Chamber
quebec
Stage
Introduced
This Quebec private bill deals with a specific property located in the city of Québec.
Key Changes
- Addresses the legal status or conditions of a specific immovable (real property) in Ville de Québec
- Introduced as a private bill, meaning it applies to a specific property rather than creating general law
- Passed the introduction stage with a Law Clerk's report confirming proper public notice
- Proceeded to committee stage for further review as of April 2, 2026
Gotchas
- The full text of the bill is only available as a PDF and was not included in the provided content, so the specific legal change being made to the property cannot be confirmed from this summary.
- Private bills in Quebec require public notice to be published in advance, which the Law Clerk confirmed was done correctly in this case.
- Private bills are narrowly scoped and do not set broad legal precedents — they apply only to the specific subject named in the bill.
Who's Affected
- Owner(s) or occupant(s) of the specific property in question
- Ville de Québec municipal government
- Potentially neighbouring property owners depending on the nature of the change
Vibes
0 responses
Gotchas
- The full text of the bill is only available as a PDF and was not included in the provided content, so the specific legal change being made to the property cannot be confirmed from this summary.
- Private bills in Quebec require public notice to be published in advance, which the Law Clerk confirmed was done correctly in this case.
- Private bills are narrowly scoped and do not set broad legal precedents — they apply only to the specific subject named in the bill.
Summary
Bill 205 is a private bill introduced in the Quebec National Assembly by Mario Asselin, the MNA for Vanier-Les Rivières. It concerns a specific piece of real property (called an 'immovable' in Quebec civil law) located within the territory of Ville de Québec. Private bills like this one typically address a specific legal situation affecting a particular person, organization, or property, rather than creating general laws that apply to everyone. The bill was introduced during the 43rd Legislature, 2nd Session, and as of the available information, it had reached the committee stage following its introduction on April 2, 2026. The Law Clerk confirmed that proper public notice was given as required by the rules governing private bills. Because the full text of the bill is only available as a PDF and the detailed content was not provided here, the specific nature of the change being made to the property's legal status — such as a boundary adjustment, change of use, or exemption — cannot be described in further detail.
Automatically generated from bill text using Claude
Vibes
0 responses