21ProvincialSocial Policy
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Bill No. 21 61st Legislature - 2nd Session An Act to Amend the Child and Youth Well-Being Act Introduced: 11/21/2025 Bill Type: Government Bill Sponsored by: Hon. Cindy MILES Status: Royal Assent

Chamber

new_brunswick

Stage

Introduced

This bill amends New Brunswick's Child and Youth Well-Being Act to update child welfare laws in the province.

Key Changes

  • Amends the existing Child and Youth Well-Being Act in New Brunswick
  • Received Royal Assent on December 12, 2025, making it law
  • Specific provisions of the amendment are not available in the provided text

Gotchas

  • The full text of the amendments was not included in the provided source material, so specific changes to the Act cannot be confirmed or detailed.
  • The bill passed through all legislative stages very quickly — from introduction to Royal Assent in under one month — which may indicate the changes were considered non-controversial or urgent.
  • As a government bill introduced by a minister, it reflects official provincial policy priorities but the rationale for the specific amendments is not described in the available text.

Who's Affected

  • Children and youth in New Brunswick
  • Families involved with child welfare services
  • Social workers and child protection workers
  • Foster families and caregivers
  • Provincial government departments responsible for child and family services

Summary

Bill No. 21 is a government bill introduced by Hon. Cindy Miles in the New Brunswick Legislative Assembly that amends the existing Child and Youth Well-Being Act. The Child and Youth Well-Being Act governs how the province supports, protects, and provides services to children and youth in New Brunswick, including matters related to child protection, foster care, and family services. The bill was introduced on November 21, 2025, moved quickly through the legislative process, and received Royal Assent on December 12, 2025, meaning it became law. Unfortunately, the full text of the specific amendments is not available in the provided source material, so the precise changes made to the Act cannot be detailed here. As a government bill sponsored by a cabinet minister, it likely reflects the provincial government's priorities around child and youth welfare policy in New Brunswick. Anyone working in child welfare, social services, or families involved with the provincial child protection system could potentially be affected.

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