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At the time that the Interpretation Act (1867) was passed, [3] the Statutes of Canada were required to be distributed and published at the end of each session of parliament. [4] This was changed in 1984, with the volumes of the Statutes of Canada being required to be distributed and published at the end of each calendar year.
The Canadian Fraternal Association / L’Association Fraternelle Canadienne (CFA-AFC) was a trade association based in Waterloo, Ontario, for fraternal benefit societies in Canada which engaged in advocacy on their behalf as well as provided services. It was dissolved in July 11, 2016.
Canadian Snowbird Association political; Canadian Wildlife Federation is an Ottawa-based Canadian non-profit organization founded in 1961 whose mandate is wildlife conservation in Canada. [11] [12] [13] Canadian Youth for Choice abortion rights; Canadians for Equal Marriage LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender) rights
The Canadian Professional Sales Association, commonly known as CPSA, was a Canadian association for sales professionals. CPSA was a not-for-profit association with over 10,000 members. Prior to its operational wind-down at the end of 2024, CPSA offered professional sales designations, sales training and a membership cost-savings program.
The Congress of Union Retirees of Canada (French: Association des syndicalistes à la retraite du Canada) is an affiliate of the Canadian Labour Congress established in 1991. [2] Over half a million people belong to the retiree organization.
The Revised Statutes of Canada (French: Lois révisées du Canada, R.S.C. or RSC) consolidates current federal laws in force, incorporating amendments into acts, adding new substantive acts enacted since the last revision and deleting rescinded acts. Supplements to the RSC contain new or amended statutes, while consolidations republish laws for ...
The Ontario Bar Association (OBA) is a bar association representing more than 16,000 lawyers, judges, notaries, law teachers, and law students from across Ontario. It is also a branch of the Canadian Bar Association. Approximately two-thirds of all practicing lawyers in Canada belong to the CBA.
The national association, first known as the Canadian Accountants' Association, was founded in 1908 by a trio of Canadian Pacific Railway accountants in Montreal, Quebec. Five years later, in 1913, the General Accountants' Association, as it was then known, was granted a charter from the government of Canada.