For criminal inadmissibility, Canadian immigration law focuses on IRPA s. 36. A key phrase in s. 36 is offences under an “Act of Parliament”—that generally means federal laws (like the Criminal Code), not provincial statutes. Source: IRPA s. 36
1) Federal
offences (Act of Parliament): can trigger inadmissibility
Federal
offences include crimes under the Criminal Code and other federal
statutes. These can trigger inadmissibility under:
● Serious criminality (IRPA s. 36(1)), and/or
● Ordinary criminality (IRPA s. 36(2)),
depending on the offence and thresholds.
Example
(federal driving offence): Dangerous operation
● Criminal Code s. 320.13 is a federal offence (“dangerous
operation”).
2) Manitoba
provincial offences: generally do not trigger IRPA s. 36
Provincial
offences are created under provincial statutes, not Acts of Parliament. A
classic example is careless driving under Manitoba’s Highway Traffic
Act.
Manitoba
example: Careless driving (provincial)
● Manitoba Highway Traffic Act s. 188(2):
“No person shall drive carelessly.”
● This is a provincial offence, so on its own it
generally does not fall under IRPA s. 36(1) or 36(2) “Act of Parliament”
conviction triggers.
Practical
Manitoba scenario (why charge reductions can matter)
If someone is
initially facing a federal Criminal Code driving allegation (e.g.,
dangerous operation under s. 320.13), but the matter is resolved as Manitoba
HTA careless driving (s. 188), that resolution is typically treated
differently for immigration purposes because it is provincial, not
federal.
3) Youth
offences and contraventions: specific exclusions in IRPA s. 36(3)(e)
Even when
conduct relates to federal law, IRPA limits inadmissibility in certain
situations. Under IRPA s. 36(3)(e), inadmissibility under s. 36(1) to
(2.1) may not be based on:
● an offence designated as a contravention under
the Contraventions Act;
● an offence where the person is found guilty under the former Young Offenders Act; or
● an offence for which the person received a youth
sentence under the Youth Criminal Justice Act.
Call A&M
Canadian Immigration Law Corporation: (204) 442-2786
If your record includes a mix of Manitoba
provincial offences, Criminal Code charges, or youth matters,
a document-based review can confirm whether IRPA s. 36 applies and what options
may be available.
Disclaimer
(Educational Use Only)
This content is
provided for general educational and informational purposes only and
does not constitute legal advice. Immigration laws, regulations,
policies, and officer practices can change, and outcomes depend on the
facts and official records in each case.
Sources
(hyperlinks)
● IRPA s.
36 (criminal inadmissibility; includes s. 36(3)(e))
● Manitoba Highway
Traffic Act (C.C.S.M. c. H60) s. 188 (careless driving)
● Criminal
Code s. 320.13 (dangerous operation)





