Seniors, Indigenous Peoples, newcomers, and low‑income persons
- Maintained cash access and use: The framework targets groups that rely more on cash, as noted in the bill’s preamble, by keeping access points and acceptance options available (Preamble; Framework Contents s.4(2)(a)-(c)). Timing: within the 18‑month reporting window for initial measures.
Non‑profits and community organizations
- Cash donations: The framework must remove barriers and disincentives to cash donations while not weakening anti‑money laundering and fraud controls (Framework Contents s.4(2)(d)).
Businesses and creditors (e.g., lenders, billers)
- Incentives to accept cash: The framework must include measures to incentivize acceptance of cash payments (Framework Contents s.4(2)(c)). Specific tools are not defined in the bill; details would come in the Minister’s framework and report.
- No immediate mandate: The bill does not require cash acceptance by law; it directs the Minister to design incentives.
Financial institutions, ATM operators, cash services
- Infrastructure expectations: The framework must support the long‑term viability, resilience, and sustainability of cash sorting, storage, distribution, and access points (Framework Contents s.4(2)(a), (e)).
- Distance standards: Institutions may be affected by any “reasonable distance” benchmarks for deposits/withdrawals set by the framework (Framework Contents s.4(2)(a)).
Everyone holding cash or old notes
- “Call‑in” power removed: The bill removes the Governor in Council’s power to call in coins and notes (Related Amendments; Summary). This lowers the risk that government could order certain notes or coins to be returned by a deadline.
Transparency and timelines
- Report to Parliament: Framework and recommendations must be tabled within 18 months and posted online within 10 days (Reports to Parliament).
- 3‑year review: The Minister must review implementation, effectiveness, and social/economic impacts within 3 years after the first report is tabled (Reports to Parliament).