Across Canada, provincial and municipal governments have passed laws to control loiteringLingering aimlessly in a public place and soliciting. From west to east, here are some examples.
In British Columbia, the B.C. - Safe Streets Act makes it an offence if someone asks for money “in a manner that would cause a reasonable person to be concerned for [their] safety or security.” It also prohibits people from soliciting money from people in cars or waiting to use a banking machine.
In Vancouver, s.70 of bylaw 2489 [PDF] makes it a crime to physically approach or harass people on the street.
In Calgary, a document titled “Bylaws Related to Public Behaviour” notes that “loitering the obstructs people in public places is prohibited.”
In Edmonton, bylaw 14614 [PDF] outlaws “aggressive panhandlingAsking for money in a public place,” which it says is marked by threats, insult or aggression to those being solicited.
In Ontario, the Ont. - Safe Streets Act addresses panhandling and the solicitation of money undertaken in a manner “to cause a reasonable person to be concerned for his or her safety or security.”
According to information on (Know Your Rights) from the Toronto Police Service, officers have the duty to enforce the Trespass to Property Act and investigate people they suspect are trespassing. The service explains trespassing means being somewhere you are prohibited from being or “being engaging in prohibited activity on private property (for example, loitering or littering).”
In Montreal, a bylaw makes it an offence to impede pedestrian and vehicular traffic by “standing still, prowling or loitering on public thoroughfares and places.”
In Halifax, bylaw N-300 makes it a crime to “create, continue or suffer any nuisance to exist on or near a street.”