This guide lists selected sources of information concerning the creation of statute law in the province of Ontario. You can use the references to find the date and the text of laws in various stages of development.
Proposed laws are presented to the Legislative Assembly as bills. Bills are numbered consecutively as they are introduced from the beginning of the session. Private members' bills are numbered with a prefix so that they can be distinguished from government bills. Bills are approved in three stages (readings) during which they may be changed. After final approval (third reading) by the Legislature the bill must receive approval by the Crown (Royal Assent) to become an act (statute ). The bill gets a chapter number and immediately has the force of law unless otherwise noted. Those acts or sections of acts that do not come into force at the time of Royal Assent are proclaimed at a later date. Existing statutes may be changed (amended) only by the passage of a new bill which may amend all or part of the existing law.
For more information please look at the Ontario Legislative Process under the Legislative Process tab.
The texts of acts or statutes are found in the following:
Print:
» Statutes of Ontario (King) KEO 185.O568
» Revised Statutes of Ontario (Seneca @ York, King) REF KEO185 .O56
Electronic:
E-Laws - Legislative Tables
CanLii
Nexis Uni
Statutory law can be altered by one of the following: 1) Other acts of the legislature (amendments or repeals); 2) Judicial or administrative tribunals interpretations (Case Law); and 3) Declarations of Constitutional Invalidity (Striking down).
Consult the following to determine if there have been any changes to a statute since the last consolidation:
Boundaries Act, | R.S.O. | 1990, | c.B.10 | I-21, | s.3(1) |
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 |
A correct legal citation of a statute consists of the above-numbered parts:
Statutes often empower administrative agencies (Lieutenant Governor, Minister, Board, Commission or tribunal) to make rules (regulations) without the need for further legislation. These regulations provide detail about how a statute is to be implemented. ie. Definitions, licensing requirements, registration requirements, performance specifications etc.
Electronic:
E-Laws Legistlative tables - Regulations
CanLii
Nexis Uni
Revised
Commercial Motor Vehicle Inspections | R.R.O. | 1990, | Reg. 575 |
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
Not revised
Ontario Tax Credit System | O. Reg. | 1992, | Reg. 364 |
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
A correct legal citation of an Ontario Regulation consists of the following parts:
The Ontario Regulations contain abbreviations that signify: "Revised Regulations of Ontario" in the first sample, and "Ontario Regulations" in the second.
To determine the dates on which a bill has passed through its various stages, consult the following:
E-Laws - Legislative Tables - Consolidated Public Statutes - Detailed Legislative History
Legislative Assembly of Ontario - Bills & Lawmaking
To determine the date upon which a bill received royal assent consult:
To find the date upon which an act, or parts thereof, come into force consult one of the following
Electronic:
E-Laws - Legislative Tables - Proclamations
Annual Statutes of Ontario
Bill 5,
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An Act to Amend the Motor Vehicle Act,
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4th sess.,
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51st Leg.,
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New Brunswick,
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1991, cl.2.
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1
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2
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3
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4
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5
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6
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There are six elements that comprise the citation, each element being separated by a comma:
The Canadian Uniform Legal Citation, or McGill Guide as it is more commonly known, establishes the legal citation standard in Canada. Find standards for citing case law, bills, by-laws, statutes, regulations, legal monographs, articles from Canadian law journals, government documents, common international law sources, and legal abbreviations.
For most up-to-dated information on Ontario BILLS, you can access the Legislative Assembly of Ontario website. From this page, click on "House Documents".