48ProvincialSocial Policy
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Third Cornwallis or Billtown Baptist Church, Kings County, An Act to incorporate the Trustees of the (amended)

Chamber

nova_scotia

Stage

Introduced

This bill updates the 1902 law that governs the legal trustees of a Baptist church in Kings County, Nova Scotia.

Key Changes

  • Amends the 1902 Act that incorporated the trustees of the Third Cornwallis or Billtown Baptist Church
  • Updates the legal framework governing how the church's trustees operate
  • Modernizes or adjusts provisions in over 120-year-old legislation for this specific church

Gotchas

  • The full text of the actual amendments is not included in the provided bill information, so the specific changes being made cannot be confirmed from this source alone.
  • This is a private and local bill, meaning it applies only to this specific church and has no broader provincial effect.
  • Such amendments to old church incorporation acts are typically administrative in nature and non-controversial.

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

Summary

This is a private and local bill that amends a very old piece of Nova Scotia legislation from 1902. That original law gave legal status to the trustees of the Third Cornwallis or Billtown Baptist Church in Kings County, meaning the church could officially own property, sign contracts, and conduct legal business as an organization. This 2025 amendment updates or changes some part of that original 1902 incorporation act. The exact changes are not detailed in the bill text provided, but such amendments typically involve things like updating the number of trustees, changing how they are selected, or modernizing outdated language in the original law. This type of bill is routine and narrow in scope. It only affects the specific church and its trustees. It was introduced by the local MLA for Kings North and passed quickly through the Nova Scotia Legislature, receiving Royal Assent on March 26, 2025.

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