Source: https://www.global-regulation.com/law/canada/503989/conflicts-of-interest-act.html
Timestamp: 2018-11-16 20:39:06
Document Index: 1033528

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 2', 'art 3', 'art 4', 'art 4', 'art 4', 'art\n23', 'art\n23', 'art 5', 'art 7', 'art 8', 'art 3', 'art 5', 'art 3', 'art 2', 'art 1', 'art\n23', 'art\n23', 'art.\n23', 'art.\n24', 'art 6', 'art 6', 'art 5', 'art 9', 'art 1', 'art 2', 'art 3', 'art 6', 'art 3']

Conflicts of Interest Act (Canada)
Link to law: http://www.qp.alberta.ca/1266.cfm?page=C23.cfm≤g_type=Acts&isbncln=9780779786176&display=html
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST ACT CONFLICTS OF INTEREST ACT
Chapter C‑23
Part 2 Obligations of Members
2 Decisions furthering private interests
4 Insider information
5 Constituency matters
6 Offices and employment
7 Gifts, benefits from persons other than the Crown
7.1 Travel on non‑commercial aircraft
8 Contracts with the Crown
9 Payments from the Crown
10 Deemed Member
Part 3 Disclosure
11 Disclosure statements
12 Contents of disclosure statement
13 Meeting with Members
14 Public disclosure statements
15 Returns relating to persons directly associated
16 President of Treasury Board and Minister of Finance’s report
17 Filing of public disclosure statements
18 Failure to file
19 Reimbursement for costs
Part 4 Members of the Executive Council and Leader of Her Majesty’s Loyal Opposition
20 Restriction on holdings
21 Employment restrictions
22 Time for compliance
23 Leader of the opposition
Part 4.1 Former Ministers
23.1 Restrictions on former Ministers
23.11 Waiver or reduction
23.12 Breach and offence
23.13 Breach for awarding contract
Part 4.2 Premier’s and Ministers’ Staff
23.2 Decisions furthering private interests
23.3 Influence
23.4 Insider information
23.41 Code of conduct
23.5 Restriction on holdings
23.6 Disclosure statements
23.61 Returns relating to persons directly associated
23.62 Failure to file
23.63 Retention of statements and returns
23.64 Reimbursement for costs
23.7 Post-employment restrictions
23.71 Waiver or reduction
23.72 Offence
23.8 Investigations under this Part
23.81 Ethics Commissioner’s report under this Part
23.9 Regulations
Part 5 Investigations into Breaches
24 Requests for investigation
26 Confidentiality
27 Ethics Commissioner’s report
28 Tabling of report
29 Powers of the Legislative Assembly
30.1 Administrative penalties for late filing
30.2 Appeal of administrative penalty
Part 7 Ethics Commissioner
33 Appointment
34 Term of office
35 Resignation
36 Suspension or removal
37 Acting Ethics Commissioner
38 Remuneration
39 Oath 40 Office of the Ethics Commissioner
41 Financing of operations
42 General duties of Ethics Commissioner
43 Binding advice and recommendations
44 General advice and recommendations
45 Actions against Ethics Commissioner and others
46 Annual report
47 Records management
Part 8 Review
48 Review of Act
WHEREAS the ethical conduct of elected officials is expected in democracies;
WHEREAS Members of the Legislative Assembly can serve Albertans most effectively if they come from a spectrum of occupations and continue to participate actively in the community;
WHEREAS Members of the Legislative Assembly are expected to perform their duties of office and arrange their private affairs in a manner that promotes public confidence and trust in the integrity of each Member, that maintains the Assembly’s dignity and that justifies the respect in which society holds the Assembly and its Members;
WHEREAS Members of the Legislative Assembly, in reconciling their duties of office and their private interests, are expected to act with integrity and impartiality;
WHEREAS Ministers and their staff must avoid conduct that violates the public trust or creates an appearance of impropriety; and
WHEREAS the adoption of clear and consistent conflict of interest rules, post‑employment restrictions and reporting duties will promote these aims;
(a) “blind trust” means a blind trust approved under section 20(4) or section 23.5(4), as appropriate;
(a.1) “Crown” means the Crown in right of Alberta and includes a Provincial agency;
(a.2) “former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff” means an employee who has ceased to hold a position referred to in clause (c.1);
(b) “former Minister” means a person who has ceased to be a member of the Executive Council, whether or not the person is a Member of the Legislative Assembly;
(b.1) “investment arrangement” means an investment arrangement approved under section 20(5) or section 23.5(5), as appropriate;
(c) “Member” means a Member of the Legislative Assembly and includes a Minister whether or not the Minister is a Member of the Legislative Assembly;
(c.1) “member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff” means an employee providing services other than administrative support who holds
(i) a position in the Office of the Premier or an office of a Minister, or
(ii) a position in any other office designated by the Chief of Staff, Office of the Premier;
(d) “Minister” means a member of the Executive Council;
(e) “minor child” includes a minor to whom a Member has demonstrated a settled intention to treat as a child of the Member’s family;
(f) “private corporation” means a corporation none of whose shares are publicly‑traded securities;
(g) “private interest” does not include the following:
(i) an interest in a matter
(A) that is of general application,
(B) that affects an individual as one of a broad class of the public, or
(C) that concerns the remuneration and benefits of an individual;
` (ii) an interest that is trivial;
(iii) an interest of an individual relating to publicly‑traded securities held in that individual’s blind trust or in an investment arrangement;
(h) “Provincial agency” means a Provincial agency as defined in the Financial Administration Act, and includes a management body within the meaning of the Alberta Housing Act and a regional health authority and a subsidiary health corporation under the Regional Health Authorities Act;
(i) “publicly‑traded securities” means
(i) securities of a corporation that are listed or posted for trading on a recognized stock exchange, or
(ii) securities of a corporation that has more than 15 shareholders and any of whose issued securities were part of a distribution to the public;
(j) “securities” means
(i) shares of any class or series of shares of a corporation, or
(ii) bonds, debentures, notes or other evidence of indebtedness or guarantees of a corporation, whether secured or unsecured,
but does not include shares or units in a mutual fund;
(k) “senior officer” means, with reference to a corporation,
(i) the president, vice‑president, secretary, comptroller, treasurer or general manager of the corporation, or
(ii) any other person who performs functions for the corporation similar to those normally performed by persons holding the offices referred to in subclause (i);
(l) “spouse” means the spouse of a married person who is a Member but does not include a spouse who is living separate and apart from the Member if the Member and spouse have separated pursuant to a written separation agreement or if their support obligations and family property have been dealt with by a court order;
(m) “Standing Committee” means the Standing Committee on Legislative Offices.
(2) For the purposes of this Act, securities of a corporation
(a) issued on a conversion of other securities, or
(b) issued in exchange for other securities
are deemed to be securities that are part of a distribution to the public if those other securities were part of a distribution to the public.
(3) Subject to subsection (4), for the purposes of this Act, securities of a corporation
(a) are part of a distribution to the public if, in respect of the securities, there has been a filing of a prospectus, statement of material facts, registration statement, securities exchange take‑over bid circular or similar document under the laws of Canada, a province or territory or of a jurisdiction outside Canada, or
(b) are deemed to be part of a distribution to the public if the securities have been issued and a filing referred to in clause (a) would be required if the securities were being issued currently.
(4) On the application of a Member who owns or is a beneficial owner of securities of a corporation, the Ethics Commissioner may determine, for the purposes of this Act, whether the securities of the corporation are or were part of a distribution to the public.
(5) For the purposes of this Act, a person is directly associated with a Member if that person is
(a) the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner,
(b) a corporation having share capital and carrying on business or activities for profit or gain and the Member is a director or senior officer of the corporation,
(c) a private corporation carrying on business or activities for profit or gain and the Member owns or is the beneficial owner of shares of the corporation,
(i) of which the Member is a partner, or
(ii) of which one of the partners is a corporation directly associated with the Member by reason of clause (b) or (c),
(e) a person or group of persons acting with the express or implied consent of the Member.
(5.1) For the purposes of this Act, a corporation is a subsidiary of another corporation if
(a) securities of the corporation to which are attached more than 50% of the votes that may be cast to elect directors of the corporation are held, otherwise than by way of security only, directly or indirectly, whether through one or more subsidiaries or otherwise, by or for the benefit of the other corporation, and
(b) the votes attached to those securities are sufficient, if exercised, to elect a majority of the directors of the corporation.
(6) Subsection (5)(c) does not apply where the corporation is
(a) an association as defined in the Co‑operative Associations Act or a cooperative as defined in the Cooperatives Act,
(b) a credit union continued or incorporated under the Credit Union Act,
(c) a co‑operative credit society incorporated by or under an Act of the Parliament of Canada, or
(d) The United Farmers of Alberta Co‑Operative Limited.
(7) For the purposes of this Act, a trust is a “blind trust” if it meets the following criteria:
(a) a Member is the settlor of the trust;
(b) the trustee is approved as trustee by the Ethics Commissioner after the Ethics Commissioner is satisfied that there is no relationship between the Member and the trustee that would affect or would appear to affect the discharge of the trustee’s duties;
(c) the terms of the trust, in the opinion of the Ethics Commissioner,
(i) give the trustee sole power over investment decisions,
(ii) preclude the Member from having any knowledge of the specific investments in the trust at any time after a deposit in the trust,
(iii) require that the Member may deposit in the trust only securities verified by the Ethics Commissioner as being publicly‑traded securities, shares or units in a mutual fund, futures and forward contracts or exchange contracts, and
(iv) require the trustee to invest only in publicly‑traded securities, in shares or units in a mutual fund, in futures and forward contracts, in exchange contracts or in certificates of deposit, deposit receipts or other evidence of indebtedness given by a bank, trust company, credit union or treasury branch in consideration of a deposit made with the bank, trust company, credit union or treasury branch.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s1;2001 cC‑28.1 s449;2001 c23 s1(9); 2002 cA‑4.5 s26;2007 c28 s3;2014 c8 s17;2014 c9 s1(3)
Decisions furthering private interests
2(1) A Member breaches this Act if the Member takes part in a decision in the course of carrying out the Member’s office or powers knowing that the decision might further a private interest of the Member, a person directly associated with the Member or the Member’s minor or adult child.
(2) Where a matter for decision in which a Member has reasonable grounds to believe that the Member, the Member’s minor or adult child or a person directly associated with the Member has a private interest is before a meeting of the Executive Council or a committee of the Executive Council or the Legislative Assembly or a committee appointed by resolution of the Legislative Assembly, the Member must, if present at the meeting, declare that interest and must withdraw from the meeting without voting on or participating in the consideration of the matter.
(3) A Member who fails to comply with subsection (2) breaches this Act.
(4) If a matter referred to in subsection (1) requires a decision of a Minister, the Minister may request another Minister to act in the Minister’s stead in connection with the decision and the Minister to whom it is referred may act in the matter for the period of time necessary.
(5) In the case of a meeting of the Legislative Assembly or a committee of it, where a Member has complied with subsection (2), the Clerk of the Legislative Assembly or the secretary of the meeting shall file with the Ethics Commissioner, as soon as practicable, a copy of the deliberations and proceedings, as recorded in Alberta Hansard, of the meeting from which the Member withdrew.
(6) In the case of a meeting of the Executive Council or a committee of it, where a Member has complied with subsection (2), the secretary of the meeting shall record
(a) the declaration,
(b) the general nature of the private interest declared, and
(c) the withdrawal of the Member from the meeting.
(7) The secretary of the meeting shall file the information recorded under subsection (6) with the Ethics Commissioner as soon as practicable after the meeting.
(8) Information filed with the Ethics Commissioner under subsection (7) is confidential and may not be disclosed or inspected, but the information may be inspected and used by the Ethics Commissioner if the information is likely to be material in determining whether a Member has breached this Act.
(9) If no record was kept of who was present at a meeting at the time a matter for decision arose in which a Member, a Member’s minor or adult child or a person directly associated with a Member had a private interest, no inference that the Member was present at the meeting at the time the matter arose can be made for the purposes of determining whether there was a breach under subsection (2).
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s2;2007 c28 s4
3 A Member breaches this Act if the Member uses the Member’s office or powers to influence or to seek to influence a decision to be made by or on behalf of the Crown to further a private interest of the Member, a person directly associated with the Member or the Member’s minor child or to improperly further another person’s private interest.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s3;2007 c28 s5
4 A Member breaches this Act if the Member uses or communicates information not available to the general public that was gained by the Member in the course of carrying out the Member’s office or powers to further or seek to further a private interest of the Member or another person’s private interest.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s4;2007 c28 s6
5 A Member does not breach this Act if the activity is one in which Members of the Legislative Assembly normally engage.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s5;2007 c28 s7
Offices and employment
6(1) A Member breaches this Act if the Member
(a) is at the time of being sworn in as a Member, or becomes at any time after being sworn in as a Member,
(i) an employee of the Crown in right of Canada, whether the employment is permanent or temporary or on a full‑time or part‑time basis, or
(ii) the holder of an office by reason of an appointment by or at the nomination of the Governor in Council or a Minister of the Crown in right of Canada, and to which a salary is attached,
(b) becomes at any time while a Member
(i) an employee of the Crown, whether the employment is permanent or temporary or on a full‑time or part‑time basis, or
(ii) the holder of any of the offices set out in the Schedule.
(2) If a person is, immediately before becoming a Member,
(a) an employee of the Crown, whether the employment is permanent or temporary or on a full‑time or part‑time basis, or
(b) the holder of any of the offices set out in the Schedule,
that person, on becoming a Member, ceases to be an employee of the Crown or the holder of the office, as the case may be, notwithstanding any other Act or law in force in Alberta.
(3) A Member does not breach this section by reason of being appointed to an office set out in the Schedule in the Member’s capacity as a Minister if the Member receives no remuneration as the holder of that office other than reasonable travelling and living expenses incurred in the course of serving in that office.
(4) Employment with the Crown held pursuant to a contract of employment shall be governed by this section and not by section 8.
1991 cC‑22.1 s6
Gifts, benefits from persons other than the Crown
7(1) A Member breaches this Act if the Member or, to the knowledge of the Member, the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner or minor child accepts from a person other than the Crown a fee, gift or other benefit that is connected, directly or indirectly, with the performance of the Member’s office.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a non-monetary gift or other non-monetary benefit that is accepted by the Member or the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner or minor child from the Member’s political party or constituency association, a charitable organization or a Canadian government, whether federal, provincial, territorial or municipal.
(3) Subsection (1) does not apply to a fee, gift or other benefit that is accepted by the Member or the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner or minor child as an incident of protocol or of the social obligations that normally accompany the Member’s office
(a) if the value of the fee, non-monetary gift or other non-monetary benefit given to the Member, the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner or minor children does not exceed $200,
(b) in the case of tickets and invitations to events, if the total value of all tickets and invitations to events accepted by the Member and the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner and minor children from the same source in any calendar year does not exceed $400;
(c) in the case of the invitation of a Member to a conference or meeting in respect of which the Member accepts a waiver of the attendance fee and the payment or reimbursement of reasonable travel expenses incurred for the Member’s attendance at the conference or meeting, if the total value of attendance fees waived and travel expenses paid or reimbursed by the same source in any calendar year does not exceed $400;
(d) in any other case, if the Member applies to the Ethics Commissioner
(i) before or as soon as practicable after the Member receives a fee, gift or benefit, or
(ii) as soon as practicable after the Member has knowledge that the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner or minor child will receive or has received a fee, gift or benefit,
and either obtains the Ethics Commissioner’s approval to retain the fee, gift or benefit on any conditions the Ethics Commissioner determines or, if the approval is refused, takes any steps that the Ethics Commissioner directs.
(4) The Ethics Commissioner may give an approval under subsection (3)(d) only if the Ethics Commissioner is satisfied that there is no reasonable possibility that retention of the fee, gift or other benefit will create a conflict between a private interest and the public duty of the Member.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s7;2014 c9 1(4);2002 cA‑4.5 s26; 2007 c28 s8;2014 c9 s1(4)
Travel on non‑commercial aircraft
7.1(1) In this section, “non‑commercial chartered or private aircraft” does not include a non‑commercial aircraft chartered by the Crown or a private aircraft owned or leased by the Crown.
(2) A Member breaches this Act if the Member accepts an offer of travel on a non‑commercial chartered or private aircraft that is connected, directly or indirectly, with the performance of the Member’s office, unless
(a) the travel is required for the performance of the Member’s office,
(b) there are exceptional circumstances warranting the acceptance of the travel, or
(c) the member receives approval from the Ethics Commissioner before accepting the travel.
(3) An approval by the Ethics Commissioner under subsection (2)(c)
(a) may be given only if the Ethics Commissioner is of the opinion that the acceptance will not create a conflict between a private interest and the public duty of the Member, and
(b) may be given subject to any conditions determined by the Ethics Commissioner.
(4) Within 30 days after accepting an offer of travel under this section, a Member shall report the following in the form and manner determined by the Ethics Commissioner:
(a) the date, place of origin and destination of the travel;
(b) the person who provided the travel;
(c) the circumstances in which the travel was accepted;
(d) any other information determined by the Ethics Commissioner.
(5) The Ethics Commissioner may publish information reported under subsection (4) on the Ethics Commissioner’s website in a form that the Ethics Commissioner considers appropriate.
2007 c28 s9;2014 c9 s1(5)
Contracts with the Crown
8(1) A Member breaches this Act if, while being a Member, the Member or a person directly associated with the Member or with the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner becomes a party to a contract within any of the following classes:
(a) a contract under which the Member or the person directly associated with the Member or with the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner borrows money from a treasury branch;
(b) a contract under which the Member or the person directly associated with the Member or with the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner conveys or agrees to convey to the Crown any interest in land otherwise than
(i) by consenting to the acquisition by the Crown of the interest under section 30 of the Expropriation Act and executing a conveyance under that section, or
(ii) with the approval of the Ethics Commissioner on certification that the consideration for the conveyance is fair and reasonable;
(c) a contract to which the Crown is also a party and that is for the construction, demolition, alteration or repair of a public work;
(d) a contract under which the Agriculture Financial Services Corporation lends money to, or guarantees a debt of, the Member or the person directly associated with the Member or with the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner;
(e) repealed 2007 c28 s10;
(f) a contract to which the Crown is also a party, other than a contract referred to in clauses (a) to (e), if the Member or the person directly associated with the Member or with the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner receives a preference from the Crown on entering into the contract or receives a benefit under the contract not available to other members of the public under contracts of the same class.
(2) Subsection (1)(f) does not prevent a Member or a person directly associated with the Member or with the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner from becoming a party to a contract with the Crown if the contract provides for a payment or benefit permitted under section 9(2)(a), (b) or (c).
(3) Where a contract to which the Crown is also a party, other than a contract referred to in subsection (1)(a) to (e), is entered into in which a Member or a person directly associated with a Member or with the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner is a party but did not receive a preference from the Crown or a benefit under the contract not available to other members of the public under contracts of the same class, the Minister responsible for the department or the agency or other body of the Crown that awarded the contract
(a) must advise the Ethics Commissioner of the contract, and
(b) must provide to the Ethics Commissioner a statutory declaration setting out
(i) the procedure used for awarding the contract, and
(ii) that the Member or the person directly associated with a Member or with the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner did not receive a preference from the Crown or a benefit under the contract not available to other members of the public under contracts of the same class.
(4) A Member does not breach subsection (1) in respect of a renewal of a contract to which subsection (1) would otherwise apply if
(a) at the time of becoming a Member, the Member or the person directly associated with the Member or with the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner was a party to the contract, and
(b) repealed 2007 c28 s10,
(c) the Ethics Commissioner, before the renewal is made by the Member or the person directly associated with the Member or with the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner, gives an opinion that
(i) the provisions of the renewal are fair and reasonable in the circumstances, having regard to the provisions of the existing contract,
(ii) the renewal will be effected in accordance with the provisions of the contract pertaining to its renewal, and
(iii) the Member or the person directly associated with the Member or with the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner has not received any preference from the Crown in relation to the renewal and will not receive a benefit under the renewal not available to other members of the public under a contract of the same class.
(5) A Member does not breach subsection (1) in respect of a contract to which subsection (1) would otherwise apply if, in the Ethics Commissioner’s opinion,
(a) the contract will not create a conflict between the person contracting with the Crown and the public interest, or
(b) the contract is trivial.
(6) In addition to section 1(5)(a), for the purposes of this section a person is directly associated with a Member or with a Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner if that person is
(a) a corporation having share capital and carrying on business or activities for profit or gain of which that Member or Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner is a director or senior officer, or a subsidiary of such a corporation whether or not that Member or Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner is a director or senior officer of the subsidiary,
(b) a private corporation carrying on business or activities for profit or gain of which that Member or Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner owns or is the beneficial owner of shares, or a subsidiary of such a corporation whether or not that Member or Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner owns or is the beneficial owner of shares of the subsidiary,
(c) a partnership
(i) of which that Member or Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner is a partner, or
(ii) of which one of the partners is a corporation directly associated with that Member or Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner by reason of clause (b),
(d) a person or group of persons acting with the express or implied consent of that Member or Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner.
(7) Section 1(6) applies in respect of subsection (6)(b).
(8) Sections 3(b) and (d) and 10(a) of the Conflicts of Interest Amendment Act, 2007 do not apply in respect of contracts entered into before those sections come into force, but subsection (4) of this section applies in respect of a renewal of those contracts.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s8;2007 c28 s10
Payments from the Crown
9(1) A Member breaches this Act if, while being a Member, the Member or a person directly associated with the Member accepts a payment of public money from the Crown or a person acting on behalf of the Crown otherwise than as permitted by subsection (2).
(2) A Member or a person directly associated with the Member may accept a payment of public money from the Crown or a person acting on behalf of the Crown if
(a) the payment is made to the Member pursuant to Part 3 or 4 of the Legislative Assembly Act or otherwise in the Member’s capacity as a Member of the Legislative Assembly, as a member of the Executive Council or as the holder of an office to which the Member is elected by the Legislative Assembly or appointed by or at the nomination of the Lieutenant Governor in Council or a Minister of the Crown in right of Alberta, and the payment is authorized by or pursuant to
(i) the Legislative Assembly Act or any other enactment,
(ii) a resolution or order of the Legislative Assembly, or
(iii) a supply vote,
(b) the recipient is, according to the enactment authorizing the payment, entitled to the payment as a matter of right or subject only to compliance with the requirements of that enactment that are conditions precedent to the payment,
(c) the recipient of the payment
(i) is, according to the enactment under which the payment is authorized, eligible to apply for the payment and complies with the requirements of that enactment that are conditions precedent to the payment,
(ii) in respect of the recipient’s application is given no preference not available to others, and
(iii) receives no special benefit in relation to the recipient’s application or the payment,
(d) the payment is made under a contract that may be entered into without the Member being in breach of section 8.
1991 cC‑22.1 s9;1996 cA‑27.01 s23
Deemed Member
10 If a person ceases to be a Member of the Legislative Assembly by reason of dissolution of the Legislature or otherwise and again becomes a Member of the Legislative Assembly by reason of being elected in the succeeding general election or by‑election, as the case may be, then, for the purposes of sections 8 and 9, the person is deemed to be a Member of the Legislative Assembly during the intervening period.
1991 cC‑22.1 s10
11(1) Every Member shall file with the Ethics Commissioner a disclosure statement in the form and manner determined by the Ethics Commissioner
(a) within 60 days after becoming a Member of the Legislative Assembly,
(b) within 60 days after being appointed to the Executive Council if the Member has not filed a current disclosure statement as a Member of the Legislative Assembly, and
(c) in each subsequent year at the time specified by the Ethics Commissioner.
(2) A Member shall, within 30 days after the occurrence of any material changes to the information contained in a current disclosure statement, file with the Ethics Commissioner an amending disclosure statement in the form provided by the Ethics Commissioner setting out the changes.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s11;2014 c9 s1(6)
Contents of disclosure statement
12 A disclosure statement
(a) shall include a statement, as of a date determined by the Ethics Commissioner, of the assets, liabilities and financial interests of the Member, of any private corporation controlled by the Member and of any private corporation controlled by a combination of the Member and the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner or minor children, but not including investments in a blind trust or investment arrangement,
(b) shall include a statement, as of a date determined by the Ethics Commissioner, of the assets, liabilities and financial interests of the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner and minor children and of any private corporation controlled by the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner, minor children or any combination of them, so far as known to the Member after the Member has requested information from the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner,
(b.1) shall, as of a date determined by the Ethics Commissioner, identify any legal proceedings of which the Member is aware being brought against the Member,
(b.2) shall, as of a date determined by the Ethics Commissioner, identify whether the Member is in arrears of maintenance payable, including legal costs, interest and penalties, in respect of a maintenance order or agreement,
(c) need not include obligations being incurred for ordinary living expenses that will be discharged in the ordinary course of the Member’s affairs,
(d) shall include a statement
(i) of the income that the Member and persons referred to in clause (a), and
(ii) of the income that, so far as known to the Member after the Member has requested information from the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner, any other person mentioned in clause (b)
have received in the preceding 12 months or expect to receive in the next 12 months and, to the extent required by the Ethics Commissioner, of the sources of the income, and
(e) shall include a list of all fees, gifts and other benefits accepted under section 7 having a value greater than $100, including any fees, gifts or other benefits not approved by the Ethics Commissioner under section 7(3)(d);
(f) shall include a list of all travel on a non‑commercial or private aircraft accepted under section 7.1.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s12;2002 cA‑4.5 s26; 2007 c28 s11;2014 c9 s1(7)
13 The Ethics Commissioner shall, as soon as practicable after a Member has filed a disclosure statement, meet with the Member and the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner, if available, to ensure that the Member has made adequate disclosure and to advise about the Member’s obligations under this Act.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s13;2002 cA‑4.5 s26
Public disclosure statements
14(1) After meeting with the Member, and with the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner if the spouse or adult interdependent partner is available, the Ethics Commissioner shall prepare a public disclosure statement.
(2) Where a Member files an amending disclosure statement, the Ethics Commissioner, after consulting the Member and the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner, if available, shall, if the Ethics Commissioner considers it necessary, prepare either a new public disclosure statement or a supplementary public disclosure statement, which shall form part of the Member’s public disclosure statement.
(3) Except as provided in this section, a public disclosure statement shall identify
(a) the assets, liabilities, financial interests and sources of income,
(b) the fees, gifts or benefits accepted with the Ethics Commissioner’s approval under section 7(3)(d), and
(c) any travel accepted under section 7.1,
as disclosed in the Member’s disclosure statement, but shall not state the amount or value of them.
(4) The following shall be excluded from a public disclosure statement unless the Ethics Commissioner is of the opinion that disclosure of the asset, liability, financial interest, source of income or information is likely to be material to the determination of whether a Member is or is likely to be in breach of this Act:
(a) assets, liabilities or interests having a value of less than $10 000;
(b) a source of income of less than $5000 per year;
(c) information identifying a home or recreational property occupied by the Member, the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner or one of the Member’s family;
(d) personal property that the Member, the Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner or one of the Member’s family uses primarily for transportation, household, educational, recreational, social or esthetic purposes;
(e) unpaid taxes, except property taxes under the Municipal Government Act and taxes under the School Act;
(f) support obligations.
(5) The Ethics Commissioner may from time to time establish other categories of matters to be excluded from public disclosure statements on the grounds that they are of little or no importance and are not likely to be material to the determination of whether a Member is or is likely to be in breach of this Act.
(6) If in the opinion of the Ethics Commissioner disclosure of the amount or value of an asset, liability, financial interest or source of income is likely to be material to the determination of whether a Member is or is likely to be in breach of this Act, the amount or value shall be included in the public disclosure statement.
(7) The Ethics Commissioner may exclude from the public disclosure statement a source of income received by a Member’s spouse or adult interdependent partner or minor child or a private corporation if
(a) the income is or will be received in respect of services or things that are customarily provided on a confidential basis, or
(b) the possibility of serious harm to a business of the spouse or adult interdependent partner, minor child or private corporation justifies a departure from the general principle of public disclosure.
(8) Information included in a disclosure statement or amending disclosure statement of a Member to the Ethics Commissioner and not included in the Member’s public disclosure statement is confidential unless it is relevant to a proceeding under Part 5.
(9) On completion of a public disclosure statement or a supplementary disclosure statement, the Ethics Commissioner shall file it with the Clerk of the Legislative Assembly.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s14;2002 cA‑4.5 s26; 2007 c28 s12;2014 c9 s1(8)
Returns relating to persons directly associated
15(1) Every person who becomes a Member shall, within 60 days after becoming a Member, furnish to the Ethics Commissioner a return showing
(a) the name and address of each person with whom the Member was directly associated on the day of becoming a Member and with whom the Member became directly associated after that date and before the date of the return, and
(b) if the Member’s direct association with any person referred to in clause (a) terminated before the date of the return, the date of the termination.
(2) Every Member shall furnish to the Ethics Commissioner
(a) a return showing
(i) the name and address of each person with whom the Member became directly associated on or after the date of the Member’s initial return under subsection (1) or (2), and
(ii) the date on which the direct association began,
within 30 days after the direct association began, and
(b) a return showing the date on which the Member’s direct association with any person terminated, within 30 days after that date.
(3) Where a person ceases to be a Member by reason of dissolution of the Legislature or otherwise,
(a) that person shall, within 30 days after ceasing to be a Member, furnish a return to the Ethics Commissioner showing
(i) the name and address of each person with whom the person became directly associated or with whom that person ceased to be directly associated on or after the date of that person’s last return under this section, and
(ii) the date on which the direct association began or terminated, as the case may be,
(b) if that person again becomes a Member in the succeeding general election or by‑election, as the case may be, that person shall, within 60 days after again becoming a Member, furnish a return to the Ethics Commissioner showing
(i) the name and address of each person with whom the Member became directly associated or with whom the Member ceased to be directly associated in the intervening period, and
(ii) the date on which the direct association began or terminated, as the case may be.
(4) In a return under this section, a Member is not required to show the name and address of any person who is or was directly associated with the Member by reason of section 1(5)(e) unless that person, during the period of the direct association and as the agent of the Member with actual authority from the Member,
(a) became a party to a contract to which the Crown was also a party, or
(b) received a payment of public money from the Crown or from a person acting on behalf of the Crown, otherwise than pursuant to a contract.
(5) A return under this section may be in the form prescribed by the Ethics Commissioner.
(6) On receipt of a return under this section, the Ethics Commissioner shall file a copy of the return with the Clerk of the Legislative Assembly and provide a copy to the President of Treasury Board and Minister of Finance.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s15;2006 c23 s21;2013 c10 s32
President of Treasury Board and Minister of Finance’s report
16(1) The President of Treasury Board and Minister of Finance shall, after the end of each Government fiscal year, prepare a report showing in respect of each person who was a Member during that fiscal year
(a) the names of the persons directly associated with the Member in that fiscal year and the period of the direct association, as indicated by the returns furnished under section 15,
(b) information relating to payments made by the Crown to the Member in that fiscal year, and
(c) information relating to payments made by the Crown in that fiscal year to the respective persons directly associated with the Member in that fiscal year, as indicated by the returns furnished under section 15.
(2) Each Provincial agency shall, in accordance with the directions of the President of Treasury Board and Minister of Finance, furnish to the President of Treasury Board and Minister of Finance after the end of each Government fiscal year any information that the President of Treasury Board and Minister of Finance requires for the purposes of a report under subsection (1) for that fiscal year insofar as it relates to payments made by that Provincial agency in that fiscal year to Members and to the persons directly associated with Members according to the returns furnished under section 15.
(3) The President of Treasury Board and Minister of Finance, in providing the information referred to in subsection (1)(b) and (c) in a report under that subsection,
(a) may classify payments in any manner the President of Treasury Board and Minister of Finance considers appropriate,
(b) shall show in respect of each class of payments the aggregate amount of the payments of that class made to each Member and to each person directly associated with the Member in the fiscal year, and
(c) shall show in respect of each person who was a Member in the fiscal year to which the report relates the aggregate amount of all payments of all classes made to that Member and the aggregate amount of all payments of all classes made to each person directly associated with the Member in the fiscal year.
(4) A report prepared under subsection (1) shall not include
(a) payments made to or on behalf of the Member pursuant to Part 3 or 4 of the Legislative Assembly Act,
(b) payments required to be included in a report under section 37 of the Legislative Assembly Act,
(c) payments of benefits under the Alberta Health Care Insurance Act,
(d) repealed 2003 cI‑0.5 s54,
(d.1) payments of assistance under Part 2 of the Income and Employment Supports Act,
(e) payments of benefits under the Assured Income for the Severely Handicapped Act,
(f) payments under the Seniors Benefit Act,
(g) repealed 2003 cI‑0.5 s54,
(h) compensation paid under the Workers’ Compensation Act or the Blind Workers’ Compensation Act,
(i) payments made by way of student financial assistance under the Students Finance Act or financial assistance under and within the meaning of the Student Financial Assistance Act,
(j) payments of salary, expenses and benefits, including pension benefits, paid to persons who are directly associated with the Member, but the report must indicate that payments were received by those persons,
(k) payments made by way of refunds, or
(l) any other class of payments by the Crown if the disclosure in the report of the identity of the recipients would contravene any law in force in Alberta that contains confidentiality requirements in respect of that class of payments.
(5) When a report is prepared under subsection (1), the President of Treasury Board and Minister of Finance shall lay the report before the Legislative Assembly if it is then sitting or, if it is not then sitting, within 15 days after the commencement of the next sitting.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s16;2002 cS‑20.5 s24;2003 cI‑0.5 s54; 2006 cA‑45.1 s14;2006 c23 s21;2013 c10 s32
Filing of public disclosure statements
17 The Office of the Ethics Commissioner
(a) shall retain each Member’s public disclosure statements, supplementary public disclosure statements, amending disclosure statements and returns for a period of 3 years after the Member ceases to be a Member, after which the statements and returns may be destroyed,
(b) shall make the public disclosure statements, any supplementary public disclosure statements and amending disclosure statements and returns available for examination by any person who wishes to examine them, and
(c) may publish information derived from a Member’s public disclosure statements, supplementary public disclosure statements, amending disclosure statements and returns on the Ethics Commissioner’s website in a form that the Ethics Commissioner considers appropriate.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s17;2007 c28 s13;2014 c9 s1(9)
18 A Member breaches this Act if the Member does not file within the time required by this Act, or knowingly gives false or misleading information in,
(a) a disclosure statement under section 11(1),
(b) an amending disclosure statement under section 11(2), or
(c) a return under section 15.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s18;2014 c9 s1(10)
Reimbursement for costs
19(1) Members are entitled to be reimbursed for
(a) costs associated with the completion of their disclosure statements,
(b) costs associated with the establishment and administration of a blind trust or of an investment arrangement, and
(c) costs associated with transferring a mortgage, line of credit or other account from a treasury branch to another financial institution as necessary to comply with section 8.
(2) The amount of the reimbursement is subject to the approval of the Ethics Commissioner.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s19;2014 c9 s1(11)
Restriction on holdings
20(1) A Minister breaches this Act if the Minister, after the expiration of the relevant period referred to in section 22, owns or has a beneficial interest in publicly‑traded securities.
(a) the publicly-traded securities are held in a blind trust approved under subsection (4) or in an investment arrangement approved under subsection (5),
(b) prior to the expiration of the relevant period referred to in section 22, the Minister applies to the Ethics Commissioner for approval to retain ownership of or a beneficial interest in the publicly‑traded securities and either obtains the Ethics Commissioner’s approval or, if the approval is refused, takes any steps that the Ethics Commissioner directs with respect to the disposition of the ownership or beneficial interest, or
(c) after the expiration of the relevant period referred to in section 22, the Minister acquires ownership of or a beneficial interest in publicly‑traded securities with the prior approval of the Ethics Commissioner.
(3) The Ethics Commissioner may give an approval
(a) under subsection (2)(b) or (c) if the Ethics Commissioner is of the opinion that the publicly‑traded securities are securities of a corporation the interests of which are not likely to be affected by decisions of the Government, or
(b) under subsection (2)(b) if the Ethics Commissioner is of the opinion that the Minister will sustain a financial loss if the publicly-traded securities are disposed of and the public interest does not require disposition of the publicly‑traded securities by the Minister.
(4) The Ethics Commissioner may approve the retention of publicly‑traded securities to be held in a blind trust if the blind trust will meet the following criteria:
(a) the Minister is the settlor of the trust;
(b) the trustee is approved as trustee by the Ethics Commissioner after the Ethics Commissioner is satisfied that there is no relationship between the Minister and the trustee that would affect or would appear to affect the discharge of the trustee’s duties;
(ii) preclude the Minister from having any knowledge of the specific investments in the trust at any time after a deposit in the trust,
(iii) require that the Minister may deposit in the trust only securities verified by the Ethics Commissioner as being publicly‑traded securities, shares or units in a mutual fund, futures and forward contracts or exchange contracts, and
(5) The Ethics Commissioner may approve the retention of publicly‑traded securities to be held in an investment arrangement if the investment arrangement will meet the following criteria:
(a) it gives a person other than the Minister sole power over investment decisions,
(b) it precludes the Minister from having any knowledge of the specific investments at any time after a deposit to the investment arrangement, and
(c) it ensures there will be no relationship between the Minister and the person referred to in clause (a) that would affect or would appear to affect that person’s investment decisions.
(6) An approval or direction given by the Ethics Commissioner under this section may be given subject to any conditions determined by the Ethics Commissioner.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s20;2014 c9 s1(12)
21(1) A Minister breaches this Act if, after the expiration of the relevant period referred to in section 22, the Minister
(a) engages in employment or in the practice of a profession,
(b) carries on a business, or
(c) holds an office or directorship other than in a social club, religious organization or political party,
that creates or appears to create a conflict between a private interest of the Minister and the public duty of the Minister.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if the Minister has disclosed the material facts to the Ethics Commissioner and if,
(a) prior to the expiration of the relevant period referred to in section 22,
(i) the Ethics Commissioner is satisfied that the activity will not create or appear to create a conflict between a private interest of the Minister or of a person directly associated with the Minister and the performance of the Minister’s public duty, and
(ii) in the case of a business, the Ethics Commissioner is satisfied that the business will be carried on by way of a management arrangement in which
(A) the Minister will be precluded from participating in discussions about matters that could affect a private interest of the Minister or of a person directly associated with the Minister, and
(B) the Minister will be precluded from voting on matters that could affect a private interest of the Minister or of a person directly associated with the Minister,
(b) after the expiration of the relevant period referred to in section 22, the Minister commences an activity with the prior approval of the Ethics Commissioner on the conditions set out in subsection (2)(a)(i) and (ii).
(3) An approval given by the Ethics Commissioner under subsection (2) may be given subject to any conditions determined by the Ethics Commissioner.
(a) the management of routine personal financial interests does not constitute carrying on a business, and
(b) maintaining qualifications in a profession or occupation as required by the profession or occupation does not constitute carrying on a business or engaging in employment or in the practice of a profession.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s21;2007 c28 s14;2014 c9 s1(13)
22(1) For the purposes of sections 20(1) and 21(1), with respect to a person who becomes a Minister, the relevant period is 60 days after being appointed to the Executive Council or any longer period that the Ethics Commissioner may direct.
(2) For the purposes of section 20(2)(c), with respect to a Minister who acquires ownership of or a beneficial interest in publicly‑traded securities by gift or inheritance, the relevant period is 60 days after receiving the gift or inheritance or any longer period that the Ethics Commissioner may direct.
(3) For the purposes of section 21(2)(b), with respect to a Minister who acquires a business by gift or inheritance, the relevant period is 60 days, or any longer period that the Ethics Commissioner may direct, after receiving the gift or inheritance of a business that is to be carried on by the Minister.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s22;2014 c9 s1(14)
23(1) Sections 20, 21 and 22(2) apply, with the necessary modifications, to the Leader of Her Majesty’s loyal opposition.
(2) For the purposes of sections 20(1) and 21(1) as they apply to the Leader of Her Majesty’s loyal opposition, the period is 60 days after becoming the Leader of Her Majesty’s loyal opposition or any longer period that the Ethics Commissioner may prescribe.
1998 c33 s12
Restrictions on former Ministers
23.1(1) No former Minister shall, for a period of 12 months from the last day the former Minister held his or her appointment as a Minister, lobby, as defined in the Lobbyists Act, any public office holder as defined in the Lobbyists Act.
(2) No former Minister shall, for a period of 12 months from the last day the former Minister held his or her appointment as a Minister, act on a commercial basis or make representations on his or her own behalf or on behalf of any other person in connection with any ongoing matter in connection with which the former Minister, while in office, directly acted for or advised a department or Provincial agency involved in the matter.
(3) No former Minister shall, for a period of 12 months from the last day the former Minister had a direct and significant official dealing with a department or Provincial agency, make representations with respect to a contract with or benefit from that department or Provincial agency.
(4) No former Minister shall, for a period of 12 months from the last day the former Minister had a direct and significant official dealing with a department or Provincial agency, solicit or accept on his or her own behalf a contract or benefit from that department or Provincial agency.
(5) No former Minister shall, for a period of 12 months from the last day the former Minister had a direct and significant official dealing with an individual, organization, board of directors or equivalent body of an organization, accept employment with that individual or organization or an appointment to the board of directors or equivalent body.
2014 c9 s1(15)
Waiver or reduction
23.11(1) A Minister or former Minister may apply to the Ethics Commissioner for a waiver or reduction of a time period set out in section 23.1, and the Ethics Commissioner may waive or reduce any time period set out in section 23.1 if, in the opinion of the Ethics Commissioner,
(a) the conditions on which and the manner in which the employment, appointment, contract or benefit is awarded, approved or given are the same for all persons similarly entitled,
(b) the award, approval, grant or benefit results from an impartially administered process open to a significant class of persons, or
(c) the activity, contract or benefit will not create a conflict between a private interest of the former Minister and the public interest.
(2) The Ethics Commissioner may under subsection (1)(c) waive or reduce a time period set out in section 23.1 on any conditions that the Ethics Commissioner determines.
Breach and offence
23.12(1) A former Minister who contravenes section 23.1 and who at the time of the contravention is a Member of the Legislative Assembly breaches this Act.
(2) A former Minister who contravenes section 23.1 and who at the time of the contravention is not a Member of the Legislative Assembly is guilty of an offence and liable to a fine not exceeding $50 000.
(3) A prosecution of an offence described in subsection (2) shall not be commenced more than 2 years after the date on which the alleged offence occurred.
(4) If a former Minister or any other person has realized financial gain in any transaction to which a conviction under subsection (2) relates, any person affected by the financial gain, including the Government or a Provincial agency, may apply to the Court of Queen’s Bench for an order of restitution against the former Minister or any other person who has realized the financial gain.
Breach for awarding contract
23.13 A Minister breaches this Act if the Minister knowingly awards or approves a contract or gives a benefit to
(a) a former Minister who is acting in contravention of section 23.1;
(b) a former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff who is acting in contravention of section 23.7;
(c) a former designated office holder as defined in the Public Service Act who is acting in contravention of section 25.4 of that Act.
23.2 A member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff breaches this Part if he or she takes part in a decision in the course of carrying out his or her office or powers knowing that the decision might further a private interest of the member, a person directly associated with the member or the member’s minor or adult child.
23.3 A member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff breaches this Part if the member uses his or her office or powers to influence or to seek to influence a decision to be made by or on behalf of the Crown to further a private interest of the member, a person directly associated with the member or the member’s minor child or to improperly further any other person’s private interest.
23.4 A member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff breaches this Act if he or she uses or communicates information not available to the general public that was gained by the member in the course of carrying out his or her office or powers to further or seek to further a private interest of the member or any other person’s private interest.
23.41(1) The Lieutenant Governor in Council may establish a code of conduct for the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff.
(2) To the extent that it is consistent with this Part, the code of conduct referred to in the terms of employment of a person who is a member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff when this section comes into force applies until it is replaced by a code of conduct referred to in subsection (1).
(3) A member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff who contravenes a code of conduct referred to in this section breaches this Part and may be subject to disciplinary action.
23.5(1) The Chief of Staff, Office of the Premier, breaches this Part if he or she, after the expiration of the relevant period referred to in subsection (7), owns or has a beneficial interest in publicly‑traded securities.
(a) the publicly‑traded securities are held in a blind trust approved under subsection (4) or in an investment arrangement approved under subsection (5),
(b) prior to the expiration of the relevant period referred to in subsection (7), the Chief of Staff, Office of the Premier, applies to the Ethics Commissioner for approval to retain ownership of or a beneficial interest in the publicly‑traded securities and either obtains the Ethics Commissioner’s approval or, if the approval is refused, takes any steps that the Ethics Commissioner directs with respect to the disposition of the ownership or beneficial interest, or
(c) after the expiration of the relevant period referred to in subsection (7), the Chief of Staff, Office of the Premier, acquires ownership of or a beneficial interest in publicly‑traded securities with the prior approval of the Ethics Commissioner.
(b) under subsection (2)(b) if the Ethics Commissioner is of the opinion that the Chief of Staff, Office of the Premier will sustain a financial loss if the publicly‑traded securities are disposed of and the public interest does not require disposition of the publicly‑traded securities by the Chief of Staff.
(4) The Ethics Commissioner may approve the retention of publicly‑traded securities to be held in a blind trust if the blind trust will meet the criteria set out in section 20(4).
(5) The Ethics Commissioner may approve the retention of publicly-traded securities to be held in an investment arrangement if the investment arrangement will meet the criteria set out in section 20(5).
(7) For the purposes of subsections (1) and (2),
(a) the relevant period is
(i) in the case of a person who becomes Chief of Staff, Office of the Premier, after the coming into force of this section, 60 days after becoming Chief of Staff or any longer period that the Ethics Commissioner directs;
(ii) in the case of a person who is Chief of Staff, Office of the Premier, when this section comes into force, 60 days after the coming into force of this section or any longer period that the Ethics Commissioner directs;
(b) with respect to a Chief of Staff, Office of the Premier, who acquires ownership of or a beneficial interest in publicly‑traded securities by gift or inheritance, the relevant period is 60 days after receiving the gift or inheritance or any longer period that the Ethics Commissioner directs.
23.6(1) Every member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff shall file with the Ethics Commissioner a disclosure statement in the form and manner determined by the Ethics Commissioner
(a) within 60 days after
(i) becoming a member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff, in the case of a person who becomes a member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff after the coming into force of this section, or
(ii) the coming into force of this section, in the case of a person who is a member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff when this section comes into force,
(b) in each subsequent year at the time specified by the Ethics Commissioner.
(2) A member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff shall, within 30 days after the occurrence of any material changes to the information contained in a current disclosure statement, file with the Ethics Commissioner an amending disclosure statement in the form provided by the Ethics Commissioner setting out the changes.
(3) Section 12(a) to (d) apply for the purpose of establishing the contents of and additional time requirements for the disclosure statements referred to in subsection (1).
23.61(1) Every member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff shall file with the Ethics Commissioner a return relating to persons directly associated with the member, in a form and manner determined by the Ethics Commissioner,
(i) becoming a member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff, in the case of a person who becomes a member after the coming into force of this section, or
(b) within 30 days after the occurrence of any material change in the information contained in a current return, and
(c) within 30 days after the day he or she ceases to be a member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff.
(2) Section 15(1)(a) and (b) and (2) apply for the purpose of establishing the contents of a member’s returns and additional time requirements for a member’s returns under this section.
(3) On receipt of a return under this section, the Ethics Commissioner shall provide a copy of the return,
(a) in the case of a return filed by a person who holds a position in the Premier’s office, to the Premier, and
(b) in the case of a return filed by a person who holds a position in a Minister’s office, to that Minister.
23.62(1) A member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff breaches this Part if the member does not file within the time required by this Part, or if the member knowingly gives false or misleading information in,
(a) a disclosure statement under section 23.6(1),
(b) an amending disclosure statement under section 23.6(2), or
(c) a return under section 23.61(1).
(2) If the Ethics Commissioner is of the opinion that a member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff has breached the time requirements for filing a disclosure statement, an amending disclosure statement or a return referred to in subsection (1), sections 30.1(1) to (8) and 30.2 apply in respect of an administrative penalty.
(3) The Ethics Commissioner shall prepare a report setting out the following:
(a) the name of the member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff required to pay an administrative penalty;
(b) the particulars of the breach;
(c) the amount of the administrative penalty;
(d) whether the administrative penalty was paid or appealed;
(e) any other information that the Ethics Commissioner considers appropriate.
(4) The report referred to in subsection (3) must be provided
(a) in the case of a breach by a person who holds a position in the Premier’s office, to the Premier, and
(b) in the case of a breach by a person who holds a position in a Minister’s office, to that Minister.
Retention of statements and returns
23.63 The Ethics Commissioner shall retain the disclosure statements, amending disclosure statements and returns submitted by a member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff for a period of 3 years after the person ceases to be a member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff, after which the statements and returns may be destroyed.
23.64(1) Members of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff are entitled to be reimbursed for
(a) costs associated with the completion of their disclosure statements, and
(b) in the case of the Chief of Staff, Office of the Premier, costs associated with the establishment and administration of a blind trust or an investment arrangement.
Post‑employment restrictions
23.7(1) No former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff shall, for a period of 12 months from the last day the former member held a position referred to in section 1(1)(c.1), lobby as defined in the Lobbyists Act any public office holder as defined in the Lobbyists Act.
(2) No former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff shall, for a period of 12 months from the last day the former member held a position referred to in section 1(1)(c.1), act on a commercial basis or make representations on his or her own behalf or on behalf of any other person in connection with any ongoing matter in connection with which the former member, while a member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff, directly acted for or advised a department or Provincial agency involved in the matter.
(3) No former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff shall, for a period of 12 months from the last day the former member had a direct and significant official dealing with a department or Provincial agency, make representations with respect to a contract with or benefit from that department or Provincial agency.
(4) No former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff shall, for a period of 12 months from the last day the former member had a direct and significant official dealing with a department or Provincial agency, solicit or accept on his or her own behalf a contract or benefit from that department or Provincial agency.
(5) No former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff shall, for a period of 12 months from the last day the former member had a direct and significant official dealing with an individual, organization, board of directors or equivalent body of an organization, accept employment with that individual or organization or an appointment to the board of directors or equivalent body.
(6) Nothing in this section restricts a member or former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff from accepting employment with a department of the public service or a Provincial agency in accordance with Part 1 of the Public Service Act.
23.71(1) A member or former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff may apply to the Ethics Commissioner for a waiver or reduction of a time period set out in section 23.7, and the Ethics Commissioner may waive or reduce any time period set out in section 23.7 if in the opinion of the Ethics Commissioner,
(c) the activity, contract or benefit will not create a conflict between a private interest of the former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff and the public interest.
(2) The Ethics Commissioner may under subsection (1)(c) waive or reduce a time period set out in section 23.7 on any conditions that the Ethics Commissioner determines.
23.72(1) A former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff who contravenes section 23.7 is guilty of an offence and liable to a fine not exceeding $50 000.
(2) A prosecution of an offence described in subsection (1) shall not be commenced more than 2 years after the date on which the alleged offence occurred.
(3) If a former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff or any other person has realized financial gain in any transaction to which a conviction under subsection (1) relates, any person affected by the financial gain, including the Government or a Provincial agency, may apply to the Court of Queen’s Bench for an order of restitution against the former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff or any other person who has realized the financial gain.
Investigations under this Part
23.8(1) Sections 24(1) to (3) and (5) and 25(1) to (3) and (5) to (10) apply for the purposes of
(a) an investigation under this Part, and
(b) an investigation of a failure to comply with a code of conduct referred to in section 23.41.
(2) If the Ethics Commissioner refuses to investigate or ceases to investigate an alleged breach, suspends an investigation of an alleged breach or contravention or refuses to re‑investigate an alleged breach or contravention, the Ethics Commissioner shall provide a notice in accordance with subsection (4).
(3) If the Ethics Commissioner is of the opinion that a request made under section 24(1) was frivolous or vexatious or was not made in good faith, the Ethics Commissioner may state that opinion in a report provided in accordance with subsection (4).
(4) A notice referred to in subsection (2) or a report referred to in subsection (3) must be provided
(a) to the individual against whom the allegation was made,
(b) to the person who made the request under section 24(1),
(c) in the case of a notice or report respecting a member or former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff who holds or held a position in the Premier’s Office, the Premier, or
(d) in the case of a notice or report respecting a member or former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff who holds or held a position in a Minister’s office, that Minister.
Ethics Commissioner’s report under this Part
23.81(1) The Ethics Commissioner shall prepare a report regarding the outcome of an investigation under this Part.
(2) Section 27, except subsection (2), applies for the purposes of a report under this Part.
(3) The report may be disclosed
(b) in the case of a report respecting a member or former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff who holds or held a position in the Premier’s Office, to the Premier,
(c) in the case of a report respecting a member or former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff who holds or held a position in a Minister’s office, to that Minister, and
(d) where the Ethics Commissioner believes on reasonable grounds that the disclosure is necessary for the purpose of advising the Minister of Justice and Solicitor General or a law enforcement agency of an alleged offence under this Part or any other enactment of Alberta or an Act of the Parliament of Canada, to the Minister of Justice and Solicitor General or a law enforcement agency.
(4) Sections 28 and 29 do not apply for the purposes of this Part.
23.9 The Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations
(a) respecting the application of the provisions of other Parts of this Act, referred to in this Part, that apply for the purposes of this Part;
(b) respecting any transitional matter relating to this Part.
24(1) Any person may request, in writing, that the Ethics Commissioner investigate any matter respecting an alleged breach or contravention of this Act.
(a) be signed by the person making it and must identify that person to the satisfaction of the Ethics Commissioner, and
(b) set out sufficient particulars of the matter to which the request relates for an investigation to be commenced.
(3) A Member may request, in writing, that the Ethics Commissioner investigate any matter respecting an alleged breach of this Act by the Member.
(4) The Legislative Assembly may, by resolution, request that the Ethics Commissioner investigate any matter respecting an alleged breach or contravention of this Act by a Member or former Member.
(5) The Executive Council may request that the Ethics Commissioner investigate any matter respecting an alleged breach or contravention of this Act by a Minister or former Minister.
(6) Where a matter has been referred to the Ethics Commissioner under subsection (1), (3) or (4), neither the Legislative Assembly nor a committee of the Assembly shall inquire into the matter.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s24;2007 c28 s15;2014 c9 s1(16)
25(1) On receiving a request under section 24 or where the Ethics Commissioner has reason to believe that an individual has acted or is acting in contravention of advice, recommendations or directions or any conditions of any approval given by the Ethics Commissioner, and on giving reasonable notice to that individual, the Ethics Commissioner may conduct an investigation.
(2) An individual whose conduct is subject to an investigation under this Part shall co‑operate with the investigation.
(3) An investigation under this section shall not be commenced more than 2 years after the date on which the alleged breach or contravention occurred.
(4) On commencing an investigation under subsection (1), the Ethics Commissioner may inform the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of
(a) the fact that an investigation has been commenced,
(b) if a request was received under section 24, the identity of the person who made the request,
(c) the name of the person who is the subject of the investigation, and
(d) the matter to which the investigation relates.
(5) For the purpose of conducting an investigation, the Ethics Commissioner may
(a) in the same manner and to the same extent as a justice of the Court of Queen’s Bench,
(i) summon and enforce the attendance of individuals before the Ethics Commissioner and compel them to give oral or written evidence on oath, and
(ii) compel persons to produce any documents or other things that the Ethics Commissioner considers relevant to the investigation,
(6) The Ethics Commissioner shall immediately suspend an investigation under this section if the Ethics Commissioner discovers that the subject‑matter of the investigation is also the subject‑matter of an investigation by a law enforcement agency to determine whether an offence under this Act or any other enactment of Alberta or under an Act of the Parliament of Canada has been committed, or that a charge has been laid with respect to that subject‑matter.
(7) The Ethics Commissioner may not continue an investigation under this section until any investigation or charge referred to in subsection (6) has been finally disposed of.
(8) If, for any reason, the Ethics Commissioner determines that he or she should not act in respect of any particular investigation, the Ethics Commissioner may appoint an ethics commissioner or equivalent officer of another jurisdiction in Canada as a special Ethics Commissioner, to exercise the powers and perform the duties of the Ethics Commissioner in respect of that investigation.
(9) The Ethics Commissioner may re‑investigate an alleged breach or contravention in respect of which the Ethics Commissioner’s findings have already been reported under this section only if, in the Ethics Commissioner’s opinion, there are new facts that on their face might change the original findings.
(10) The Ethics Commissioner may refuse to investigate or may cease an investigation if the Ethics Commissioner is of the opinion that
(a) a request under section 24(1) is frivolous or vexatious or was not made in good faith, or
(b) there are no or insufficient grounds to warrant an investigation or the continuation of an investigation.
(11) If the Ethics Commissioner refuses to investigate or ceases to investigate an alleged breach or contravention, suspends an investigation of an alleged breach or contravention or refuses to re-investigate an alleged breach or contravention, the Ethics Commissioner shall so inform
(a) the individual against whom the allegation was made,
(b) the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly, and
(c) the person who made the request under section 24.
(12) Where the request was made under section 24(1), (3) or (4), the Ethics Commissioner shall report the Ethics Commissioner’s findings to the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly.
(13) The Ethics Commissioner, before reporting the Ethics Commissioner’s findings to the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly under subsection (12),
(a) shall provide a copy of the report to the individual against whom the allegation was made, and
(b) may, in the case of an allegation made against a Member, former Member or former Minister, provide a copy of the report to the leader in the Legislative Assembly of the political party to which the Member, former Member or former Minister belongs.
(14) Where the request was made under section 24(5), the Ethics Commissioner shall report the Ethics Commissioner’s findings to the President of the Executive Council.
(15) If the Ethics Commissioner is of the opinion
(a) that a request made by a Member under section 24(1) was frivolous or vexatious or was not made in good faith, or
(b) that a request was made under section 24(1) by a person at the request of a Member and that the request was frivolous or vexatious or was not made in good faith,
the Ethics Commissioner may state that opinion in a report to the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly.
(16) The Speaker of the Legislative Assembly shall lay a report referred to in subsection (15) before the Legislative Assembly and the Legislative Assembly, after considering the report, may
(a) find the Member referred to in subsection (15) in contempt of the Legislative Assembly pursuant to section 10 of the Legislative Assembly Act, or
(b) order the Member referred to in subsection (15) to pay to the individual against whom the allegation was made the costs of the proceeding incurred by the individual,
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s25;2007 c28 s16;2014 c9 s1(17)
26(1) Except as provided in this section, the Ethics Commissioner, any former Ethics Commissioner and a person who is or was employed or engaged by the Office of the Ethics Commissioner shall maintain the confidentiality of all information and allegations that come to their knowledge in the course of the administration of this Act.
(2) Allegations and information to which subsection (1) applies may be
(a) disclosed to the individual against whom the allegation was made;
(b) disclosed by a person conducting an investigation to the extent necessary to enable that person to obtain information from another person;
(c) disclosed in a notice or report made by the Ethics Commissioner under this Act;
(d) disclosed to the Minister of Justice and Solicitor General or a law enforcement agency where the Ethics Commissioner believes on reasonable grounds that the disclosure is necessary for the purpose of advising the Minister of Justice and Solicitor General or a law enforcement agency of an alleged offence under this Act or any other enactment of Alberta or an Act of the Parliament of Canada.
(3) Despite subsection (1), the Ethics Commissioner may disclose to the public any information contained in a report to the Speaker under section 30.1(9) regarding an administrative penalty.
(4) The Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act does not apply to a record that is created by or for or is in the custody or under the control of the Ethics Commissioner and relates to the exercise of the Ethics Commissioner’s functions under this Act or any other enactment.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s26;2007 c28 s17;2013 c10 s34; 2014 c9 s1(18)
Ethics Commissioner’s report
27(1) A report by the Ethics Commissioner to the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly under section 25(12) must be concise and may set out the following:
(a) the facts relating to the alleged breach found by the Ethics Commissioner,
(b) the Ethics Commissioner’s findings as to whether the individual under investigation has breached or contravened this Act and, if so,
(i) the nature of the breach or contravention of this Act, including any contravention of advice, recommendations or directions or conditions of any approval given by the Ethics Commissioner, and
(ii) the Ethics Commissioner’s recommendation for the sanction, if any, that the Legislative Assembly may impose on a Member for a breach,
(c) the Ethics Commissioner’s recommendations, if any.
(1.1) Notwithstanding subsection (1), if a report relates to a former Minister who is no longer a Member or to a former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff, subsection (1)(b)(ii) does not apply.
(2) The Ethics Commissioner may recommend any one of the following sanctions:
(a) that the Member be reprimanded;
(b) that a penalty be imposed on the Member in an amount recommended by the Ethics Commissioner;
(c) that the Member’s right to sit and vote in the Legislative Assembly be suspended for a stated period or until the fulfilment of a condition;
(d) that the Member be expelled from membership of the Legislative Assembly,
and may also recommend the alternative of a lesser sanction or no sanction if the Member carries out recommendations in the report for the rectification of the breach.
(3) If the Ethics Commissioner is of the opinion that the breach was trivial, inadvertent or committed in good faith, the Ethics Commissioner may recommend that no sanction be imposed.
(3.1) Where the Ethics Commissioner considers it appropriate in the circumstances, the Ethics Commissioner may recommend that the Member, former Member, former Minister or former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff be reimbursed, in an amount approved by the Ethics Commissioner, for his or her legal expenses incurred in respect of an investigation.
(4) Where it appears to the Ethics Commissioner that a report may adversely affect a Member, former Member, former Minister or former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff, the Ethics Commissioner shall inform the Member, former Member, former Minister or former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff of the particulars and give the Member, former Member, former Minister or former member of the Premier’s and Ministers’ staff the opportunity to make representations, either orally or in writing at the discretion of the Ethics Commissioner, before the Ethics Commissioner completes the report.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s27;2007 c28 s18;2014 c9 s1(19)
28(1) On receiving a report from the Ethics Commissioner under section 25(7), the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly shall lay the report before the Legislative Assembly if it is then sitting or, if it is not then sitting, within 15 days after the commencement of the next sitting.
(2) If the Legislative Assembly is not sitting when the Ethics Commissioner reports the Ethics Commissioner’s findings to the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly under section 25(7), the Speaker shall make copies of the report available to the public.
(3) If in the report from the Ethics Commissioner the Ethics Commissioner has found that a Member or former Minister has breached this Act and the Ethics Commissioner has recommended a sanction, the Legislative Assembly shall debate and vote on the report within 15 days after the tabling of the report, or any other period that is determined by a resolution of the Legislative Assembly.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s28;2007 c28 s19
Powers of the Legislative Assembly
29(1) The Legislative Assembly may accept or reject the findings of the Ethics Commissioner or make its own findings and may if it determines that there is a breach
(a) impose the sanction recommended by the Ethics Commissioner or any other sanction referred to in section 27(2) it considers appropriate, or
(b) impose no sanction.
(2) Where under subsection (1) the Legislative Assembly determines that there has been a breach and a Member or any other person has realized financial gain in any transaction to which the breach relates, any person affected by the financial gain, including the Government or a Provincial agency, may apply to the Court of Queen’s Bench for an order of restitution against the Member or any other person who has realized the financial gain.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s29;2007 c28 s20;2014 c9 s1(20)
30 A breach of this Act by a Member is not an offence to which the Provincial Offences Procedure Act applies.
1991 cC‑22.1 s28
Administrative penalties for late filing
30.1(1) If the Ethics Commissioner is of the opinion that a Member has breached the time requirements for filing a disclosure statement, an amending disclosure statement or a return referred to in section 18, the Ethics Commissioner may serve a notice of administrative penalty on the Member, requiring the Member to pay to the Crown the amount set out in the notice.
(2) A Member is liable for an administrative penalty for each day or part of a day on which the breach occurs or continues, and the maximum cumulative amount of an administrative penalty that may be imposed under subsection (1) is $500.
(3) The Ethics Commissioner may, in each case, determine the amount of an administrative penalty taking into account the following matters:
(a) the objective of encouraging compliance with this Act;
(b) the Member’s history of prior breaches under this Act during the 5‑year period immediately before the current breach;
(c) any other factors that, in the opinion of the Ethics Commissioner, are relevant.
(4) A notice of administrative penalty must contain the following information:
(a) the name of the Member required to pay the administrative penalty;
(c) the amount of the administrative penalty and the date by which it must be paid;
(d) a statement of the right to appeal the imposition or the amount of the administrative penalty to the Court of Queen’s Bench.
(5) A notice of administrative penalty may not be issued more than 2 years after the date on which the breach occurred.
(6) A person who has been served with a notice of administrative penalty pursuant to this section shall pay the amount of the penalty within 30 days from the date of service of the notice.
(7) A person who pays an administrative penalty in respect of a breach shall not be subject to a sanction under section 29 in respect of the breach that is described in the notice of administrative penalty.
(8) Subject to the right to appeal, where a person fails to pay an administrative penalty in accordance with a notice of administrative penalty, the Ethics Commissioner may file a copy of the notice of administrative penalty with the clerk of the Court of Queen’s Bench, and on being filed, the notice has the same force and effect and may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the Court.
(9) The Ethics Commissioner shall, in each case, report to the Speaker
(a) the name of the Member required to pay an administrative penalty,
(b) the particulars of the breach,
(c) the amount of the administrative penalty,
(d) whether the administrative penalty was paid or appealed, and
2014 c9 s1(21)
Appeal of administrative penalty
30.2(1) A person who is served with a notice of administrative penalty may appeal the Ethics Commissioner’s decision to impose an administrative penalty by filing an application with the Court of Queen’s Bench within 30 days from the date the notice of administrative penalty was served.
(2) The application shall describe the notice of administrative penalty and state the reasons for the appeal.
(3) A copy of the application shall be served on the Ethics Commissioner not less than 30 days before the appeal is to be heard.
(4) The Court may, on application either before or after the time referred to in subsection (1), extend that time if it considers it appropriate to do so.
(5) On hearing the appeal, the Court of Queen’s Bench may confirm, rescind or vary the amount of the administrative penalty.
Part 6 and Part 6.1 Repealed 2014 c9 s1(22).
33(1) There is to be appointed, as an officer of the Legislature, by the Lieutenant Governor in Council on the recommendation of the Legislative Assembly, an Ethics Commissioner to carry out the Ethics Commissioner’s duties and functions under this Act or any other enactment.
(2) The Ethics Commissioner may not be a Member of the Legislative Assembly.
(3) The Ethics Commissioner may be appointed on either a full‑time or part‑time basis.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s33;2007 c28 s23;2014 c9 s1(23)
34(1) Unless the office sooner becomes vacant, a person appointed as Ethics Commissioner holds office for 5 years from the date of that person’s appointment under section 33.
(2) A person holding office as Ethics Commissioner continues to hold office after the expiry of that person’s term of office until that person is reappointed, a successor is appointed or a period of 6 months has expired, whichever occurs first.
1991 cC‑22.1 s32;1998 c33 s15
35 The Ethics Commissioner may at any time resign from office by delivering a written resignation to the Clerk of the Legislative Assembly.
1991 cC‑22.1 s33
36(1) On the recommendation of the Legislative Assembly, the Lieutenant Governor in Council may, at any time, suspend or remove the Ethics Commissioner from office for cause or incapacity.
(2) At any time the Legislative Assembly is not sitting the Lieutenant Governor in Council, on the recommendation of the Standing Committee, may suspend the Ethics Commissioner from office for cause or incapacity, but the suspension shall not continue in force beyond the end of the next sitting of the Legislative Assembly.
1991 cC‑22.1 s34;1995 c17 s19
Acting Ethics Commissioner
37(1) The Lieutenant Governor in Council, on the recommendation of the Standing Committee, may appoint an acting Ethics Commissioner if
(a) the office of Ethics Commissioner is or becomes vacant when the Legislative Assembly is not sitting,
(b) the Ethics Commissioner is suspended when the Legislative Assembly is not sitting, or
(c) the Ethics Commissioner is suspended or removed or the office of the Ethics Commissioner otherwise becomes vacant when the Legislative Assembly is sitting but no recommendation is made by the Assembly under section 33(1) before the end of the session.
(2) The Lieutenant Governor in Council may appoint an acting Ethics Commissioner if the Ethics Commissioner is temporarily absent because of illness or for another reason.
(3) An acting Ethics Commissioner holds office until
(a) a person is appointed as Ethics Commissioner under section 33(1),
(b) the suspension of the Ethics Commissioner ends, or
(c) the Ethics Commissioner returns to office after a temporary absence.
1991 cC‑22.1 s35;1998 c33 s16
38 The Ethics Commissioner shall be remunerated as determined by the Standing Committee, and it shall review that remuneration at least once a year.
1991 cC‑22.1 s36
39(1) Before commencing the duties of the office, the Ethics Commissioner must take an oath to faithfully and impartially perform the duties of the office and not to disclose any information received by the Office of the Ethics Commissioner except as authorized under this Act or any other enactment.
(2) The oath shall be administered by the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly or the Clerk of the Legislative Assembly.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s39;2014 c9 s1(24)
40(1) There is to be a department of the public service of Alberta called the Office of the Ethics Commissioner consisting of the Ethics Commissioner and those persons employed pursuant to the Public Service Act as are necessary to assist the Ethics Commissioner in carrying out the Ethics Commissioner’s duties and functions under this or any other enactment.
(2) The Ethics Commissioner may engage the services of any persons as are necessary to assist the Ethics Commissioner in carrying out the Ethics Commissioner’s duties and functions.
(3) On the recommendation of the Ethics Commissioner, the Standing Committee may order that
be inapplicable to, or be varied in respect of, the Office of the Ethics Commissioner or any particular employee or class of employees in the Office of the Ethics Commissioner.
(4) An order made under subsection (3)(a) in relation to a regulation, order or directive made under the Financial Administration Act operates notwithstanding that Act.
(6) The chair of the Standing Committee shall lay a copy of each order made under subsection (3) before the Legislative Assembly if it is then sitting or, if it is not then sitting, within 15 days after the commencement of the next sitting.
(7) Every person employed or engaged by the Office of the Ethics Commissioner shall, before beginning to perform that person’s duties, take an oath, to be administered by the Ethics Commissioner, not to disclose any information received in the performance of that person’s duties except as authorized under this Act or any other enactment.
(8) If the Ethics Commissioner or any former Ethics Commissioner or a person who is or was employed or engaged by the Office of the Ethics Commissioner discloses information that is confidential under section 14(8), 26(1) or 43(3), that person is guilty of an offence and liable to a fine not exceeding $20 000.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s40;2014 c9 s1(25);2015 cP‑40.5 s18
41(1) The Ethics Commissioner shall submit to the Standing Committee in respect of each fiscal year an estimate of the sum that will be required to be provided by the Legislature to defray the several charges and expenses of the Office of the Ethics Commissioner in that fiscal year.
(2) The Standing Committee shall review each estimate submitted pursuant to subsection (1) and, on the completion of the review, the chair of the Committee shall transmit the estimate to the President of Treasury Board and Minister of Finance for presentation to the Legislative Assembly.
(3) If at any time the Legislative Assembly is not sitting the Standing Committee, or if there is no Standing Committee, the President of Treasury Board and Minister of Finance,
(a) reports that the Ethics Commissioner has certified that in the public interest, an expenditure of public money is urgently required in respect to any matter pertaining to the Ethics Commissioner’s office, and
(4) When the Legislative Assembly is adjourned for a period of more than 14 days, the Legislative Assembly is deemed, for the purposes of subsection (3), not to be sitting during the period of the adjournment.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s41;2006 c23 s21;2013 c10 s32
General duties of Ethics Commissioner
42(1) It is a function of the Ethics Commissioner to promote the understanding by Members of their obligations under this Act by
(a) personal discussions with Members, and in particular when interviewing them about disclosure statements,
(b) commissioning the preparation and dissemination of written information about the obligations, and
(c) continuing contact with party caucuses and advising them as to what programs they might institute.
(2) Where this Act provides for the doing of anything by a time or within a prescribed period of time, the Ethics Commissioner may, before or after the time has expired, extend the time for the doing of that thing under this Act.
1991 cC‑22.1 s40;1998 c33 s17
Binding advice and recommendations
43(1) A Member, former Minister or former political staff member may request the Ethics Commissioner to give advice and recommendations on any matter respecting obligations of the Member, former Minister or former political staff member under this Act.
(1.1) A political staff member may request the Ethics Commissioner to give advice and recommendations on any matter respecting obligations of the political staff member on becoming a former political staff member.
(2) The Ethics Commissioner may, in writing, provide the Member, former Minister, political staff member or former political staff member with advice and recommendations, which
(a) shall state the material facts either expressly or by incorporating facts stated by the Member, former Minister, political staff member or former political staff member,
(b) shall be based on the facts referred to in clause (a), and
(c) may be based on any other considerations the Ethics Commissioner considers appropriate.
(3) Advice and recommendations under this section are confidential until released by or with the consent of the Member, former Minister, political staff member or former political staff member.
(4) The Ethics Commissioner may make any inquiries that the Ethics Commissioner considers appropriate in order to provide advice and recommendations under this section.
(5) If a Member, former Minister or former political staff member has, with respect to advice and recommendations under this section,
(a) communicated the material facts to the Ethics Commissioner, and
(b) complied with any recommendations contained in the advice and recommendations of the Ethics Commissioner,
no proceeding or prosecution shall be taken against the Member, former Minister or former political staff member under this Act by reason only of the facts so communicated and the compliance of the Member, former Minister or former political staff member with the recommendations.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s43;2007 c28 s24
44(1) The Ethics Commissioner may give advice and recommendations of general application to Members, former Ministers or former political staff members or a class of Members, former Ministers or former political staff members on matters respecting obligations of Members, former Ministers or former political staff members under this Act, which may be based on the facts set out in the advice and recommendations or on any other considerations the Ethics Commissioner considers appropriate.
(2) With respect to advice and recommendations given under subsection (1), no proceeding or prosecution shall be taken against a Member, former Minister or former political staff member under this Act by reason only of the facts and considerations stated in the advice and recommendations and the compliance of the Member, former Minister or former political staff member with the advice and recommendations.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s44;2007 c28 s25
Actions against Ethics Commissioner and others
45(1) No action lies against the Ethics Commissioner or any former Ethics Commissioner or any other person who is or was employed or engaged by the Office of the Ethics Commissioner for anything done in good faith under this Act or any other enactment.
(2) No action lies against a person who in good faith provides information or gives evidence in a proceeding under Part 5 to the Ethics Commissioner or to a person employed or engaged by the Office of the Ethics Commissioner.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s45;2014 c9 s1(26)
46(1) The Ethics Commissioner shall, at any times that the Ethics Commissioner considers appropriate, and at least annually, report in writing to the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly
(a) the names of Members who, in the opinion of the Ethics Commissioner,
(i) have not filed disclosure statements or returns within the time provided by section 11 or 15, as the case may be, or
(ii) have not made the full disclosure required by section 12,
(b) generally on the affairs of the Office of the Ethics Commissioner.
(2) The Speaker of the Legislative Assembly shall lay a copy of the report before the Legislative Assembly if it is then sitting or, if it is not then sitting, within 15 days after the commencement of the next sitting.
1991 cC‑22.1 s44
47(1) On the recommendation of the Ethics Commissioner, the Standing Committee may make an order
(a) respecting the management of records in the custody or under the control of the Office of the Ethics Commissioner, including their creation, handling, control, organization, retention, maintenance, security, preservation, disposition, alienation and destruction and their transfer to the Provincial Archives of Alberta;
(b) establishing or governing the establishment of programs for any matter referred to in clause (a);
(c) defining and classifying records;
(2) Notwithstanding subsection (1), the Ethics Commissioner shall retain records
(a) of a Member that are in the Ethics Commissioner’s custody or control for a period of at least 2 years after the Member ceases to be a Member,
(b) of a former Minister that are in the Ethics Commissioner’s custody or control for a period of at least 2 years after the period referred to in section 31(1) in respect of the former Minister has expired, and
(c) of a former political staff member that are in the Ethics Commissioner’s custody or control for a period of at least 2 years after the period referred to in section 32.1(1) in respect of the former political staff member has expired.
(3) The Ethics Commissioner shall destroy the records retained under subsection (2) immediately after the period referred to in subsection (2) unless
(a) the records are required for the purpose of an investigation or prosecution under this Act, or
(b) the Ethics Commissioner has reasonable grounds to believe that the records are required for the purpose of an investigation, inquiry or prosecution under any other enactment of Alberta or under an Act of the Parliament of Canada.
(4) The Ethics Commissioner shall destroy the records when in the opinion of the Ethics Commissioner the records are no longer required under subsection (3)(a) or (b).
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s47;2007 c28 s26;2014 c9 s1(27)
48 By December 1, 2012 and every 5 years after that, a special committee established by the Legislative Assembly must begin a comprehensive review of this Act and must submit to the Legislative Assembly, within one year after beginning the review, a report that includes any amendments recommended by the committee.
RSA 2000 cC‑23 s48;2007 c28 s27
Part 9 Repealed 2007 c28 s28.
Disqualifying Offices
Part 1 Judicial Offices
1. Judges of The Provincial Court of Alberta Part 2 Offices of the Legislature
1. The Auditor General of Alberta under the Auditor General Act
2. The Ombudsman under the Ombudsman Act
3. The Chief Electoral Officer under the Election Act
4. The Ethics Commissioner under the Conflicts of Interest Act
5. The Information and Privacy Commissioner
6. The Child and Youth Advocate
7. The Public Interest Commissioner
Part 3 Other Disqualifying Offices
The Lieutenant Governor in Council may by regulation amend this Part to add any office the Lieutenant Governor in Council considers appropriate for the purposes of this Act.
The office of chair or member of any of the following:
Alberta Agricultural Products Marketing Council
Alberta Apprenticeship and Industry Training Board under the Apprenticeship and Industry Training Act
Alberta Building Standards Council
Alberta Gaming Commission appointed under section 207 of the Criminal Code (Canada)
Board of the Alberta Gaming and Liquor Commission
Alberta Order of Excellence Council
Alberta Transportation Safety Board
Appeal board under the Freehold Mineral Rights Tax Act
Appeal board under the Mortgage Brokers Regulation Act
Automobile Insurance Rate Board
Board of Directors of the Alberta General Insurance Company
Board of Directors of the Alberta Opportunity Company
Board of governors of a public college under the Post‑secondary Learning Act
Board of governors of a technical institute under the Post‑secondary Learning Act
Board of governors of a university under the Post‑secondary Learning Act
Board of Governors of The Banff Centre
Board of trustees of Northland School Division No. 61
Body incorporated under section 6 of the Universities Act
Criminal Injuries Review Board
Farm Implement Board under the Farm Implement Act
Health Disciplines Board
Hospital Privileges Appeal Board
Initial governing authority of a technical institute under the Post‑secondary Learning Act
Initial governing authority or governing authority of a university under the Post‑secondary Learning Act
Irrigation Council
Judicial Council established under Part 6 of the Judicature Act
Land Compensation Board
Local Authorities Pension Plan Board of Trustees
Metis Settlements Appeal Tribunal, including the Land Access Panel and the Existing Leases Land Access Panel
Occupational Health and Safety Council
Provincial Health Board under the Regional Health Authorities Act
Public Emergency Tribunal under the Burial of the Dead Act
Public Health Appeal Board
Public Service Pension Board
Regional Health Authority under the Regional Health Authorities Act
Review panel under the Mental Health Act
Safety Codes Council under the Safety Codes Act
School Buildings Board
Special Forces Pension Board
Teaching Profession Appeal Board under the Teaching Profession Act
Universities Academic Pension Board
The Workers’ Compensation Board
RSA 2000 cC‑23 Sched.;RSA 2000 cH‑7 s146; RSA 2000 cT‑6 s194;2002 c8 s21;2002 c11 s1(27); 2002 c22 s9;2003 cP‑19.5 s135;2003 c12 s26;2003 c40 s22; 2004 c30 s4;2007 cA‑37.2 s82(3);2007 c28 s29;2007 c32 s1(35); 2007 c42 s2;2008 cA‑4.2 s124;2008 cF‑11.5 s21;2008 cH‑4.3 s12; 2008 c19 s39;2008 c25 s21;2009 c26 s32;2011 cC‑11.5 s27;2011 cH‑7.2 s26; 2012 cP‑39.5 s55;2012 cR‑17.3 s87;2013 cB‑7.5 s10;2015 c12 s1
(NOTE: Section 29(n) of the Conflicts of Interest Amendment Act, 2007 (SA 2007 c28) purports to amend the Schedule as follows:
29 The Schedule is amended in Part 3
(n) by adding “Review Board appointed under section 672.38 of the Criminal Code (Canada)” after “Regional Health Authority under the Regional Health Authority Act”.
The amendment has not been incorporated because the words “Regional Health Authority Act” do not appear in the Schedule.)