· Bill / Repeal of broad regulation-making power · enacted
Bill 5 — Repeal of Broad Regulation-Making Power for Protection of Privacy Act
Bill 5 repeals a section of the Protection of Privacy Act that previously allowed the Lieutenant Governor in Council to make broad regulatory amendments to any Act or regulation to implement the Act.
What changed
- Section 62.1 of the Protection of Privacy Act is repealed.
- This section previously allowed the Lieutenant Governor in Council (LGIC) to amend any Act or regulation by regulation to make "necessary changes" resulting from the Protection of Privacy Act.
- The LGIC's power under this section could override regulations made by other members of the Executive Council or other bodies.
Why it matters
- The repeal removes a broad executive power to unilaterally modify the legislative framework for privacy protection.
- Future "necessary changes" related to the Protection of Privacy Act will likely require legislative amendment rather than executive regulation.
- This change limits the executive's ability to centralize or streamline implementation of the Act through regulation.
Other governance concerns
- Reduced executive discretion in amending legislation
- Increased legislative oversight for future changes
Primary sources (1)
- Primary sourceGovernment documentBill 5 – Miscellaneous Statutes Amendment Act, 2025 (Alberta Legislative Assembly)