Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Feds reintroduce assisted dying bill

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Oct, 2020 10:38 PM
  • Feds reintroduce assisted dying bill

The federal government has reintroduced legislation to amend Canada's law on medical assistance in dying, just two months before a court-imposed deadline.

The government has until Dec. 18 to amend the law to comply with a Quebec court ruling last fall, which found it was unconstitutional to allow only those whose natural death is "reasonably foreseeable" to be able to get medical help to end their suffering.

Justice Minister David Lametti introduced a bill in response to that ruling last February but it didn't get beyond the initial stage of the legislative process before the House of Commons adjourned in mid-March due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

That bill died when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau prorogued Parliament last month.

The government now has just two months to get the new bill, which is identical to the one introduced last winter, through both the Commons and the Senate.

The bill scraps reasonably foreseeable death as a requirement for an assisted death but retains the concept to set out easier eligibility rules for those who are near death and more stringent rules for those who aren't.

MORE National ARTICLES

Mail part of ElectionsBC plan for safe COVID vote

Mail part of ElectionsBC plan for safe COVID vote
Chief electoral officer Anton Boegman says it involves measures to ensure safe voting procedures for people who want to cast ballots at polling stations and enhanced opportunities to vote by mail.

Mail part of ElectionsBC plan for safe COVID vote

PM to deliver national address on COVID-19

PM to deliver national address on COVID-19
The federal Liberals are expected to lay out plans for child care, affordable housing and navigating the economic fallout of the pandemic as part of throne speech cast in the shadow of rising COVID-19 cases.

PM to deliver national address on COVID-19

WATCH: Trump Says No To Being Part Of International Vaccine Initiative-Canada joins in

WATCH: Trump Says No To Being Part Of  International Vaccine Initiative-Canada joins in
WATCH: US rejects a global vaccine sharing effort but Canada supports 'Vaccine for all.'

WATCH: Trump Says No To Being Part Of International Vaccine Initiative-Canada joins in

Supreme Court weighs carbon tax constitutionality

Supreme Court weighs carbon tax constitutionality
In 2019, appeals courts in Saskatchewan and Ontario determined the policy was constitutional, while in February of this year the Alberta Court of Appeal said it was not.

Supreme Court weighs carbon tax constitutionality

Quebec woman faces charge of threatening Trump

Quebec woman faces charge of threatening Trump
Officials in the U.S. say the letter sent to Washington, D.C., was intercepted at a mail sorting facility on Friday before it reached the White House.

Quebec woman faces charge of threatening Trump

Teddy expected to propel storm surge

Teddy expected to propel storm surge
Chuck Porter, the minister responsible for Nova Scotia's Emergency Management Office, told reporters his biggest concern was the threat of storm surges accompanied by 10-metre waves.

Teddy expected to propel storm surge