131ProvincialSocial Policy
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Privacy and Credit Protection Act

Chamber

nova_scotia

Stage

Introduced

This Nova Scotia bill aims to strengthen privacy rights and protect residents from harmful credit reporting practices.

Key Changes

  • Would establish or strengthen privacy protections for Nova Scotia residents
  • Would introduce credit protection measures for individuals
  • May create new rights around accessing, correcting, or freezing credit information
  • Could impose obligations on businesses or credit agencies regarding personal data

Gotchas

  • The full text of the bill's specific provisions was not available in the provided legislative record, limiting the ability to summarize exact measures
  • As a private member's bill introduced by an opposition NDP MLA, it faces a lower likelihood of passing without government support
  • Credit reporting in Canada is partly regulated federally, so a provincial bill may have jurisdictional limitations
  • The bill was referred to the Public Bills Committee, meaning it may be amended or studied further before any vote

Who's Affected

  • Nova Scotia residents with credit files
  • Credit reporting agencies operating in Nova Scotia
  • Businesses that collect or use personal information
  • Consumers dealing with credit disputes or identity theft

Summary

Bill 131, the Privacy and Credit Protection Act, is a private member's bill introduced by NDP MLA Susan Leblanc in the Nova Scotia Legislature on September 23, 2025. The bill's stated purpose is to address privacy rights and credit protection for Nova Scotians, though the full text of the bill's specific provisions was not included in the available legislative record. Based on the title and sponsoring party, the bill likely seeks to give individuals more control over their personal information and credit files, potentially including measures around credit freezes, dispute resolution, or limits on how credit information can be used. Private member's bills like this are introduced by opposition MLAs to raise issues and propose policy changes, though they face a lower likelihood of passing without government support. The bill was introduced in the first session of the 65th Nova Scotia Assembly and proceeded to Second Reading debate on October 1, 2025, and was referred to the Public Bills Committee for further study.

Automatically generated from bill text using Claude

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