Bill S-236 explained in plain English
An Act to amend the Canadian Victims Bill of Rights and to establish a framework for implementing the rights of victims of crime
Federal Parliament bill summary, status, timeline, sponsor, votes, and official sources.
At a glance
Official Parliament of Canada snapshot for 45th Parliament, 1st 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.
Our plain-language take, written for civic education.
Source: By PoliticalData.ca
Bill S-236 enhances victims' rights under the Canadian Victims Bill of Rights by expanding access to information, support services, and reparations, while requiring training and reporting on implementation.
Bill S-236 amends the Canadian Victims Bill of Rights to strengthen victims' rights, including automatic access to information about criminal cases, support services, reparations, and enforcement mechanisms. It also requires training for criminal justice system employees and establishes reporting obligations for the Minister of Justice.
- Amends the Canadian Victims Bill of Rights to automatically grant victims access to information about investigations, offenders, and court proceedings without needing to request it.
- Adds new rights for victims to access support services and seek reparations for harm caused by crimes.
- Requires the criminal justice system to enforce victims' rights and ensure procedural fairness.
- Mandates the Minister of Justice to develop training for criminal justice employees on victims' rights within 180 days of the bill's enactment.
- Establishes reporting requirements for the Minister of Justice, including a report within one year of the bill's passage and a follow-up report assessing effectiveness within five years.
- Prohibits laws or practices that undermine victims' rights to access justice and procedural fairness.
- Victims of crime
- Criminal justice system employees (police, prosecutors, judges, etc.)
- Minister of Justice and federal government departments
- Parliament and members of the public (through reporting requirements)
- The exact scope of 'support services' and 'reparations' is not defined in the bill text.
- The specific content of the training programs required by the bill is not detailed.
- The bill does not specify penalties for failing to comply with training or reporting requirements.
Expands victims' rights to information, support services, reparations, and enforcement. Prohibits laws that undermine these rights.
Mandates training for employees in the criminal justice system on victims' rights, with training required within 180 days of the bill's enactment.
Requires the Minister of Justice to table and publish reports on victims' rights implementation, with the first report due within one year of the bill's passage and a second report within five years.
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 textParliamentary Process
We don't have a plain-language summary for First reading yet. The official source linked below is the full record.
The Senate debated bills related to Ukrainian heritage, forced sterilization, and trade policies, with discussions highlighting historical accountability and cultural recognition.
The Senate debate transcript includes discussions on several bills and motions. Bill S-210, which establishes Ukrainian Heritage Month, was debated with focus on cultural recognition and historical context. Bill S-228, addressing forced sterilization in the Criminal Code, faced scrutiny over its legal implications and historical accuracy. Other topics included trade restrictions, economic diplomacy, and the monument to Ukrainian internment. The third reading of bills was mentioned as a procedural step, with some speakers emphasizing the importance of historical accountability and survivor testimonies.
We don't have a plain-language summary for Second reading yet. The official source linked below is the full record.
We don't have a plain-language summary for Third reading yet. The official source linked below is the full record.
We don't have a plain-language summary for First reading yet. The official source linked below is the full record.
We don't have a plain-language summary for Second reading yet. The official source linked below is the full record.
We don't have a plain-language summary for Consideration in committee yet. The official source linked below is the full record.
We don't have a plain-language summary for Report stage yet. The official source linked below is the full record.
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
This bill is still active. We only show vote counts after the legislature publishes a recorded division.
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