The New Divorce Act

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The current Divorce Act has been around since 1985. It hasn't changed much in the last 35 years, except when the Child Support Guidelines where introduced in 1997 as a regulation to the Act. It's about to change a lot.

On 18 June 2019, Parliament passed Bill C-78, called "An Act to amend the Divorce Act, the Family Orders and Agreements Enforcement Assistance Act and the Garnishment, Attachment and Pension Diversion Act and to make consequential amendments to another Act." The amendments to the Divorce Act, and to the other legislation in that very long title, will come into effect on 1 July 2020. This page provides an overview of some of the really important changes to the Divorce Act.

Introduction

The federal Divorce Act is the main Canadian law on marriage breakdown and divorce. It only applies to couples who are or were married to each other, regardless of where they were married. It talks about:

  • divorce and foreign divorce orders,
  • custody of children,
  • access to children,
  • paying child support,
  • paying spousal support, and
  • changing orders about custody, access, child support, and spousal support.

Bill C-78 will change how we talk about parenting after separation, and the things the court thinks about when making orders about parenting after separation. It will also impose new duties on married spouses and lawyers to try to resolve problems out of court before deciding that a problem has to be litigated. It will create a new way to change orders about child support and spousal support when one or both spouses have moved to different provinces. And, there's a new test to help decide what should happen when someone wants to move away with a child.

The other parts of the Divorce Act about divorce, foreign divorce orders, and making and changing orders about child support and spousal support aren't changing much at all.

Remember, the Divorce Act only applies to people who are, or were, legally married to each other. If you never married your partner, the Divorce Act doesn't apply to you. Any problems you have can only be dealt with under the provincial Family Law Act.

Parenting After Separation

Parenting Orders and Contact Orders

The biggest change in Bill C-78 is about how we talk about parenting after separation. Say goodbye to "custody" and "access."

Instead, we'll be talking about:

Parenting time, which is the schedule of the time the children spend with each spouse.

Decision-making responsibility, which is about making decisions about important aspects of the children's lives, like where they go to school, how they get treated when they get sick, or if they will be raised in a religion.

Contact, which is the time someone other than a spouse spends with the children.

Together, orders about parenting time and decision-making responsibility are called parenting orders. A parenting plan, on the other hand, means the parts of a written agreement between spouses that talk about parenting time and decision-making responsibility.

Parenting orders and parenting plans may:

  • divide parenting time between spouses,
  • divide or share decision-making responsibilities between spouses, and
  • specify how spouses communicate with each other.


This information applies to British Columbia, Canada. Last reviewed for legal accuracy by JP Boyd, November 19, 2019.


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