Feds launch review of official-languages law 50 years after its introduction
OTTAWA — The federal government is launching a review of the Official Languages Act, saying it is time to modernize the decades-old law.
The 1969 law enshrined Canadians’ right to receive federal services in English or French.
The last major reform of the law was in 1988 and there have been recent calls to update it again, including from a Senate committee that late last month said the act needs to be applied more effectively and consistently.
Oversight mechanisms need to be beefed up to ensure rights aren’t trampled on, the report said, adding a veiled reference to a furor in Ontario that forced the government to backtrack on plans to abolish the independent office of its French-language services commissioner and shrink a francophone-affairs cabinet post.