Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The original Municipal Government Act (known as Bill 23) was introduced by Edgar Gerhart in the Alberta Legislature in 1968 during the 1st Session of the 16th Alberta Legislature, along with the Municipal Election Act (now known as the Local Authorities Election Act). It came into effect on June 1, 1968, and defines the laws and rules under ...
Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Accurate News and Information Act; Alberta Health Insurance Act (1935)
At the time that Alberta was created, the basics of its structure were set out in a statute passed by the federal parliament, the Alberta Act (1905). This is considered a constitutional document and is listed as such in the appendix to the Constitution Act, 1982. Nevertheless, Alberta has always had the power to change its own internal ...
The underlying framework for the regulation of Alberta's electric industry is the Electric Utilities Act. The Act began Alberta's deregulated electricity market in 1996, where the province began to restructure its electricity market away from traditional cost-of-service regulation to a market-based system. [1]
The Alberta Act (French: Loi sur l'Alberta), effective September 1, 1905, was the act of the Parliament of Canada that created the province of Alberta. The act is similar in nature to the Saskatchewan Act, which established the province of Saskatchewan at the same time. Like the Saskatchewan Act, the Alberta Act was controversial because (sec ...
In 2002, there were 62 changes made to the Act. [2]: i–vi This included amendments, references and potential changes to other acts such as the Traffic Safety Act, Vital Statistics Act, Election Act, Health Information Act, [3] Mines and Minerals Act, [4] Electronic Transactions Act, Occupational Health and Safety Act and the Municipal Government Act.
This page was last edited on 27 September 2019, at 09:47 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The Civil Enforcement Act, S.A. 1994, c.C-10.5, is a law in Alberta, Canada. The law gave responsibility for seizures, evictions, repossessions, and enforcing court orders to authorized civil enforcement agencies.