Liberals table bill to protect French in sweeping update to Official Languages Act
OTTAWA — The Liberals are tabling legislation to beef up protection of French in Canada as part of the biggest overhaul to the Official Languages Act in more than three decades.
Official Languages Minister Mélanie Joly introduced the bill in the House of Commons this morning, proposing reforms in areas that range from federal workplaces to immigration to the selection of Supreme Court judges.
The legislation, known as Bill C-32, would also grant the official languages commissioner more teeth, with the power to compel companies to abide by tighter French-speaking requirements in most large, federally regulated workplaces.
Joly says the bill comes as a response to developments that had yet to unfold when it first passed under then-prime minister Pierre Trudeau in 1969.