Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Dog, cat custody to be built into B.C. laws

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Mar, 2023 04:41 PM
  • Dog, cat custody to be built into B.C. laws

VICTORIA - The important role pets play in families who are separating is being addressed in proposed amendments to British Columbia's Family Law Act.

Attorney General Niki Sharma says amendments she introduced in B.C.'s legislature will clarify the law around pets, property and pensions for couples and families going through a separation or divorce.

She says the amendments, if passed, will provide more guidance for people and judges involved in a legal dispute.

The changes would require the consideration of factors that include each person's ability and willingness to care for a pet, the relationship a child has with the animal and the risk of family violence or threat of cruelty.

Sharma says other proposed amendments to the law would include making it easier to equitably divide property and improve the division of pensions.

The government says in a statement that the amendments are based on a review over several years of the Family Law Act to address both changes in society and developments in case law.

Sharma says in the statement that dividing a family can be an incredibly difficult experience and the changes will help make that easier.

She says the proposed amendments "better reflect the priorities and values of people today, including making sure the important role pets play in families is considered in the separation process."

V. Victoria Shroff, an animal law specialist at Shroff and Associates, says the changes reflect how pets are valued as unique family members by society, rather than inanimate property like furniture.

"Having relevant factors to consider for these difficult decisions will bring more clarity and is a welcome change," she says in the statement.

Another proposed change would make it easier to equally divide property by preventing the use of an outdated principle called the presumption of advancement, the government says.

"Historically, this principle applied only to property transferred from husband to wife, not a wife to their husband, or between same-sex spouses or unmarried spouses," the statement says.

MORE National ARTICLES

Another winter storms sweeps over parts of B.C.

Another winter storms sweeps over parts of B.C.
Environment Canada says another winter blast is hammering northwestern parts of the province and is expected to hit the south coast before Thursday. The weather office says 5 to 15 centimetres is expected over higher elevations of the North Shore, west and central sections of the Fraser Valley and along the Sea-to-Sky corridor.

Another winter storms sweeps over parts of B.C.

Langara College exposer Christopher Ram pleads guilty to indecent act

Langara College exposer Christopher Ram pleads guilty to indecent act
Christopher Ram, 36, pleaded guilty to the March 27, 2022 offence, as well as another indecent act that occurred April 17 at Foster Park, near Kingsway and Boundary Road. 

Langara College exposer Christopher Ram pleads guilty to indecent act

Lone male barricades himself in a residence with reported weapons: Burnaby RCMP

Lone male barricades himself in a residence with reported weapons: Burnaby RCMP
Attempts to negotiate and deescalate the situation were unsuccessful, and shortly after 11:40 p.m. the male attempted to lower himself from a third story window. He was arrested at ground level with the assistance of a police dog and taken to hospital with non-life threatening injuries. 

Lone male barricades himself in a residence with reported weapons: Burnaby RCMP

Police seek suspects who rammed an occupied Police vehicle

Police seek suspects who rammed an occupied Police vehicle
The suspects are believed to be driving a grey newer-model Toyota Tacoma with significant front-end damage. The vehicle was last seen driving west-bound on Pitt River Road in Port Coquitlam. The officer was transported to hospital for non-life-threatening injuries.

Police seek suspects who rammed an occupied Police vehicle

B.C. advocates cheer free contraception plan

B.C. advocates cheer free contraception plan
The new program set to take effect April 1 will cover prescription contraception options, including most oral hormone pills, contraceptive injections, copper and hormonal intrauterine devices and subdermal implants, along with so-called Plan B, also known as the morning-after pill.

B.C. advocates cheer free contraception plan

House Republicans launch northern border caucus

House Republicans launch northern border caucus
The new 28-member Northern Border Security Caucus is focused exclusively on what it calls a badly under-resourced, largely unnoticed national security concern that just happens to be the longest international border in the world.    

House Republicans launch northern border caucus