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A bill that would have stiffened penalties for those who assault healthcare workers won’t go away, according to the B. C. Nurses Union, is disappointed. After Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s resignation and the corresponding prorogation of Parliament, Bill C-321 passed away on the order paper as it was nearly finished the national legislative process. If passed, the legislation would have made crime against first responders and health-care workers a contributing factor to punishment. 1: 51
Senate hears from B. C. caregivers on act tackling violence against primary firefighters” We will definitely start over. The cause may continue. But it is very disappointing”, said Adriane Gear, leader of the B. C. Nurses Union. Gear claimed that the rules would have sent a powerful message to both the general public and healthcare workers who felt their health was being neglected. One of several pieces of legislation with a future uncertain, B.C. MP Todd Dorhety sponsored, was act C-321, a secret person’s costs. Funding promises for everything from nursery to transportation to accommodation are also currently in doubt. According to B.C. Premier David Eby,” we will look at the repercussions for British Columbia given the fact that important pieces of legislation weren’t passed by the federal government and may have had an impact on funding that was announced but no delivered,” he said on Tuesday. 1: 38
Problems ahead as B. C. impacted by Justin Trudeau’s resignation” But I’ll be harsh and frank and say that we saw a lot of presentations of money that weren’t delivered to British Columbia, whether or not the federal government was sitting, so we are prepared for that “.The one piece of proposed regulations that hasn’t yet passed but may still affect British Columbians is shifts to Canada’s capital gains tax. The Canada Revenue Agency claims it will continue to follow the new, higher level until a new federal signals a different course in the upcoming tax season. &, copy 2025 Global News, a section of Corus Entertainment Inc.