Part 1 implements certain income tax measures by 
 (a) providing a Labour Mobility Deduction for the temporary relocation of tradespeople to a work location; 
 (b) allowing for the immediate expensing of eligible property by certain Canadian businesses; 
 (c) allowing the Children’s Special Allowance to be paid in respect of a child who is maintained by an Indigenous governing body and providing consistent tax treatment of kinship care providers and foster parents receiving financial assistance from an Indigenous governing body and those receiving such assistance from a provincial government; 
 (d) doubling the allowable qualifying expense limit under the Home Accessibility Tax Credit; 
 (e) expanding the criteria for the mental functions impairment eligibility as well as the life-sustaining therapy category eligibility for the Disability Tax Credit; 
 (f) providing clarity in respect of the determination of the one-time additional payment under the GST/HST tax credit for the period 2019-2020; 
 (g) changing the delivery of Climate Action Incentive payments from a refundable credit claimed annually to a credit that is paid quarterly; 
 (h) temporarily extending the period for incurring eligible expenses and other deadlines under film or video production tax credits; 
 (i) providing a tax incentive for specified zero-emission technology manufacturing activities; 
 (j) providing the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) the discretion to accept late applications for the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy, the Canada Emergency Rent Subsidy and the Canada Recovery Hiring Program; 
 (k) including postdoctoral fellowship income in the definition of “earned income” for RRSP purposes; 
 (l) enabling registered charities to enter into charitable partnerships with organizations other than qualified donees under certain conditions; 
 (m) allowing automatic and immediate revocation of the registration of an organization as a charity where that organization is listed as a terrorist entity under the  Criminal Code ; 
 (n) enabling the CRA to use taxpayer information to assist in the collection of Canada Emergency Business Account loans; and 
 (o) expanding capital cost allowance deductions to include new clean energy equipment. 
 It also makes related and consequential amendments to the  Excise Tax Act , the  Children’s Special Allowances Act , the  Excise Act, 2001 , the  Income Tax Regulations  and the  Children’s Special Allowance Regulations . 
 Part 2 implements certain Goods and Services Tax/Harmonized Sales Tax (GST/HST) measures by 
 (a) ensuring that all assignment sales in respect of newly constructed or substantially renovated residential housing are taxable supplies for GST/HST purposes; and 
 (b) extending eligibility for the expanded hospital rebate to health care services supplied by charities or non-profit organizations with the active involvement of, or on the recommendation of, either a physician or a nurse practitioner, irrespective of their geographic location. 
 Part 3 amends the  Excise Act, 2001 , the  Excise Act  and other related texts in order to implement three measures. 
 Division 1 of Part 3 implements a new federal excise duty framework for vaping products by, among other things, 
 (a) requiring that manufacturers of vaping products obtain a vaping licence from the CRA; 
 (b) requiring that all vaping products that are removed from the premises of a vaping licensee to be entered into the Canadian market for retail sale be affixed with an excise stamp; 
 (c) imposing excise duties on vaping products to be paid by vaping product licensees; 
 (d) providing for administration and enforcement rules related to the excise duty framework on vaping products; 
 (e) providing the Governor in Council with authority to provide for an additional excise duty in respect of provinces and territories that enter into a coordinated vaping product taxation agreement with Canada; and 
 (f) making related amendments to other legislative texts, including to allow for a coordinated federal/provincial-territorial vaping product taxation system and to ensure that the excise duty framework applies properly to imported vaping products. 
 Division 2 of Part 3 amends the excise duty exemption under the  Excise Act, 2001  for wine produced in Canada and composed wholly of agricultural or plant product grown in Canada. 
 Division 3 of Part 3 amends the  Excise Act  to eliminate excise duty for beer containing no more than 0.5% alcohol by volume. 
 Part 4 enacts the  Select Luxury Items Tax Act . That Act creates a new taxation regime for domestic sales, and importations into Canada, of certain new motor vehicles and aircraft priced over $100,000 and certain new boats priced over $250,000. It provides that the tax applies if the total price or value of the subject select luxury item at the time of sale or importation exceeds the relevant price threshold. It provides that the tax is to be calculated at the lesser of 10% of the total price of the item and 20% of the total price of the item that exceeds the relevant price threshold. To promote compliance with the new taxation regime, that Act includes modern elements of administration and enforcement aligned with those found in other taxation statutes. Finally, this Part also makes related and consequential amendments to other texts to ensure proper implementation of the new tax and to ensure a cohesive and efficient administration by the CRA. 
 Division 1 of Part 5 retroactively renders a provision of the contract that is set out in the schedule to  An Act respecting the Canadian Pacific Railway , chapter 1 of the Statutes of Canada, 1881, to be of no force or effect. It retroactively extinguishes any obligations and liabilities of Her Majesty in right of Canada and any rights and privileges of the Canadian Pacific Railway Company arising out of or acquired under that provision. 
 Division 2 of Part 5 amends the  Nisga’a Final Agreement Act  to give force of law to the entire Nisga’a Nation Taxation Agreement during the period that that Taxation Agreement is, by its terms, in force. 
 Division 3 of Part 5 repeals the  Safe Drinking Water for First Nations Act . 
 It also amends the  Income Tax Act  to exempt from taxation under that Act any income earned by the Safe Drinking Water Trust in accordance with the Settlement Agreement entered into on September 15, 2021 relating to long-term drinking water quality for impacted First Nations. 
 Division 4 of Part 5 authorizes payments to be made out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund for the purpose of addressing transit shortfalls and needs and improving housing supply and affordability. 
 Division 5 of Part 5 amends the  Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation Act  by adding the President and Chief Executive Officer of the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation and one other member to that Corporation’s Board of Directors. 
 Division 6 of Part 5 amends the  Federal-Provincial Fiscal Arrangements Act  to authorize additional payments to the provinces and territories. 
 Division 7 of Part 5 amends the  Borrowing Authority Act  to, among other things, count previously excluded borrowings made in the spring of 2021 in the calculation of the maximum amount that may be borrowed. It also amends the  Financial Administration Act  to change certain reporting requirements in relation to amounts borrowed under orders made under paragraph 46.1(c) of that Act. 
 Division 8 of Part 5 amends the  Pension Benefits Standards Act, 1985  to, among other things, permit the establishment of a solvency reserve account in the pension fund of certain defined benefit plans and require the establishment of governance policies for all pension plans. 
 Division 9 of Part 5 amends the  Special Import Measures Act  to, among other things, 
 (a) provide that assessments of injury are to take into account impacts on workers; 
 (b) require the Canadian International Trade Tribunal to make inquiries with respect to massive importations when it is acting under section 42 of that Act; 
 (c) require that Tribunal to initiate expiry reviews of certain orders and findings; 
 (d) modify the deadline for notifying the government of the country of export of properly documented complaints; 
 (e) modify the criteria for imposing duties in cases of massive importations; 
 (f) modify the criteria for initiating anti-circumvention investigations; and 
 (g) remove the requirement that, in order to find circumvention, the principal cause of the change in a pattern of trade must be the imposition of anti-dumping or countervailing duties. 
 It also amends the  Canadian International Trade Tribunal Act  to provide that trade unions may, with the support of domestic producers, file global safeguard complaints. 
 Division 10 of Part 5 amends the  Trust and Loan Companies Act  and the  Insurance Companies Act  to, among other things, modernize corporate governance communications of financial institutions. 
 Division 11 of Part 5 amends the  Insurance Companies Act  to permit property and casualty companies and marine companies to not include the value of certain debt obligations when calculating their borrowing limit. 
 Division 12 of Part 5 enacts the  Prohibition on the Purchase of Residential Property by Non-Canadians Act . The Act prohibits the purchase of residential property in Canada by non-Canadians unless they are exempted by the Act or its regulations or the purchase is made in certain circumstances specified in the regulations. 
 Division 13 of Part 5 amends the  Parliament of Canada Act  and makes consequential and related amendments to other Acts to, among other things, 
 (a) change the additional annual allowances that are paid to senators who occupy certain positions so that the government’s representatives and the Opposition in the Senate are eligible for the allowances for five positions each and the three other recognized parties or parliamentary groups in the Senate with the greatest number of members are eligible for the allowances for four positions each; 
 (b) provide that the Leader of the Government in the Senate or Government Representative in the Senate, the Leader of the Opposition in the Senate and the Leader or Facilitator of every other recognized party or parliamentary group in the Senate are to be consulted on the appointment of certain officers and agents of Parliament; and 
 (c) provide that the Leader of the Government in the Senate or Government Representative in the Senate, the Leader of the Opposition in the Senate and the Leader or Facilitator of every other recognized party or parliamentary group in the Senate may change the membership of the Standing Senate Committee on Internal Economy, Budgets and Administration. 
 Division 14 of Part 5 amends the  Financial Administration Act  in order to, among other things, allow the Treasury Board to provide certain services to certain entities. 
 Division 15 of Part 5 amends the  Competition Act  to enhance the Commissioner of Competition’s investigative powers, criminalize wage fixing and related agreements, increase maximum fines and administrative monetary penalties, clarify that incomplete price disclosure is a false or misleading representation, expand the definition of anti-competitive conduct, allow private access to the Competition Tribunal to remedy an abuse of dominance and improve the effectiveness of the merger notification requirements and other provisions. 
 Division 16 of Part 5 amends the  Copyright Act  to extend certain terms of copyright protection, including the general term, from 50 to 70 years after the life of the author and, in doing so, implements one of Canada’s obligations under the Canada–United States–Mexico Agreement. 
 Division 17 of Part 5 amends the  College of Patent Agents and Trademark Agents Act  to, among other things, 
 (a) ensure that the College has sufficient independence and flexibility to exercise its corporate functions; 
 (b) provide statutory immunity to certain persons involved in the regulatory activities of the College; and 
 (c) grant powers to the Registrar and Investigations Committee that will allow for improved efficiency in the complaints and discipline process. 
 Division 18 of Part 5 enacts the  Civil Lunar Gateway Agreement Implementation Act  to implement Canada’s obligations under the Memorandum of Understanding between the Government of Canada and the Government of the United States of America concerning Cooperation on the Civil Lunar Gateway. It provides for powers to protect confidential information provided under the Memorandum. It also makes related amendments to the  Criminal Code  to extend its application to activities related to the Lunar Gateway and to the  Government Employees Compensation Act  to address the cross-waiver of liability set out in the Memorandum. 
 Division 19 of Part 5 amends the  Corrections and Conditional Release Act  to restrict the use of detention in dry cells to cases where the institutional head has reasonable grounds to believe that an inmate has ingested contraband or that contraband is being carried in the inmate’s rectum. 
 Division 20 of Part 5 amends the  Customs Act  in order to authorize its administration and enforcement by electronic means and to provide that the importer of record of goods is jointly and severally, or solidarily, liable to pay duties on the goods under section 17 of that Act with the importer or person authorized to account for the goods, as the case may be, and the owner of the goods. 
 Division 21 of Part 5 amends the  Criminal Code  to create an offence of wilfully promoting antisemitism by condoning, denying or downplaying the Holocaust through statements communicated other than in private conversation. 
 Division 22 of Part 5 amends the  Judges Act , the  Federal Courts Act , the  Tax Court of Canada Act  and certain other acts to, among other things, 
 (a) implement the Government of Canada’s response to the report of the sixth Judicial Compensation and Benefits Commission regarding salaries and benefits and to create the office of supernumerary prothonotary of the Federal Court; 
 (b) increase the number of judges for certain superior courts and include the new offices of Associate Chief Justice of the Court of Queen’s Bench of New Brunswick and Associate Chief Justice of the Court of Queen’s Bench for Saskatchewan; 
 (c) create the offices of prothonotary and supernumerary prothonotary of the Tax Court of Canada; and 
 (d) replace the term “prothonotary” with “associate judge”. 
 Division 23 of Part 5 amends the  Immigration and Refugee Protection Act  to, among other things, 
 (a) authorize the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration to give instructions establishing categories of foreign nationals for the purposes of determining to whom an invitation to make an application for permanent residence is to be issued, as well as instructions setting out the economic goal that that Minister seeks to support in establishing the category; 
 (b) prevent an officer from issuing a visa or other document to a foreign national invited in respect of an established category if the foreign national is not in fact eligible to be a member of that category; 
 (c) require that the annual report to Parliament on the operation of that Act include a description of any instructions that establish a category of foreign nationals, the economic goal sought to be supported in establishing the category and the number of foreign nationals invited to make an application for permanent residence in respect of the category; and 
 (d) authorize that Minister to give instructions respecting the class of permanent residents in respect of which a foreign national must apply after being issued an invitation, if the foreign national is eligible to be a member of more than one class. 
 Division 24 of Part 5 amends the  Old Age Security Act  to correct a cross-reference in that Act to the  Budget Implementation Act, 2021, No. 1 . 
 Division 25 of Part 5 
 (a) amends the  Canada Emergency Response Benefit Act  to set out the consequences that apply in respect of a worker who received, for a four-week period, an income support payment and who received, for any week during the four-week period, any benefit, allowance or money referred to in subparagraph 6(1)(b)(ii) or (iii) of that Act; 
 (b) amends the  Canada Emergency Student Benefit Act  to set out the consequences that apply in respect of a student who received, for a four-week period, a Canada emergency student benefit and who received, for any week during the  four-week  period, any benefit, allowance or money referred to in subparagraph 6(1)(b)(ii) or (iii) of that Act; and 
 (c) amends the  Employment Insurance Act  to set out the consequences that apply in respect of a claimant who received, for any week, an employment insurance emergency response benefit and who received, for that week, any payment or benefit referred to in paragraph 153.9(2)(c) or (d) of that Act. 
 Division 26 of Part 5 amends the  Employment Insurance Act  to, among other things, 
 (a) replace employment benefits and support measures set out in Part II of that Act with employment support measures that are intended to help insured participants and other workers — including workers in groups underrepresented in the labour market — to obtain and keep employment; and 
 (b) allow the Canada Employment Insurance Commission to enter into agreements to provide for the payment of contributions to organizations for the costs of measures that they implement and that are consistent with the purpose and guidelines set out in Part II of that Act. 
 It also makes a consequential amendment to the  Income Tax Act . 
 Division 27 of Part 5 amends the  Employment Insurance Act  to specify the maximum number of weeks for which benefits may be paid in a benefit period to certain seasonal workers and to extend, until October 28, 2023, the increase in the maximum number of weeks for which those benefits may be paid. It also amends the  Budget Implementation Act, 2021, No. 1  to add a transitional measure in relation to amendments to the  Employment Insurance Regulations  that are found in that Act. 
 Division 28 of Part 5 amends the  Canada Pension Plan  to make corrections respecting 
 (a) the calculation of the minimum qualifying period and the contributory period for the purposes of the post-retirement disability benefit; 
 (b) the determination of values for contributors who have periods excluded from their contributory periods by reason of disability; and 
 (c) the attribution of amounts for contributors who have periods excluded from their contributory periods because they were family allowance recipients. 
 Division 29 of Part 5 amends  An Act to amend the Criminal Code and the Canada Labour Code  to, among other things, 
 (a) shorten the period before which an employee begins to earn one day of medical leave of absence with pay per month; 
 (b) standardize the conditions related to the requirement to provide a medical certificate following a medical leave of absence, regardless of whether the leave is paid or unpaid; 
 (c) authorize the Governor in Council to make regulations in certain circumstances, including to modify certain provisions respecting medical leave of absence with pay; 
 (d) ensure that, for the purposes of medical leave of absence, an employee who changes employers due to the lease or transfer of a work, undertaking or business or due to a contract being awarded through a retendering process is deemed to be continuously employed with one employer; and 
 (e) provide that the provisions relating to medical leave of absence come into force no later than December 1, 2022. 
 Division 30 of Part 5 amends the  Canada Business Corporations Act  to, among other things, 
 (a) require certain corporations to send to the Director appointed under that Act information on individuals with significant control on an annual basis or when a change occurs; 
 (b) allow that Director to provide all or part of that information to an investigative body, the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada or any prescribed entity; and 
 (c) clarify that, for the purposes of subsection 21.1(7) of that Act, it is the securities of a corporation, not the corporation itself, that are listed and posted for trading on a designated stock exchange. 
 Division 31 of Part 5 amends the  Special Economic Measures Act  and the  Justice for Victims of Corrupt Foreign Officials Act (Sergei Magnitsky Law)  to, among other things, 
 (a) create regimes allowing for the forfeiture of property that has been seized or restrained under those Acts; 
 (b) specify that the proceeds resulting from the disposition of those properties are to be used for certain purposes; and 
 (c) allow for the sharing of information between certain persons in certain circumstances. 
 It also makes amendments to the  Seized Property Management Act  in relation to those forfeiture of property regimes.