Yarmouth Golf and Country Club, An Act to Incorporate The (amended)
Chamber
nova_scotia
Stage
Introduced
This bill updates the 1920 incorporation act for the Yarmouth Golf and Country Club in Nova Scotia.
Key Changes
- Amends the original 1920 Act that incorporated the Yarmouth Golf and Country Club
- Updates the legal framework governing the club's incorporation under Nova Scotia law
- Comes into force upon proclamation rather than automatically on Royal Assent
Gotchas
- The full text of the specific amendments is not available in the provided material, so the exact changes to the club's governance or structure cannot be confirmed
- The bill comes into force upon proclamation, meaning it does not automatically take effect after Royal Assent — a separate government order is required
- As a private and local bill, this legislation applies only to this specific organization and has no broader public policy implications
Who's Affected
- Members and leadership of the Yarmouth Golf and Country Club
- Residents of the Yarmouth area who interact with the club
Vibes
0 responses
Gotchas
- The full text of the specific amendments is not available in the provided material, so the exact changes to the club's governance or structure cannot be confirmed
- The bill comes into force upon proclamation, meaning it does not automatically take effect after Royal Assent — a separate government order is required
- As a private and local bill, this legislation applies only to this specific organization and has no broader public policy implications
Summary
This is a private and local bill introduced in the Nova Scotia Legislature that amends the original 1920 act that incorporated the Yarmouth Golf and Country Club. Private and local bills like this one typically deal with the specific legal status, governance structure, or operational rules of a particular organization rather than broad public policy. The bill was introduced by MLA Nick Hilton, who represents the Yarmouth riding, and received Royal Assent on October 3, 2025. Because the full text of the amendments is not included in the provided material, the specific changes made to the club's incorporating legislation are not detailed here. This type of legislation is routine in Canadian provincial legislatures and is used to update older incorporation documents for private organizations such as clubs, societies, or local institutions to reflect modern needs or legal requirements.
Automatically generated from bill text using Claude
Vibes
0 responses