diagnosed with competence-impairing conditions like dementia.
     
    The delivery of health care is a provincial jurisdiction so drafting a federal law will involve consultations and collaboration with the provinces.
     
     
    The department has already begun working on the law and Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould says she hopes to have something to take to cabinet within a couple of weeks.
     
    2. Once a bill is introduced, it must go through the normal legislative process. That means it must be debated in the House of Commons and pass a second reading vote giving it approval in principle.
     
    3. The bill must then be referred to a Commons committee, which will hear from witnesses and examine the bill clause by clause. The committee can propose amendments. 
     
    4. The bill must be debated at third reading in the Commons and pass a final vote.
     
    5. Once approved by the Commons, the bill must go through the same legislative process — debate, vote in principle, committee study, debate and final vote — in the Senate. Should the Senate approve any amendments, the bill would have to go back to the Commons.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Fugitive High-Risk Sex Offender Who Escaped Canada Convicted Of Raping Seattle Woman

    Fugitive High-Risk Sex Offender Who Escaped Canada Convicted Of Raping Seattle Woman
    Michael Stanley, 49, triggered a manhunt across Saskatchewan and Alberta when he cut off his ankle bracelet in Lloydminster on the boundary of the two provinces and made a run for the U.S. border where he managed to cross unchallenged

    Fugitive High-Risk Sex Offender Who Escaped Canada Convicted Of Raping Seattle Woman

    How Big Will It Be? Finance Minister Bill Morneau To Give Canadians Sense Of Federal Deficit

    How Big Will It Be? Finance Minister Bill Morneau To Give Canadians Sense Of Federal Deficit
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau recently acknowledged that his government would no longer live up to its pledge to keep the 2016-17 deficit under $10 billion.

    How Big Will It Be? Finance Minister Bill Morneau To Give Canadians Sense Of Federal Deficit

    Minister Ralph Goodale Expresses 'Outrage' At RCMP's 'Toxic Workplace'

    Minister Ralph Goodale Expresses 'Outrage' At RCMP's 'Toxic Workplace'
    Ralph Goodale says he told RCMP Commissioner Bob Paulson he expects a comprehensive, transparent investigation, strong discipline, support for victims and a plan to end what he calls "this toxic workplace behaviour."

    Minister Ralph Goodale Expresses 'Outrage' At RCMP's 'Toxic Workplace'

    28-Year-Old Man Dies After Apparent Work Accident At Montreal University

    28-Year-Old Man Dies After Apparent Work Accident At Montreal University
    Emergency workers found the man in critical condition underneath one of the school's escalators.

    28-Year-Old Man Dies After Apparent Work Accident At Montreal University

    $37 Million Fine For Ponzi Schemer Doris Elizabeth Nelson Who Defrauded Hundreds Of Investors

    $37 Million Fine For Ponzi Schemer Doris Elizabeth Nelson Who Defrauded Hundreds Of Investors
    The commission says Doris Elizabeth Nelson promoted the Little Loan Shoppe to 121 investors in British Columbia who invested $19 million in what was actually a Ponzi scheme.

    $37 Million Fine For Ponzi Schemer Doris Elizabeth Nelson Who Defrauded Hundreds Of Investors

    4 People Charged With Drug Offences After Raids At Two Homes In Chilliwack

    RCMP say they conducted raids at two homes in the spring of 2015 related to the alleged sale of heroin in the Fraser Valley community.

    4 People Charged With Drug Offences After Raids At Two Homes In Chilliwack