Third Cornwallis or Billtown Baptist Church, Kings County, An Act to incorporate the Trustees of the (amended)
Chamber
nova_scotia
Stage
Introduced
This bill amends a 1902 Nova Scotia law that incorporated the trustees of a Baptist church in Kings County.
Key Changes
- Amends the 1902 Act that incorporated the trustees of the Third Cornwallis or Billtown Baptist Church
- Updates the legal framework governing the church's incorporated trustees
- Became law immediately upon Royal Assent on March 26, 2025
Gotchas
- The full text of the specific amendments is not available in the provided bill summary, so the exact changes to the 1902 act cannot be detailed.
- As a private and local bill, this legislation applies only to this specific church and does not set broader legal precedent.
- The bill was introduced by the local MLA for Kings North, which is standard practice for private and local bills affecting constituents.
Who's Affected
- Trustees of the Third Cornwallis or Billtown Baptist Church
- Members of the Third Cornwallis or Billtown Baptist Church congregation
- Kings County, Nova Scotia community
Vibes
0 responses
Gotchas
- The full text of the specific amendments is not available in the provided bill summary, so the exact changes to the 1902 act cannot be detailed.
- As a private and local bill, this legislation applies only to this specific church and does not set broader legal precedent.
- The bill was introduced by the local MLA for Kings North, which is standard practice for private and local bills affecting constituents.
Summary
This is a private and local bill introduced in the Nova Scotia Legislature that updates a very old piece of legislation from 1902. The original 1902 act gave legal status (incorporation) to the trustees of the Third Cornwallis or Billtown Baptist Church in Kings County, Nova Scotia. This 2025 amendment modifies some aspect of that original incorporation, though the specific changes to the church's trustee structure or powers are not detailed in the available text. Private and local bills like this one are common in provincial legislatures. They deal with specific organizations, municipalities, or individuals rather than the general public. In this case, the bill likely updates the church's legal framework to reflect modern needs, such as changes in how the trustees are organized, how property is managed, or how the church operates legally. It received Royal Assent on March 26, 2025, and came into effect the same day.
Automatically generated from bill text using Claude
Vibes
0 responses