By Jack Farrell
Posted November 17, 2025 6:12 pm
1 min read
Descrease article font size
Increase article font size
Alberta’s government has tabled legislation to add health-care numbers and mandatory citizenship markers to driver’s licences and identification cards.
The government had announced its plans to do so earlier this year, leading critics to say the province was creating privacy concerns rather than protecting against them.
Get daily National news
Get the day’s top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.
Critics at the time said someone’s citizenship status would become known in unnecessary situations, such as purchasing alcohol.
The government has said having citizenship markers on driver’s licences and other forms of identification will streamline access to services and prevent election fraud.
Trending Now
-
Calgary father, 7-year-old daughter die after wave sweeps them out to sea in California
-
Carney gets Green confidence vote ally but budget test outcome still hazy
The government says Albertans won’t have to pay to have their licences or identification cards updated.
The bill, tabled by Service Alberta Minister Dale Nally, also prohibits professional regulatory colleges from requiring Canadian work experience before accepting applications, unless there are health and safety concerns.
More on Politics
More videos
© 2025 The Canadian Press



