An Act to establish a national framework for silver alerts
This bill directs the Minister of Public Safety to create a national framework for a coordinated silver alert system to locate missing vulnerable older persons, including those with dementia. It leverages Canada’s existing National Alert Aggregation and Dissemination System to issue consistent, rapid, and targeted alerts across provinces and territories. The framework must harmonize activation criteria, set privacy guidelines, reduce inappropriate alerts, enable interprovincial coordination, and support public education. It requires a report to Parliament within one year and a follow-up effectiveness review within two years.
Coordinating a national silver alert framework improves safety and public service efficiency by leveraging existing infrastructure and clear standards. While economic impacts are indirect, reduced duplication, faster recoveries, and fewer inappropriate alerts support efficiency-focused tenets without adding unnecessary bureaucracy.
What is the total estimated cost to implement and maintain the national silver alert framework, and will the federal government provide a transparent, stable cost-sharing formula to avoid downloading expenses onto provinces, municipalities, and police services?
How will the framework ensure uniform, evidence-based activation criteria that prevent alert fatigue, and what performance metrics and timelines will the Minister use to evaluate effectiveness in the mandated two-year review?
What specific privacy safeguards will limit the personal information released and ensure automatic expiry and rapid rescission of alerts, and how will compliance be audited across jurisdictions using the national alert system?
Primarily a public safety framework with indirect economic effects; no direct impact on national prosperity.
Standardizes and coordinates alerts across jurisdictions using existing systems, reducing fragmentation and duplication.
May free policing and health resources through faster recoveries, but effects on productivity are indirect and modest.
No relation to trade or export growth.
Uses existing alert infrastructure; limited implications for investment or innovation policy.
Coordinated criteria and privacy rules, fewer false alerts, and national interoperability improve service quality and can lower search and health system costs.
No tax policy changes.
A targeted safety initiative; benefits are important but not transformative for macroeconomic prosperity.
Did we get the builder vote wrong?
Email hi@buildcanada.com