
Alberta Child Support Laws (2026): Guidelines & MEP
Alberta uses the Federal Child Support Guidelines tables for all cases. Learn how amounts are calculated, section 7 expenses, shared parenting, and MEP enforcement.
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37 articles

Alberta uses the Federal Child Support Guidelines tables for all cases. Learn how amounts are calculated, section 7 expenses, shared parenting, and MEP enforcement.

Alberta follows Canada's federal one-party consent rule under Criminal Code s. 184(2)(a). Learn what you can record, how Alberta PIPA applies, and why civil privacy remedies are more limited than in Ontario or BC.

Alberta slip and fall law under the Occupiers' Liability Act RSA 2000 c O-4: visitor duty of care, recreational-land trespasser carve-out, child trespassers, 2-year limitation period, and municipal claims.

How child support works in British Columbia: federal guidelines, BC table amounts, special expenses, shared parenting, age of majority at 19, and BC Family Maintenance Agency enforcement.

BC follows Canada's one-party consent rule under Criminal Code s. 184(2)(a). Learn what you can record, the BC Privacy Act statutory tort, PIPA, and penalties.

Slip and fall in BC? The Occupiers Liability Act RSBC 1996 c 337 sets the duty of care, rural exceptions, 2-year limit, and municipal notice traps.

Canada introduced Bill C-36, the Protecting Privacy and Consumer Data Act, on June 15, 2026 to replace its aging federal privacy law. Status: first reading.

Understand Manitoba child support laws, the provincial guidelines that govern Divorce Act cases, table amounts, special expenses, the Child Support Service, and MEP enforcement.

Manitoba follows Canada's one-party consent rule under Criminal Code s. 184(2)(a). Learn how the Manitoba Privacy Act creates a civil tort for unlawful recording without proof of damage.

Manitoba slip and fall law explained: The Occupiers' Liability Act CCSM c O8, trespasser/recreational exceptions, 2-year limitation, and municipal notice rules.

New Brunswick recording laws follow Canada's one-party consent rule (Criminal Code s. 184). Learn PIPEDA obligations and the NB Intimate Images Act.

New Brunswick slip and fall claims are governed by ordinary negligence law, not an Occupiers' Liability Act. Learn the duty of care, 2-year limitation, and municipal notice rules.

Newfoundland and Labrador hit and run laws: s. 320.16 penalties up to life, HTA duties to stop and report, and unidentified driver coverage explained.

NL follows Canada's one-party consent rule for recording. Learn Criminal Code s. 184 rules, the NL Privacy Act civil tort, PIPEDA, and penalties.

NL slip and fall uses common-law negligence, not an OLA. 2-year limitation, no municipal notice deadline, proportionate fault apportionment. Know your rights.

How child support is calculated in the Northwest Territories: federal tables, section 7 expenses, shared parenting, the MEP, and the free NWT recalculation service.

Northwest Territories hit and run laws explained: territorial Motor Vehicles Act duties, Criminal Code s. 320.16, RCMP reporting, and insurance for victims.

Northwest Territories follows Canada's federal one-party consent rule. Any party may record a conversation. No territorial private-sector privacy act; PIPEDA applies. Full guide.

Northwest Territories slip and fall law applies common-law negligence: no Occupiers' Liability Act exists. Learn the duty of care, 6-year limitation, and fault apportionment rules.

Nova Scotia is one-party consent: record any conversation you are part of. Covers Criminal Code s. 184, PIPEDA, the NS Intimate Images Act, and civil privacy.

Nova Scotia slip and fall law: Occupiers' Liability Act SNS 1996 c 27, 2-year limitation, recreational premises, and the municipal sidewalk exception explained.

Nunavut uses the Federal Child Support Tables to set monthly amounts by payor income and number of children. Learn how support is calculated and enforced.

Nunavut hit and run laws explained: territorial Motor Vehicles Act duties, Criminal Code s. 320.16, RCMP reporting, and insurance for victims.

Nunavut follows Canada's one-party consent rule under Criminal Code s. 184. Learn what you can legally record and how PIPEDA and ATIPP apply.

Nunavut has no Occupiers' Liability Act. Slip and fall claims rely on common-law negligence. Learn the duty of care, 6-year limitation period, and contributory fault rules.

Ontario follows Canada's one-party consent rule: you can legally record any conversation you are part of. Learn the Criminal Code rules, Jones v. Tsige civil tort, PIPEDA, voyeurism limits, and workplace recording risks.

Ontario's Occupiers' Liability Act requires reasonable care for all visitors. Snow or ice falls need 60-day written notice; sidewalk falls need 10-day notice.

Prince Edward Island follows Canada's federal one-party consent rule under Criminal Code s. 184. Learn what you can legally record, PEI's limited civil privacy layer, and PIPEDA rules.

PEI's Occupiers' Liability Act requires reasonable care for all visitors. No 60-day snow notice rule. Trespassers receive reduced protection. Two-year limitation period applies.

Quebec uses Canada's one-party consent rule. The Civil Code (arts. 35-41), Quebec Charter s. 5, and Law 25 add the broadest civil privacy layer in Canada.

Quebec slip and fall law uses the Civil Code, not an Occupiers' Liability Act. Learn article 1457 fault rules, the 3-year prescriptive period, and the Dorval SCC ruling on municipal notice.

Saskatchewan follows Canada's one-party consent rule under Criminal Code s. 184(2)(a). Learn what you can record, how the Saskatchewan Privacy Act creates civil liability, and when PIPEDA applies.

Saskatchewan has no Occupiers' Liability Act. Learn how the common-law invitee, licensee, and trespasser categories determine your rights, plus the 2-year limitation period.

Yukon child support follows the federal guidelines and tables. Learn how amounts are calculated, the age-19 cutoff, and how the Yukon MEP enforces orders.

Yukon hit and run law explained: Criminal Code s. 320.16 penalties (up to life), Motor Vehicles Act duties, RCMP reporting, and uninsured motorist coverage for hit-and-run victims.

Yukon follows Canada's federal one-party consent rule under Criminal Code s. 184(2)(a). Learn what you can legally record, PIPEDA's role, and civil-remedy limits.

Yukon has no Occupiers' Liability Act. Learn how common-law negligence governs slip and fall claims, the 2-year limitation period, and fault apportionment rules.