Chamber
nova_scotia
Stage
Introduced
This Nova Scotia NDP private member's bill proposes amendments to the province's Finance Act from 2010.
Key Changes
- Proposes amendments to Chapter 2 of the Acts of 2010, the Finance Act of Nova Scotia
- Specific changes cannot be determined as the full amendment text was not provided in the source document
Gotchas
- This is a Private Member's Bill introduced by an opposition NDP MLA, meaning it is less likely to pass without government support
- The full text of the proposed amendments was not available in the provided document, making a complete analysis impossible
- The bill was referred to the Public Bills Committee, which is a standard step but does not guarantee it will advance further
Who's Affected
- Nova Scotia provincial government and its fiscal operations
- Nova Scotia taxpayers and residents, depending on the nature of the amendments
Vibes
0 responses
Gotchas
- This is a Private Member's Bill introduced by an opposition NDP MLA, meaning it is less likely to pass without government support
- The full text of the proposed amendments was not available in the provided document, making a complete analysis impossible
- The bill was referred to the Public Bills Committee, which is a standard step but does not guarantee it will advance further
Summary
Bill 25 is a private member's bill introduced by NDP MLA Lisa Lachance in the Nova Scotia Legislature on February 20, 2025. It proposes changes to the Finance Act, which is the law that governs how the provincial government manages its finances, borrowing, and fiscal operations. Unfortunately, the full text of the specific amendments is not included in the provided document — only the bill's title, introduction details, and legislative progress are shown. Without the actual amendment text, it is not possible to describe exactly what changes are being proposed to the Finance Act. The bill was introduced as a Private Member's Bill, meaning it was brought forward by an opposition MLA rather than the governing party. It received its Second Reading debate on February 26, 2025, and was referred to the Public Bills Committee for further review.
Automatically generated from bill text using Claude
Vibes
0 responses