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Family Day (Canada)
In parts of Canada, Family Day is a statutory holiday occurring on a Monday in February.
In the provinces of Alberta, Manitoba, Ontario, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island
and Saskatchewan, it is observed on the third Monday of February; in the provinces of Manitoba,
Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island, the holiday is instead termed Louis Riel Day,
Nova Scotia Heritage Day and Islander Day respectively.
British Columbia observes Family Day on the second Monday of February.
Two-thirds of Canadians live in a province that observes a February statutory holiday. The second
and third Mondays in February are regular working days in Quebec, Newfoundland and Labrador,
and the territories. As Family Day is not recognized in the federal sphere,
federal employees in all provinces work on this day. In Yukon,
one Friday in February is deemed Yukon Heritage Day.
 Alberta 
The holiday was first celebrated in 1990. Alberta was the only province
to have a statutory holiday in February until Saskatchewan began observing it in 2007.
The holiday was proclaimed by Lieutenant Governor Helen Hunley, on the advice of her premier,
Don Getty. Premier Getty said it was important for Albertans to spend time with their families,
and that this holiday would emphasize the importance of family values.
Getty faced considerable criticism at the time;
many employers felt an additional statutory holiday was an unnecessary financial burden.
In response, Heritage Day was downgraded to a civic holiday,
meaning employers would not be required to observe it. Under Alberta law, the employer may choose
to observe Heritage Day as a general holiday, under which rules applying
to general holiday pay will be used.
 Saskatchewan 
In October 2006, Saskatchewan's Premier, Lorne Calvert, proposed the holiday for the province,
starting in 2007. The bill for the Labour Standards Amendment Act, 2006,
was introduced in the legislature on November 1, 2006, and received Royal Assent on December 6.
The act officially declares Family Day on the third Monday of each February;
the first Family Day in Saskatchewan was February 19, 2007.
The annual number of days off remains unchanged for many,
as Easter Monday is no longer considered a holiday by private businesses.
Businesses suggested the new holiday might cost them as much as $140 million a year,
and have requested tax breaks to soften the economic impact.
The Saskatchewan government has provided $95 million in corporate tax cuts,
but most of the companies benefiting have adjusted the official days off such that the annual
allotment remains the same.
 Ontario 
During the Ontario provincial election in 2007, Dalton McGuinty, of the Liberal Party,
promised that, if re-elected premier, he would establish a provincial holiday in February.
On October 12, 2007,
the provincial government established Family Day on the third Monday in February,
to be first observed on February 18, 2008.
Its creation raised Ontario's number of statutory holidays to nine per year. However,
this holiday does not necessarily add to the number of holidays Ontarians receive,
because employers can substitute any non-statutory holidays that employees may already be receiving
in lieu of this day. Many employers have substituted the popular Civic Holiday,
which falls on the first Monday in August. Although the Civic Holiday is enjoyed
by millions every year, it is not public, and workers may have to choose one holiday
or the other, based on their contract, union negotiations, service requirements, etc.
 British Columbia 
A private member's bill
to establish Family Day on the third Monday in February was introduced in the British Columbia
Legislature by Liberal MLA Bob Chisholm in 1994, but failed to pass.
Although there were renewed calls to introduce Family Day in BC between 2007 and 2011,
it was opposed by the British Columbia Chamber of Commerce and the Campbell government.
On January 10, 2011, while running for the leadership of the BC Liberal Party,
Christy Clark proposed establishing a Family Day holiday on the third Monday of February.
Clark subsequently became premier; the Speech from the Throne, delivered on October 3, 2011,
said that BC would observe its first Family Day on February 18, 2013. In 2012,
a two-week consultation process was held in order
to determine if British Columbians preferred the holiday to fall on the second
or third Monday in February. On May 28, 2012,
it was announced that Family Day would be observed on the second Monday in February each year,
starting February 11, 2013. As this does not coincide with Presidents Day,
it also provides two consecutive long weekends for tourism, particularly at BC's many ski resorts.
On February 9, 2018,
the British Columbia provincial government announced that Family Day would be moved
to the 3rd Monday in February in 2019, to align their holiday
with the rest of those provinces who observe it on that Monday.
New Brunswick
On September 5, 2010, while campaigning for re-election,
New Brunswick Premier Shawn Graham promised
to establish Family Day in his province if his Liberal Party was returned to government,
Graham did not win re-election. The Liberals won re-election in September 2014,
and in February 2016 the Liberal Government started studying the implementation of Family Day.
On April 26, 2017,
Premier Brian Gallant announced that New Brunswick would become the newest province
to observe Family Day, beginning on February 19, 2018.
 Louis Riel Day (Manitoba) 
In February 2007,
it was reported that the Manitoba government was considering a February holiday.
Legislation proclaiming the third Monday in February as Louis Riel Day was passed
by Manitoba's Legislative Assembly on April 17, 2007, and first celebrated February 18, 2008.
The day is known as Louis Riel Day, a name suggested by Manitoba school students,
in honour of Louis Riel, the Métis leader who lead the fight to maintain aboriginal rights.
 Islander Day (Prince Edward Island) 
The provincial government of Prince Edward Island introduced Islander Day in 2009, due
to the rising trend of a holiday in February.
It was first held on the second Monday of February in 2009, rather than the third Monday,
as in other provinces. This incongruity effected much controversy,
as businesses suffered as a result of being out of sync with their partners in other provinces,
as well the United States, which celebrates Presidents Day on the third Monday of February.
In April 2009, Provincial Attorney General Gerard Greenan moved the holiday
to the third Monday in February.
 Nova Scotia Heritage Day 
After the Nova Scotia Liberal Party was elected in 2013,
its leader Stephen McNeil said he planned to create a February statutory holiday in Nova Scotia.
In December 2013 the government introduced a bill
to create a holiday on the third Monday in February, starting in 2015. The permanent name
for the holiday, Nova Scotia Heritage Day, was announced on June 26, 2014.
Each year it will honour a different person, the first was Viola Desmond. The first 12,
which covers 2015 – 2026, were chosen by a three-member government appointed panel
from suggestions from Nova Scotian school children. Other days will recognize Mi'kmaq heritage,
Africville, Joseph Howe, Edward Francis Arab, Nora Bernard, Carrie Best, J. Willie Comeau,
Grand-Pré National Historic Site, William Hall, Rita Joe, Maud Lewis, and Mona Louise Parsons.
 Yukon Heritage Day 
In Yukon,
Yukon Heritage Day is a holiday observed on the Friday before the last Sunday of February.
Although the government and many businesses are closed on this day, it is not a statutory holiday.
 Elsewhere 
Governments in the remaining jurisdictions without February holidays have come under some pressure
to harmonize. Ontario's enactment of Family Day has meant the Canadian financial sector,
including the Toronto Stock Exchange, largely shuts down on this date. In 2008,
federal NDP leader Jack Layton proposed that it be made a federal holiday.
Not being a federal holiday,
federally regulated workplaces work on Family Day regardless of the day's status in the respective
provinces.
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