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C-10

HOUSEAT3RDREADING

45th Parliament · Session 1

Bill C-10: An Act respecting the Commissioner for Modern Treaty Implementation

Commissioner for Modern Treaty Implementation Act

Introduced

September 25, 2025

Current Stage

HouseAt3rdReading

Last Updated

April 21, 2026

Sponsor

Rebecca Alty

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Bill C-10

Tue Apr 21 2026

An Act respecting the Commissioner for Modern Treaty Implementation

Impact Rating

3/5

Short Summary

Establishes an independent Commissioner to audit the federal government and ensure it keeps promises made in modern treaties with Indigenous nations.

Indigenous Rights
Modern Treaties
Accountability
Government Oversight
Reconciliation

This bill creates a new, independent watchdog called the 'Commissioner for Modern Treaty Implementation'. Since 1974, the Canadian government has signed many 'Modern Treaties' (comprehensive land claims) with Indigenous groups. However, the government often fails to fulfill the specific promises made in these agreements. This Commissioner will audit government departments to ensure they are keeping their word, report failures directly to Parliament, and hold the government accountable for its legal obligations to Indigenous peoples.

Why does this bill exist?

Origin (Platform Promise)

This fulfills a government commitment to improve the relationship with Indigenous peoples by ensuring that signed agreements are actually honoured.

  • Establishes the 'Commissioner for Modern Treaty Implementation' as an independent officer.

  • The Commissioner serves a 7-year term and is appointed with the approval of both the House and Senate.

  • The core job is to conduct 'performance audits' of government departments to see if they are obeying treaty terms.

  • The Commissioner reports directly to Parliament, not just to a Minister, ensuring transparency.

  • Requires the government to consult with Indigenous treaty partners before appointing the Commissioner or changing this law.

  • The Commissioner has the power to demand information and records from government institutions.

  • Does not apply to historic treaties (pre-1975); strictly focuses on Modern Treaties.

Indigenous Treaty Partners

(Rights Expanded)

They gain a dedicated champion to investigate complaints when the government fails to deliver on treaty promises.

Federal Bureaucrats

(Harder)

They will face stricter audits and must spend more time reporting on how they are meeting treaty obligations.

Taxpayers

(More Expensive)

Funds will be required to pay for this new agency's salaries and operations.

Provincial Impact

Provincial Impact

None (Purely Federal) Interaction

This bill applies only to federal government institutions and their obligations under treaties.

Benefits & Pros

Increases government accountability by creating an independent check on federal promises.

Could save money in the long run by fixing treaty issues early, avoiding expensive lawsuits.

Builds trust between Indigenous nations and the Crown by showing a commitment to follow-through.

Ensures that treaty implementation is not hidden within a department but is reported publicly to Parliament.

Beneficiaries

Indigenous Modern Treaty Holders (e.g., Nisga'a, Inuit, Tlicho)
Parliamentarians (Better information)

Risks & Cons

Creates a new layer of bureaucracy with associated costs (salaries, staff, office space) for taxpayers.

The Commissioner has the power to report and recommend, but cannot force the government to act (no enforcement power).

May create administrative friction between the new Commissioner and existing departments.

Limited to Modern Treaties, leaving issues regarding historic treaties unaddressed by this specific office.

Affected Groups

Federal Government Departments (Increased scrutiny and workload)

Before & After

Currently: If the government fails to build a promised community center under a treaty, the Indigenous group has to lobby ministers or sue in court (expensive and slow). Under this Bill: The Commissioner investigates the failure, publishes a damning report to Parliament, and pressure is put on the government to fix it immediately.

Real World Scenario

Currently: A Modern Treaty requires the government to hire 40% local Indigenous staff for a regional project. The government ignores this and hires 5%. No one notices for years. Under this Bill: The Commissioner audits the project, discovers the hiring breach, and tables a report in Parliament, forcing the Minister to explain why they broke the law.

Frequently Asked Questions

Sponsor

Rebecca Alty

Member of Parliament

House of Commons

First reading

Completed on September 25, 2025

Second reading

Completed on February 9, 2026

Consideration in committee

Completed on March 23, 2026

Report stage

Completed on April 21, 2026

Third reading

Not yet started

Senate

First reading

Not yet started

Second reading

Not yet started

Third reading

Not yet started

Abuse Potential

The risk of abuse is low regarding citizen rights, but high regarding bureaucratic inefficiency. The Commissioner has broad powers to launch reviews and audits. If misused, this could bog down government departments in endless paperwork and inquiries ('paralysis by analysis') without achieving tangible results. Conversely, because the Commissioner lacks binding enforcement power, a future government could simply ignore the findings, rendering the office an expensive but toothless symbol.

Implementation Risk

Moderate. The main risk is finding a Commissioner who is trusted by both the Government and Indigenous groups. If the appointee is seen as biased, the office will fail.

Broad Economic Impact

Indirect. Better treaty compliance creates more certainty for resource development and land use, which is good for the economy.

Everyday Life

Minimal impact. Unless you belong to a Modern Treaty nation, your daily life will not change.

Admin Burden

None for citizens. High for government departments.

Timeline

The Office will be established shortly after the bill passes, but audits will take time to complete.