On April 29, 2022, Bill 13 received royal assent, establishing the Financial Innovation Act, SA 2022 c F-13 (FIA). Bill 13 comes into force on proclamation. The regulations contemplated by Bill 13 have not been made publicly available at this time and additional requirements may be contained in such regulations. The exact scope of the FIA will be better known and understood once the regulations have been published.
The FIA will create a regulatory sandbox for financial services and fintech companies, becoming a safe space for companies to test innovative products or services with decreased regulatory scrutiny and allowing companies to gauge the potential value of new products and services to consumers.
With Bill 13 receiving royal assent, Alberta will become the first jurisdiction in Canada to establish such a regulatory sandbox. Similar initiatives to encourage innovation in the financial sector have arisen in other international jurisdictions, leading to the development of technologies such as soft tokens, biometric authentication, application programming interface (API) services, distributed ledger technologies and mobile app enhancements. The Minister of Finance has explained that the regulatory sandbox's benefits to Albertans will be twofold: first, by increasing the presence of innovative product offerings to Albertans; and second, stimulating further growth of Alberta's financial sector.
The FIA will enable the Minister to issue a certificate of acceptance to approved companies that provides time-limited exemptions to certain laws and regulations for a two-year period, which may be extended for an additional year. Companies participating in the sandbox may be exempt from some or all of the legal requirements set out in the following Acts:
Specific exemptions would depend on the relief sought by the applicant. Additionally, the legislation will establish a regulation-making authority that would allow the FIA to apply to other Acts not listed above.
The acceptance criteria for the regulatory sandbox includes the following mandatory conditions.
The FIA's framework confers a high degree of discretion on the Minister, including the discretion to impose terms, conditions or restrictions to:
Beyond the confines of the Alberta Business Corporations Act and similar acts, the FIA provides different processes and legal authority for oversight, offences and penalties for companies operating in the sandbox. The Minister will be empowered to appoint an individual to examine a sandbox participant or its corporate partners.
The Information and Privacy Commissioner is responsible for issuing exemptions under the Personal Information Protection Act. In such cases, the Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner will have similar powers to appoint an examiner. Nonetheless, increased privacy measures are planned to protect consumers, such as the requirement for customers to give express permission prior to disclosing privacy information to a corporation in the sandbox.
Penalties under the FIA mirror the provisions in other financial sector legislation, including the Loan and Trust Corporations Act, Securities Act, Insurance Act and the Credit Union Act.
Failure to comply with the terms, conditions or restrictions of a certificate of acceptance, the FIA or its regulations could amount to a fine of up to $100,000 for a first conviction and up to $200,000 for each subsequent conviction.
Once a certificate of acceptance is issued to a sandbox participant or amended, the Government of Alberta will publish the following information online:
Please contact any of the authors or a member of the Bennett Jones Fintech or Financial Services groups for more information about the developments discussed in this post or to seek assistance in preparing your business to capitalize on the opportunities presented by this proposed legislation.