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FederalDid not become law (session ended)40th Parliament, 3rd Session

Bill S-224 explained in plain English

An Act to establish a national volunteer emergency response service

Federal Parliament bill summary, status, timeline, sponsor, votes, and official sources.

At a glance

Jurisdiction
Federal Parliament
Legislature / Parliament
Parliament of Canada
Session
40th Parliament, 3rd Session
Bill number
Bill S-224
Full title
An Act to establish a national volunteer emergency response service
Current status
Did not become law (session ended)
Latest event
At second reading in the Senate
Last updated
Mar 2, 2011
Sponsor

Official Parliament of Canada snapshot for 40th Parliament, 3rd Session. MP vote breakdowns appear when the House of Commons publishes a recorded division export for that bill. Senate and House stage details include official debate/sitting links when LEGISinfo publishes them.

Chamber
Parliament of Canada
Current Stage
At second reading in the Senate
Latest Activity
Mar 2, 2011
Sponsor
Plain-language explanation
In plain English (our explanation)

Our plain-language take, written for civic education.

Source: By PoliticalData.ca

AI-assisted, reviewed before publishing
Short Version

Bill S-224 proposes to establish a national volunteer emergency response service led by a federally appointed Commissioner to supplement emergency personnel during crises.

What It Means

Bill S-224 proposes to create a new federal organization called the National Volunteer Emergency Response Service. This service would respond to emergencies by supplementing and supporting military, police, health, and other emergency personnel and service providers. The bill establishes that: - A Commissioner appointed by the Governor in Council would lead the Service. - Optionally, a Deputy Commissioner could also be appointed. - All members, including the Commissioner and Deputy Commissioner, would be unpaid volunteers. - To be a member, a person must be at least 18 years old, a Canadian citizen or permanent resident, of good character, and meet additional requirements set by the Commissioner. - The Commissioner would recruit members, set training standards, establish a code of conduct, and set membership requirements. - Which specific emergencies the Service responds to would be decided by the Governor in Council (the cabinet). - The Service would work with provinces to ensure it does not interfere with their emergency management abilities. - The Commissioner would help the federal government carry out emergency management responsibilities. - The Governor in Council could make regulations to assign additional functions to the Service. - The Act would come into force only after Parliament has approved funding for it.

What This Bill Does
  • Establishes a new federal organization called the National Volunteer Emergency Response Service
  • Sets the Service's role as responding to emergencies by supplementing and supporting military, police, health, and other emergency personnel and service providers
  • Requires the Governor in Council to decide which emergencies the Service will respond to
  • Allows the Governor in Council to assign additional functions to the Service by regulation
  • Requires the Service to cooperate with provinces and avoid impairing their emergency management abilities
  • Specifies that all members of the Service, including leadership, are unpaid volunteers
  • Establishes membership qualifications: at least 18 years old, Canadian citizen or permanent resident, good character, and Commissioner-set requirements
  • Creates the position of Commissioner to direct and manage the Service, appointed by the Governor in Council
  • Lists Commissioner duties: recruit and appoint members, establish training standards, establish a code of conduct, and set additional membership requirements
  • Allows the Governor in Council to optionally appoint a Deputy Commissioner
  • Requires the Commissioner to assist the federal government in carrying out Emergency Management Act responsibilities
  • Makes the Act come into force only after Parliament has appropriated funding for it
Who Is Affected
  • Canadian citizens and permanent residents who may choose to volunteer as unpaid members of the Service
  • Military, police, health, and other emergency personnel who would be supplemented and supported by the Service
  • Emergency service providers working in Canada
  • Provincial governments, who would coordinate with the Service but retain their own emergency management powers
  • The federal government, which would appoint the Commissioner and direct which emergencies the Service responds to
  • Federal ministers responsible for public safety and emergency preparedness
Rights, Duties, Or Obligations
  • The Service has an obligation to respond to emergencies designated by the Governor in Council
  • The Service has an obligation to supplement and support emergency personnel without unduly impairing provincial emergency management abilities
  • The Service has an obligation to cooperate with provinces to achieve concerted emergency response action
  • The Commissioner has an obligation to direct and manage the Service and assist the government with Emergency Management Act responsibilities
  • The Commissioner has an obligation to recruit members, establish training standards, establish a code of conduct, and set membership requirements
  • Service members have an obligation to meet membership qualifications and requirements set by the Commissioner
  • Service members have an obligation to follow the code of conduct established by the Commissioner
  • Provinces have a right to take measures for dealing with emergencies under provincial law without undue interference from the Service
  • Eligible Canadian citizens and permanent residents have a right to volunteer as Service members if they meet the requirements
Important Dates
  • The bill was first read in the Senate on October 26, 2010
  • The Act does not come into force on a fixed date; it comes into force on a date or dates to be set by Governor in Council order, but only after Parliament has appropriated funding
Financial Or Tax Impacts
  • Parliament must appropriate funding for the Service before the Act can come into force
  • The Governor General must recommend appropriation of funds for the Act to the Governor in Council
Uncertainties Or Limits
  • The bill does not specify what training standards would be required for Service members
  • The bill does not specify what additional membership requirements the Commissioner would establish beyond the four listed in Section 8
  • The bill does not specify what code of conduct would apply to members
  • The bill does not specify which emergencies the Governor in Council would designate for the Service to respond to
  • The bill does not specify what other functions the Governor in Council might assign to the Service by regulation
  • The bill does not specify the funding amount or sources for the Service
  • The bill does not specify the operational structure, geographic distribution, or size of the Service
  • The exact date the Act comes into force is not specified and depends on Cabinet decree and parliamentary appropriation
Laws Or Regulations Affected
Emergency Management Act
affected

The Commissioner of the National Volunteer Emergency Response Service would assist the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness and other ministers in carrying out their responsibilities under the Emergency Management Act

Source: Section 11(3)

Immigration and Refugee Protection Act
referenced

The term 'permanent resident' in the membership qualifications refers to the definition in the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act

Source: Section 8(b)

Generated using AI from official bill text. Not legal advice. It is written by PoliticalData.ca for civic education, automatically checked and spot-reviewed before publishing.

Official text

Parliamentary Process

Step 1
First reading
Oct 26, 2010
Completed

Bill S-224, concerning the establishment of a national volunteer emergency response service, has completed first reading and is currently undergoing second reading debates in the Senate.

Introduction and first reading, Oct 26, 2010
End of stage activity, Oct 26, 2010
Chamber sittings
Introduction and first reading - Oct 26, 2010

On October 26, 2010, the Senate held its first reading for Bill S-224, an act to establish a national volunteer emergency response service, and engaged in various other debates and proceedings.

Step 2
Second reading
Mar 2, 2011
Not completed

Bill S-224, concerning the establishment of a national volunteer emergency response service, was undergoing debate at the second reading stage in the Senate.

Chamber sittings
Debate at second reading - Dec 8, 2010

During a Senate sitting on December 8, 2010, Senator Mac Harb introduced Bill S-224, "An Act to establish a national volunteer emergency response service," at second reading, and debate on the bill was adjourned.

During the Senate's second reading debate on Bill S-224, Senator Mac Harb introduced the bill to establish a national volunteer emergency response service, emphasizing the need for better preparedness and the role of trained volunteers in disaster response.

Debate at second reading - Mar 2, 2011

The Senate continued the debate on Bill S-224, An Act to establish a national volunteer emergency response service, but the debate was not concluded.

Step 3
Third reading
Not reached yet
Not reached

We don't have a plain-language summary for Third reading yet. The official source linked below is the full record.

Step 1
First reading
Not reached yet
Not reached

We don't have a plain-language summary for First reading yet. The official source linked below is the full record.

Step 2
Second reading
Not reached yet
Not reached

We don't have a plain-language summary for Second reading yet. The official source linked below is the full record.

Step 3
Consideration in committee
Not reached yet
Not reached

We don't have a plain-language summary for Consideration in committee yet. The official source linked below is the full record.

Step 4
Report stage
Not reached yet
Not reached

We don't have a plain-language summary for Report stage yet. The official source linked below is the full record.

Step 5
Third reading
Not reached yet
Not reached

We don't have a plain-language summary for Third reading yet. The official source linked below is the full record.

Debate and sitting links point to official parliamentary sources when LEGISinfo publishes them. Any plain-language discussion summaries should be generated from those official texts and reviewed before public display.

Vote Summary

No published recorded division

This bill is still active. We only show vote counts after the legislature publishes a recorded division.

Sponsor
Mac Harb
Senator | Details not listed in current Senate roster
Jurisdiction
Federal Parliament

No published representative vote breakdown

This bill is still moving through the process. When a recorded division is published, representative positions can be listed here.

Official sources

Status, sponsor, votes, and timeline on this page are drawn from these official legislative sources and public records. Each summary above is attributed to its own source.

How this data is sourced