Canada has updated their previous Cabinet Directive on Regulatory Management with the Cabinet Directive on Regulation (CDR) in 2018. It mandates government departments and agencies to conduct ex post evaluation on all subordinate regulations and provides guidance and trainings to policy makers on how to carry them out. In 2018, Canada also introduced Targeted Regulatory Reviews (TRRs) as part of their regulatory framework. These reviews support the government’s broader agenda towards regulatory modernisation, and address regulatory requirements and practices that seem to cause bottlenecks to innovation, growth and competitiveness. In 2019, the first round of TRRs were completed and led to nearly 70 proposals for regulatory and legislative amendments, improvements to regulatory practices, and novel regulatory approaches.
RIAs continue to be mandatory and publicly available via a central registry along with their draft legal text for subordinate regulations only. The CDR reinforced requirements for the analysis of environmental and gender-based impacts and enshrines regulatory co-operation and consultation throughout the regulatory cycle. Canada conducts open consultation by a variety of mechanisms, including over online government portals for draft subordinate regulations. The public can submit comments on consultations on the central government portal or directly to regulators themselves. Generally, once the consultation process is over, a summary of received comments is made publicly available in the final version of the RIA.
The Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat (TBS) oversees subordinate regulations, and provides a review and challenge function to ensure quality RIA, consultation, and regulatory co-operation. It supports the Treasury Board, a Cabinet committee that considers and approves regulations. A Centre for Regulatory Innovation has also been established at TBS to help businesses work with regulators to facilitate regulatory experiments and test emerging technologies. It aims to encourage innovation while safeguarding consumer trust and confidence. For primary laws, the Privy Council Office supports Cabinet in its assessment and approval of legislative proposals destined for parliamentary consideration. Canada could enhance existing oversight by regularly evaluating the quality of consultations and of ex post evaluations. The results of these evaluation could be made publicly available along with suggestions for improvement.