C-19 - Cities and Towns Act

Full text
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  (subparagraph repealed);
(2)  (subparagraph repealed);
(3)  (subparagraph repealed);
(4)  (subparagraph repealed);
(5)  (subparagraph repealed);
(6)  (subparagraph repealed);
(7)  (subparagraph repealed);
(8)  to establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a pension plan for the benefit of the officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a plan; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with an insurer authorized under the Insurers Act (chapter A-32.1) or a trust company authorized under the Trust Companies and Savings Companies Act (chapter S-29.02) or with a legal person or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of the plan; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and the contributions which they and the municipality must pay into the plan’s pension fund; to cause to be assumed by the municipality the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for the purposes of the pension plan, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating or amending the plan.
A by-law passed under this subparagraph may establish classes of officers or employees and prescribe that the pension plan is restricted to a certain class or that separate plans are established for each class.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers (chapter R-9.3) whose territory comprises that of the municipality, made by way of a resolution approved by the majority of the employees of the said body, include those employees within the scope of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by-law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
A by-law establishing a pension plan requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees referred to in the by-law even if the by-law prescribes a loan. Such approval may, in respect of the officers and employees represented by a certified association, be given by the association. However, no approval is required in the case of an amendment to the by-law for the purpose of enhancing benefits, which enhancement is paid out of a stabilization fund established under the Supplemental Pension Plans Act (chapter R-15.1), or refunding contributions paid into such a fund.
The Supplemental Pension Plans Act applies to a pension plan referred to in this subparagraph, except where the plan is referred to in section 2 of that Act. Every by-law to establish or amend a pension plan may have effect retroactively to the first effective date of the pension plan or any amendment to it under the Supplemental Pension Plans Act;
(9)  (subparagraph repealed);
(10)  to take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers whose territory comprises that of the municipality, include the employees of the body within the scope of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares of the cost of the premium from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by-law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
The council may, by by-law, take out liability insurance for the benefit of its officers and employees.
The members of the council, as long as they remain in office, may participate in the group insurance and liability insurance taken out by the council under this subparagraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the officers and employees mentioned in the subparagraph. However, the council may exercise the powers provided for in the first and third paragraphs in respect of the members of the council exclusively provided there are officers or employees of the municipality who also benefit from the same type of insurance contract.
The council may, by by-law, authorize any person having been a member of the council of the municipality during any period that the by-law determines, and receiving a retirement pension under a plan in which the members of the council of the municipality were members, to participate in the group insurance taken out by the municipality. The member shall pay the entire amount of the premium.
Every by-law adopted under this subparagraph may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the insurance policy or the amendment to it, as the case may be;
(10.1)  to enable it to participate, for the benefit of its officers and employees or the members of the council, in the type of insurance contract referred to in the first or third paragraph of subparagraph 10 of the first paragraph, for which the policyholder is the Union des municipalités du Québec or the Fédération québécoise des municipalités locales et régionales (FQM); such participation may only cover the members of the council provided there are officers or employees of the municipality who also benefit from the same type of insurance contract; the by-law establishes the rules governing the proportion of the premium paid by the municipality.
The council may exercise the powers provided for in the second, fifth and sixth paragraphs of subparagraph 10 of the first paragraph in respect of a by-law passed under this subparagraph, with the necessary modifications.
The rules governing the awarding of contracts by a municipality apply to a contract referred to in the first paragraph taken out with an insurer by the Union or the Federation. However, the contract is only subject to the by-law on contract management described in section 573.3.1.2 that must be adopted by the Union or the Federation for that purpose.
A municipality may also, in accordance with the first and second paragraphs, participate in a contract already taken out with an insurer by the Union or the Federation if such participation was provided for in the call for tenders made by the Union or the Federation and all tenderers are treated equally;
(11)  to provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
However, the council may exercise its powers under subparagraphs 8, 10, 10.1 and 11 of the first paragraph by resolution.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80; 1982, c. 2, s. 34; 1984, c. 38, s. 12; 1986, c. 31, s. 6; 1987, c. 42, s. 4; 1989, c. 38, s. 268; 1992, c. 27, s. 6; 1992, c. 21, s. 123; 1994, c. 23, s. 23; 1996, c. 2, s. 169; 1996, c. 27, s. 18; 1999, c. 40, s. 51; 2001, c. 68, s. 11; 2003, c. 19, s. 116; 2005, c. 6, s. 194; 2009, c. 26, s. 20; 2011, c. 11, s. 6; 2013, c. 30, s. 2; 2017, c. 13, s. 275; 2018, c. 23, s. 732.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  (subparagraph repealed);
(2)  (subparagraph repealed);
(3)  (subparagraph repealed);
(4)  (subparagraph repealed);
(5)  (subparagraph repealed);
(6)  (subparagraph repealed);
(7)  (subparagraph repealed);
(8)  to establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a pension plan for the benefit of the officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a plan; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a legal person or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of the plan; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and the contributions which they and the municipality must pay into the plan’s pension fund; to cause to be assumed by the municipality the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for the purposes of the pension plan, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating or amending the plan.
A by-law passed under this subparagraph may establish classes of officers or employees and prescribe that the pension plan is restricted to a certain class or that separate plans are established for each class.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers (chapter R-9.3) whose territory comprises that of the municipality, made by way of a resolution approved by the majority of the employees of the said body, include those employees within the scope of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by-law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
A by-law establishing a pension plan requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees referred to in the by-law even if the by-law prescribes a loan. Such approval may, in respect of the officers and employees represented by a certified association, be given by the association. However, no approval is required in the case of an amendment to the by-law for the purpose of enhancing benefits, which enhancement is paid out of a stabilization fund established under the Supplemental Pension Plans Act (chapter R-15.1), or refunding contributions paid into such a fund.
The Supplemental Pension Plans Act applies to a pension plan referred to in this subparagraph, except where the plan is referred to in section 2 of that Act. Every by-law to establish or amend a pension plan may have effect retroactively to the first effective date of the pension plan or any amendment to it under the Supplemental Pension Plans Act;
(9)  (subparagraph repealed);
(10)  to take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers whose territory comprises that of the municipality, include the employees of the body within the scope of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares of the cost of the premium from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by-law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
The council may, by by-law, take out liability insurance for the benefit of its officers and employees.
The members of the council, as long as they remain in office, may participate in the group insurance and liability insurance taken out by the council under this subparagraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the officers and employees mentioned in the subparagraph. However, the council may exercise the powers provided for in the first and third paragraphs in respect of the members of the council exclusively provided there are officers or employees of the municipality who also benefit from the same type of insurance contract.
The council may, by by-law, authorize any person having been a member of the council of the municipality during any period that the by-law determines, and receiving a retirement pension under a plan in which the members of the council of the municipality were members, to participate in the group insurance taken out by the municipality. The member shall pay the entire amount of the premium.
Every by-law adopted under this subparagraph may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the insurance policy or the amendment to it, as the case may be;
(10.1)  to enable it to participate, for the benefit of its officers and employees or the members of the council, in the type of insurance contract referred to in the first or third paragraph of subparagraph 10 of the first paragraph, for which the policyholder is the Union des municipalités du Québec or the Fédération québécoise des municipalités locales et régionales (FQM); such participation may only cover the members of the council provided there are officers or employees of the municipality who also benefit from the same type of insurance contract; the by-law establishes the rules governing the proportion of the premium paid by the municipality.
The council may exercise the powers provided for in the second, fifth and sixth paragraphs of subparagraph 10 of the first paragraph in respect of a by-law passed under this subparagraph, with the necessary modifications.
The rules governing the awarding of contracts by a municipality apply to a contract referred to in the first paragraph taken out with an insurer by the Union or the Federation. However, the contract is only subject to the by-law on contract management described in section 573.3.1.2 that must be adopted by the Union or the Federation for that purpose.
A municipality may also, in accordance with the first and second paragraphs, participate in a contract already taken out with an insurer by the Union or the Federation if such participation was provided for in the call for tenders made by the Union or the Federation and all tenderers are treated equally;
(11)  to provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
However, the council may exercise its powers under subparagraphs 8, 10, 10.1 and 11 of the first paragraph by resolution.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80; 1982, c. 2, s. 34; 1984, c. 38, s. 12; 1986, c. 31, s. 6; 1987, c. 42, s. 4; 1989, c. 38, s. 268; 1992, c. 27, s. 6; 1992, c. 21, s. 123; 1994, c. 23, s. 23; 1996, c. 2, s. 169; 1996, c. 27, s. 18; 1999, c. 40, s. 51; 2001, c. 68, s. 11; 2003, c. 19, s. 116; 2005, c. 6, s. 194; 2009, c. 26, s. 20; 2011, c. 11, s. 6; 2013, c. 30, s. 2; 2017, c. 13, s. 275.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  (subparagraph repealed);
(2)  (subparagraph repealed);
(3)  (subparagraph repealed);
(4)  (subparagraph repealed);
(5)  (subparagraph repealed);
(6)  (subparagraph repealed);
(7)  (subparagraph repealed);
(8)  to establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a pension plan for the benefit of the officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a plan; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a legal person or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of the plan; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and the contributions which they and the municipality must pay into the plan’s pension fund; to cause to be assumed by the municipality the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for the purposes of the pension plan, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating or amending the plan.
A by-law passed under this subparagraph may establish classes of officers or employees and prescribe that the pension plan is restricted to a certain class or that separate plans are established for each class.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers (chapter R-9.3) whose territory comprises that of the municipality, made by way of a resolution approved by the majority of the employees of the said body, include those employees within the scope of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by-law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
A by-law establishing a pension plan requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees referred to in the by-law even if the by-law prescribes a loan. Such approval may, in respect of the officers and employees represented by a certified association, be given by the association. However, no approval is required in the case of an amendment to the by-law for the purpose of enhancing benefits, which enhancement is paid out of a stabilization fund established under the Supplemental Pension Plans Act (chapter R-15.1), or refunding contributions paid into such a fund.
The Supplemental Pension Plans Act applies to a pension plan referred to in this subparagraph, except where the plan is referred to in section 2 of that Act. Every by-law to establish or amend a pension plan may have effect retroactively to the first effective date of the pension plan or any amendment to it under the Supplemental Pension Plans Act;
(9)  (subparagraph repealed);
(10)  to take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers whose territory comprises that of the municipality, include the employees of the body within the scope of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares of the cost of the premium from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by-law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
The council may, by by-law, take out liability insurance for the benefit of its officers and employees.
The members of the council, as long as they remain in office, may participate in the group insurance and liability insurance taken out by the council under this subparagraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the officers and employees mentioned in the subparagraph. However, the council may exercise the powers provided for in the first and third paragraphs in respect of the members of the council exclusively provided there are officers or employees of the municipality who also benefit from the same type of insurance contract.
The council may, by by-law, authorize any person having been a member of the council of the municipality during any period that the by-law determines, and receiving a retirement pension under a plan in which the members of the council of the municipality were members, to participate in the group insurance taken out by the municipality. The member shall pay the entire amount of the premium.
Every by-law adopted under this subparagraph may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the insurance policy or the amendment to it, as the case may be;
(10.1)  to enable it to participate, for the benefit of its officers and employees or the members of the council, in the type of insurance contract referred to in the first or third paragraph of subparagraph 10 of the first paragraph, for which the policyholder is the Union des municipalités du Québec or the Fédération québécoise des municipalités locales et régionales (FQM); such participation may only cover the members of the council provided there are officers or employees of the municipality who also benefit from the same type of insurance contract; the by-law establishes the rules governing the proportion of the premium paid by the municipality.
The council may exercise the powers provided for in the second, fifth and sixth paragraphs of subparagraph 10 of the first paragraph in respect of a by-law passed under this subparagraph, with the necessary modifications.
The rules governing the awarding of contracts by a municipality apply to a contract referred to in the first paragraph taken out with an insurer by the Union or the Federation. However, the contract is only subject to the contract management policy described in section 573.3.1.2 that must be adopted by the Union or the Federation for that purpose.
A municipality may also, in accordance with the first and second paragraphs, participate in a contract already taken out with an insurer by the Union or the Federation if such participation was provided for in the call for tenders made by the Union or the Federation and all tenderers are treated equally;
(11)  to provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
However, the council may exercise its powers under subparagraphs 8, 10, 10.1 and 11 of the first paragraph by resolution.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80; 1982, c. 2, s. 34; 1984, c. 38, s. 12; 1986, c. 31, s. 6; 1987, c. 42, s. 4; 1989, c. 38, s. 268; 1992, c. 27, s. 6; 1992, c. 21, s. 123; 1994, c. 23, s. 23; 1996, c. 2, s. 169; 1996, c. 27, s. 18; 1999, c. 40, s. 51; 2001, c. 68, s. 11; 2003, c. 19, s. 116; 2005, c. 6, s. 194; 2009, c. 26, s. 20; 2011, c. 11, s. 6; 2013, c. 30, s. 2.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  (subparagraph repealed);
(2)  (subparagraph repealed);
(3)  (subparagraph repealed);
(4)  (subparagraph repealed);
(5)  (subparagraph repealed);
(6)  (subparagraph repealed);
(7)  (subparagraph repealed);
(8)  to establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a pension plan for the benefit of the officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a plan; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a legal person or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of the plan; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and the contributions which they and the municipality must pay into the plan’s pension fund; to cause to be assumed by the municipality the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for the purposes of the pension plan, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating or amending the plan.
A by-law passed under this subparagraph may establish classes of officers or employees and prescribe that the pension plan is restricted to a certain class or that separate plans are established for each class.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers (chapter R-9.3) whose territory comprises that of the municipality, made by way of a resolution approved by the majority of the employees of the said body, include those employees within the scope of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by-law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
A by-law establishing a pension plan requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees referred to in the by-law even if the by-law prescribes a loan. Such approval may, in respect of the officers and employees represented by a certified association, be given by the association.
The Supplemental Pension Plans Act (chapter R-15.1) applies to a pension plan referred to in this subparagraph, except where the plan is referred to in section 2 of that Act. Every by-law to establish or amend a pension plan may have effect retroactively to the first effective date of the pension plan or any amendment to it under the Supplemental Pension Plans Act;
(9)  (subparagraph repealed);
(10)  to take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers whose territory comprises that of the municipality, include the employees of the body within the scope of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares of the cost of the premium from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by-law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
The council may, by by-law, take out liability insurance for the benefit of its officers and employees.
The members of the council, as long as they remain in office, may participate in the group insurance and liability insurance taken out by the council under this subparagraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the officers and employees mentioned in the subparagraph. However, the council may exercise the powers provided for in the first and third paragraphs in respect of the members of the council exclusively provided there are officers or employees of the municipality who also benefit from the same type of insurance contract.
The council may, by by-law, authorize any person having been a member of the council of the municipality during any period that the by-law determines, and receiving a retirement pension under a plan in which the members of the council of the municipality were members, to participate in the group insurance taken out by the municipality. The member shall pay the entire amount of the premium.
Every by-law adopted under this subparagraph may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the insurance policy or the amendment to it, as the case may be;
(10.1)  to enable it to participate, for the benefit of its officers and employees or the members of the council, in the type of insurance contract referred to in the first or third paragraph of subparagraph 10 of the first paragraph, for which the policyholder is the Union des municipalités du Québec or the Fédération québécoise des municipalités locales et régionales (FQM); such participation may only cover the members of the council provided there are officers or employees of the municipality who also benefit from the same type of insurance contract; the by-law establishes the rules governing the proportion of the premium paid by the municipality.
The council may exercise the powers provided for in the second, fifth and sixth paragraphs of subparagraph 10 of the first paragraph in respect of a by-law passed under this subparagraph, with the necessary modifications.
The rules governing the awarding of contracts by a municipality apply to a contract referred to in the first paragraph taken out with an insurer by the Union or the Federation. However, the contract is only subject to the contract management policy described in section 573.3.1.2 that must be adopted by the Union or the Federation for that purpose.
A municipality may also, in accordance with the first and second paragraphs, participate in a contract already taken out with an insurer by the Union or the Federation if such participation was provided for in the call for tenders made by the Union or the Federation and all tenderers are treated equally;
(11)  to provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
However, the council may exercise its powers under subparagraphs 8, 10, 10.1 and 11 of the first paragraph by resolution.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80; 1982, c. 2, s. 34; 1984, c. 38, s. 12; 1986, c. 31, s. 6; 1987, c. 42, s. 4; 1989, c. 38, s. 268; 1992, c. 27, s. 6; 1992, c. 21, s. 123; 1994, c. 23, s. 23; 1996, c. 2, s. 169; 1996, c. 27, s. 18; 1999, c. 40, s. 51; 2001, c. 68, s. 11; 2003, c. 19, s. 116; 2005, c. 6, s. 194; 2009, c. 26, s. 20; 2011, c. 11, s. 6.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  (subparagraph repealed);
(2)  (subparagraph repealed);
(3)  (subparagraph repealed);
(4)  (subparagraph repealed);
(5)  (subparagraph repealed);
(6)  (subparagraph repealed);
(7)  (subparagraph repealed);
(8)  to establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a pension plan for the benefit of the officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a plan; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a legal person or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of the plan; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and the contributions which they and the municipality must pay into the plan’s pension fund; to cause to be assumed by the municipality the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for the purposes of the pension plan, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating or amending the plan.
A by-law passed under this subparagraph may establish classes of officers or employees and prescribe that the pension plan is restricted to a certain class or that separate plans are established for each class.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers (chapter R-9.3) whose territory comprises that of the municipality, made by way of a resolution approved by the majority of the employees of the said body, include those employees within the scope of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by-law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
A by-law establishing a pension plan requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees referred to in the by-law even if the by-law prescribes a loan. Such approval may, in respect of the officers and employees represented by a certified association, be given by the association.
The Supplemental Pension Plans Act (chapter R-15.1) applies to a pension plan referred to in this subparagraph, except where the plan is referred to in section 2 of that Act. Every by-law to establish or amend a pension plan may have effect retroactively to the first effective date of the pension plan or any amendment to it under the Supplemental Pension Plans Act;
(9)  (subparagraph repealed);
(10)  to take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers whose territory comprises that of the municipality, include the employees of the body within the scope of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares of the cost of the premium from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by-law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
The council may, by by-law, take out liability insurance for the benefit of its officers and employees.
The members of the council, as long as they remain in office, may participate in the group insurance and liability insurance taken out by the council under this subparagraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the officers and employees mentioned in the subparagraph. However, the council may exercise the powers provided for in the first and third paragraphs in respect of the members of the council exclusively provided there are officers or employees of the municipality who also benefit from the same type of insurance contract.
The council may, by by-law, authorize any person having been a member of the council of the municipality during any period that the by-law determines, and receiving a retirement pension under a plan in which the members of the council of the municipality were members, to participate in the group insurance taken out by the municipality. The member shall pay the entire amount of the premium.
Every by-law adopted under this subparagraph may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the insurance policy or the amendment to it, as the case may be;
(10.1)  to enable it to participate, for the benefit of its officers and employees or the members of the council, in the type of insurance contract referred to in the first or third paragraph of subparagraph 10 of the first paragraph, for which the policyholder is the Union des municipalités du Québec or the Fédération québécoise des municipalités locales et régionales (FQM); such participation may only cover the members of the council provided there are officers or employees of the municipality who also benefit from the same type of insurance contract; the by-law establishes the rules governing the proportion of the premium paid by the municipality.
The council may exercise the powers provided for in the second, fifth and sixth paragraphs of subparagraph 10 of the first paragraph in respect of a by-law passed under this subparagraph, with the necessary modifications.
The rules governing the awarding of contracts by a municipality apply to a contract referred to in the first paragraph taken out with an insurer by the Union or the Federation.
A municipality may also, in accordance with the first and second paragraphs, participate in a contract already taken out with an insurer by the Union or the Federation if such participation was provided for in the call for tenders made by the Union or the Federation and all tenderers are treated equally;
(11)  to provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
However, the council may exercise its powers under subparagraphs 8, 10, 10.1 and 11 of the first paragraph by resolution.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80; 1982, c. 2, s. 34; 1984, c. 38, s. 12; 1986, c. 31, s. 6; 1987, c. 42, s. 4; 1989, c. 38, s. 268; 1992, c. 27, s. 6; 1992, c. 21, s. 123; 1994, c. 23, s. 23; 1996, c. 2, s. 169; 1996, c. 27, s. 18; 1999, c. 40, s. 51; 2001, c. 68, s. 11; 2003, c. 19, s. 116; 2005, c. 6, s. 194; 2009, c. 26, s. 20.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  (subparagraph repealed);
(2)  (subparagraph repealed);
(3)  (subparagraph repealed);
(4)  (subparagraph repealed);
(5)  (subparagraph repealed);
(6)  (subparagraph repealed);
(7)  (subparagraph repealed);
(8)  to establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a pension plan for the benefit of the officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a plan; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a legal person or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of the plan; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and the contributions which they and the municipality must pay into the plan’s pension fund; to cause to be assumed by the municipality the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for the purposes of the pension plan, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating or amending the plan.
A by-law passed under this subparagraph may establish classes of officers or employees and prescribe that the pension plan is restricted to a certain class or that separate plans are established for each class.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers (chapter R‐9.3) whose territory comprises that of the municipality, made by way of a resolution approved by the majority of the employees of the said body, include those employees within the scope of a by‐law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by‐law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
A by-law establishing a pension plan requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees referred to in the by-law even if the by-law prescribes a loan. Such approval may, in respect of the officers and employees represented by a certified association, be given by the association.
The Supplemental Pension Plans Act (chapter R‐15.1) applies to a pension plan referred to in this subparagraph, except where the plan is referred to in section 2 of that Act. Every by-law to establish or amend a pension plan may have effect retroactively to the first effective date of the pension plan or any amendment to it under the Supplemental Pension Plans Act;
(9)  (subparagraph repealed);
(10)  to take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers whose territory comprises that of the municipality, include the employees of the body within the scope of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares of the cost of the premium from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by-law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
The council may, by by-law, take out liability insurance for the benefit of its officers and employees.
The members of the council, as long as they remain in office, may participate in the group insurance and liability insurance taken out by the council under this subparagraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the officers and employees mentioned in the subparagraph.
The council may, by by-law, authorize any person having been a member of the council of the municipality during any period that the by-law determines, and receiving a retirement pension under a plan in which the members of the council of the municipality were members, to participate in the group insurance taken out by the municipality. The member shall pay the entire amount of the premium.
Every by-law adopted under this subparagraph may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the insurance policy or the amendment to it, as the case may be;
(11)  to provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
However, the council may exercise its powers under subparagraphs 8, 10 and 11 of the first paragraph by resolution.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80; 1982, c. 2, s. 34; 1984, c. 38, s. 12; 1986, c. 31, s. 6; 1987, c. 42, s. 4; 1989, c. 38, s. 268; 1992, c. 27, s. 6; 1992, c. 21, s. 123; 1994, c. 23, s. 23; 1996, c. 2, s. 169; 1996, c. 27, s. 18; 1999, c. 40, s. 51; 2001, c. 68, s. 11; 2003, c. 19, s. 116; 2005, c. 6, s. 194.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  To indemnify persons whose property has been destroyed or injured, either wholly or in part, by rioters or persons tumultuously assembled, within the territory of the municipality.
The council may levy, over and above any other tax, on the taxable property in the territory of the municipality, the amount which the municipality may be held to pay in damages for damage caused to property by rioters or persons riotously assembled.
In default of the council paying such damages within six months, according to the decision of arbitrators, the municipality may be sued before any competent court for the damages so occasioned;
(2)  To relieve any person who has received any wound or contracted any sickness or disease at a fire;
(3)  To grant rewards, in money or otherwise, to any person who performs a meritorious action at a fire, or who saves or endeavours to save anyone from drowning or from other serious danger;
(4)  To provide for the wants of the family of any person who loses his life at a fire, or while saving or endeavouring to save any one from a serious danger;
(5)  To contribute to the maintenance or support of poor persons residing in the territory of the municipality, who, from infirmity, age or other causes, are unable to earn their own livelihood;
(6)  To establish and maintain houses of refuge, and other establishments for the support and relief of the destitute, and to subsidize institutions operating a hospital centre within the meaning of the Act respecting health services and social services (chapter S‐4.2) or within the meaning of the Act respecting health services and social services for Cree Native persons (chapter S‐5) or charitable institutions established in the territory of the municipality or elsewhere in Québec;
(7)  To offer and give rewards for the discovery and arrest of criminals;
(8)  To establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a pension plan for the benefit of the officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a plan; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a legal person or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of the plan; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and the contributions which they and the municipality must pay into the plan’s pension fund; to cause to be assumed by the municipality the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for the purposes of the pension plan, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating or amending the plan.
A by-law passed under this paragraph may establish classes of officers or employees and prescribe that the pension plan is restricted to a certain class or that separate plans are established for each class.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers (chapter R‐9.3) whose territory comprises that of the municipality, made by way of a resolution approved by the majority of the employees of the said body, include those employees within the scope of a by‐law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by‐law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
A by-law establishing a pension plan requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees referred to in the by-law even if the by-law prescribes a loan. Such approval may, in respect of the officers and employees represented by a certified association, be given by the association.
The Supplemental Pension Plans Act (chapter R‐15.1) applies to a pension plan referred to in this subparagraph, except where the plan is referred to in section 2 of that Act. Every by-law to establish or amend a pension plan may have effect retroactively to the first effective date of the pension plan or any amendment to it under the Supplemental Pension Plans Act.
(9)  To aid, by any means deemed advisable, the settlement of Québec, and agriculture, horticulture, arts and sciences, within the territory of the municipality or, where that territory is comprised within that of an agricultural society, within the territory of the society;
(10)  To take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers whose territory comprises that of the municipality, include the employees of the body within the scope of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares of the cost of the premium from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by-law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
The council may, by by-law, take out liability insurance for the benefit of its officers and employees.
The members of the council, as long as they remain in office, may participate in the group insurance and liability insurance taken out by the council under this paragraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the officers and employees mentioned in that paragraph.
The council may, by by-law, authorize any person having been a member of the council of the municipality during any period that the by-law determines, and receiving a retirement pension under a plan in which the members of the council of the municipality were members, to participate in the group insurance taken out by the municipality. The member shall pay the entire amount of the premium.
Every by-law adopted under this paragraph may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the insurance policy or the amendment to it, as the case may be.
(11)  To provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
However, the council may exercise its powers under subparagraphs 8, 10 and 11 of the first paragraph by resolution.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80; 1982, c. 2, s. 34; 1984, c. 38, s. 12; 1986, c. 31, s. 6; 1987, c. 42, s. 4; 1989, c. 38, s. 268; 1992, c. 27, s. 6; 1992, c. 21, s. 123; 1994, c. 23, s. 23; 1996, c. 2, s. 169; 1996, c. 27, s. 18; 1999, c. 40, s. 51; 2001, c. 68, s. 11; 2003, c. 19, s. 116.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  To indemnify persons whose property has been destroyed or injured, either wholly or in part, by rioters or persons tumultuously assembled, within the territory of the municipality.
The council may levy, over and above any other tax, on the taxable property in the territory of the municipality, the amount which the municipality may be held to pay in damages for damage caused to property by rioters or persons riotously assembled.
In default of the council paying such damages within six months, according to the decision of arbitrators, the municipality may be sued before any competent court for the damages so occasioned;
(2)  To relieve any person who has received any wound or contracted any sickness or disease at a fire;
(3)  To grant rewards, in money or otherwise, to any person who performs a meritorious action at a fire, or who saves or endeavours to save anyone from drowning or from other serious danger;
(4)  To provide for the wants of the family of any person who loses his life at a fire, or while saving or endeavouring to save any one from a serious danger;
(5)  To contribute to the maintenance or support of poor persons residing in the territory of the municipality, who, from infirmity, age or other causes, are unable to earn their own livelihood;
(6)  To establish and maintain houses of refuge, and other establishments for the support and relief of the destitute, and to subsidize institutions operating a hospital centre within the meaning of the Act respecting health services and social services (chapter S‐4.2) or within the meaning of the Act respecting health services and social services for Cree Native persons (chapter S‐5) or charitable institutions established in the territory of the municipality or elsewhere in Québec;
(7)  To offer and give rewards for the discovery and arrest of criminals;
(8)  To establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a pension plan for the benefit of the officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a plan ; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a legal person or government issuing life annuities ; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of the plan ; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and the contributions which they and the municipality must pay into the plan’s pension fund ; to cause to be assumed by the municipality the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for the purposes of the pension plan, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating or amending the plan.
A by-law passed under this paragraph may establish classes of officers or employees and prescribe that the pension plan is restricted to a certain class or that separate plans are established for each class.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers (chapter R‐9.3) whose territory comprises that of the municipality, made by way of a resolution approved by the majority of the employees of the said body, include those employees within the scope of a by‐law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by‐law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
A by-law establishing a pension plan requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees referred to in the by-law even if the by-law prescribes a loan. Such approval may, in respect of the officers and employees represented by a certified association, be given by the association.
The Supplemental Pension Plans Act (chapter R-15.1) applies to a pension plan referred to in this subparagraph, except where the plan is referred to in section 2 of that Act. Every by-law to establish or amend a pension plan may have effect retroactively to the first effective date of the pension plan or any amendment to it under the Supplemental Pension Plans Act.
(9)  To aid, by any means deemed advisable, the settlement of Québec, and agriculture, horticulture, arts and sciences, within the territory of the municipality or, where that territory is comprised within that of an agricultural society, within the territory of the society;
(10)  To take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers whose territory comprises that of the municipality, include the employees of the body within the scope of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares of the cost of the premium from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by-law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
The council may, by by-law, take out liability insurance for the benefit of its officers and employees.
The members of the council, as long as they remain in office, may participate in the group insurance and liability insurance taken out by the council under this paragraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the officers and employees mentioned in that paragraph.
Every by-law adopted under this paragraph may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the insurance policy or the amendment to it, as the case may be.
(11)  To provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
However, the council may exercise its powers under subparagraphs 8, 10 and 11 of the first paragraph by resolution.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80; 1982, c. 2, s. 34; 1984, c. 38, s. 12; 1986, c. 31, s. 6; 1987, c. 42, s. 4; 1989, c. 38, s. 268; 1992, c. 27, s. 6; 1992, c. 21, s. 123; 1994, c. 23, s. 23; 1996, c. 2, s. 169; 1996, c. 27, s. 18; 1999, c. 40, s. 51; 2001, c. 68, s. 11.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  To indemnify persons whose property has been destroyed or injured, either wholly or in part, by rioters or persons tumultuously assembled, within the territory of the municipality.
The council may levy, over and above any other tax, on the taxable property in the territory of the municipality, the amount which the municipality may be held to pay in damages for damage caused to property by rioters or persons riotously assembled.
In default of the council paying such damages within six months, according to the decision of arbitrators, the municipality may be sued before any competent court for the damages so occasioned;
(2)  To relieve any person who has received any wound or contracted any sickness or disease at a fire;
(3)  To grant rewards, in money or otherwise, to any person who performs a meritorious action at a fire, or who saves or endeavours to save anyone from drowning or from other serious danger;
(4)  To provide for the wants of the family of any person who loses his life at a fire, or while saving or endeavouring to save any one from a serious danger;
(5)  To contribute to the maintenance or support of poor persons residing in the territory of the municipality, who, from infirmity, age or other causes, are unable to earn their own livelihood;
(6)  To establish and maintain houses of refuge, and other establishments for the support and relief of the destitute, and to subsidize institutions operating a hospital centre within the meaning of the Act respecting health services and social services (chapter S‐4.2) or within the meaning of the Act respecting health services and social services for Cree Native persons (chapter S‐5) or charitable institutions established in the territory of the municipality or elsewhere in Québec;
(7)  To offer and give rewards for the discovery and arrest of criminals;
(8)  To establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a retirement pension fund for the benefit of the officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a retirement fund; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a legal person or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of such fund; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and their contributive shares to the pension fund; to constitute a commission whose members are chosen among the members of the council and the officers or employees who benefit from the by-law, to administer the pension fund and determine the by-laws for the internal management of such commission; to cause to be assumed by the municipality the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for pension purposes, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating the pension fund.
A by-law passed under this paragraph may establish classes of officers or employees and prescribe that the pension plan is restricted to a certain class or that separate plans are established for each class.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers (chapter R‐9.3) whose territory comprises that of the municipality, made by way of a resolution approved by the majority of the employees of the said body, include those employees within the scope of a by‐law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by‐law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
A by‐law establishing a retirement pension fund requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees contemplated by the by‐law even if the by‐law prescribes a loan.
Every by‐law to establish or amend a pension fund may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the pension fund or any amendment to it under the Supplemental Pension Plans Act (chapter R‐15.1).
The Supplemental Pension Plans Act applies to every pension fund so established;
(9)  To aid, by any means deemed advisable, the settlement of Québec, and agriculture, horticulture, arts and sciences, within the territory of the municipality or, where that territory is comprised within that of an agricultural society, within the territory of the society;
(10)  To take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers whose territory comprises that of the municipality, include the employees of the body within the scope of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares of the cost of the premium from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by-law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
The council may, by by-law, take out liability insurance for the benefit of its officers and employees.
The members of the council, as long as they remain in office, may participate in the group insurance and liability insurance taken out by the council under this paragraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the officers and employees mentioned in that paragraph.
Every by-law adopted under this paragraph may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the insurance policy or the amendment to it, as the case may be.
(11)  To provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
However, the council may exercise its powers under subparagraphs 8, 10 and 11 of the first paragraph by resolution.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80; 1982, c. 2, s. 34; 1984, c. 38, s. 12; 1986, c. 31, s. 6; 1987, c. 42, s. 4; 1989, c. 38, s. 268; 1992, c. 27, s. 6; 1992, c. 21, s. 123; 1994, c. 23, s. 23; 1996, c. 2, s. 169; 1996, c. 27, s. 18; 1999, c. 40, s. 51.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  To indemnify persons whose property has been destroyed or injured, either wholly or in part, by rioters or persons tumultuously assembled, within the territory of the municipality.
The council may levy, over and above any other tax, on the taxable property in the territory of the municipality, the amount which the municipality may be held to pay for damages occasioned to property by rioters or persons riotously assembled.
In default of the council paying such damages within six months, according to the decision of arbitrators, the municipality may be sued before any competent court for the damages so occasioned;
(2)  To relieve any person who has received any wound or contracted any sickness or disease at a fire;
(3)  To grant rewards, in money or otherwise, to any person who performs a meritorious action at a fire, or who saves or endeavours to save anyone from drowning or from other serious danger;
(4)  To provide for the wants of the family of any person who loses his life at a fire, or while saving or endeavouring to save any one from a serious danger;
(5)  To contribute to the maintenance or support of poor persons residing in the territory of the municipality, who, from infirmity, age or other causes, are unable to earn their own livelihood;
(6)  To establish and maintain houses of refuge, and other establishments for the support and relief of the destitute, and to subsidize institutions operating a hospital centre within the meaning of the Act respecting health services and social services (chapter S-4.2) or within the meaning of the Act respecting health services and social services for Cree Native persons (chapter S-5) or charitable institutions established in the territory of the municipality or elsewhere in Québec;
(7)  To offer and give rewards for the discovery and arrest of criminals;
(8)  To establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a retirement pension fund for the benefit of the officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a retirement fund; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a corporation or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of such fund; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and their contributive shares to the pension fund; to constitute a commission whose members are chosen among the members of the council and the officers or employees who benefit from the by-law, to administer the pension fund and determine the by-laws for the internal management of such commission; to cause to be assumed by the municipality the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for pension purposes, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating the pension fund.
A by-law passed under this paragraph may establish classes of officers or employees and prescribe that the pension plan is restricted to a certain class or that separate plans are established for each class.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers (chapter R-9.3) whose territory comprises that of the municipality, made by way of a resolution approved by the majority of the employees of the said body, include those employees within the scope of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by-law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
A by-law establishing a retirement pension fund requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees contemplated by the by-law even if the by-law prescribes a loan.
Every by-law to establish or amend a pension fund may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the pension fund or any amendment to it under the Supplemental Pension Plans Act (chapter R-15.1).
The Supplemental Pension Plans Act applies to every pension fund so established;
(9)  To aid, by any means deemed advisable, the settlement of Québec, and agriculture, horticulture, arts and sciences, within the territory of the municipality or, where that territory is comprised within that of an agricultural society, within the territory of the society;
(10)  To take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council may, at the request of any mandatary body of the municipality or any supramunicipal body within the meaning of the Act respecting the Pension Plan of Elected Municipal Officers whose territory comprises that of the municipality, include the employees of the body within the scope of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph. The body concerned shall deduct the employees’ contributive shares of the cost of the premium from their salary or remuneration and shall pay them to the municipality at the same time as its own contributive share. The by-law by which the council integrates the employees of the body must specify the terms and conditions of the integration.
The council may, by by-law, take out liability insurance for the benefit of its officers and employees.
The members of the council, as long as they remain in office, may participate in the group insurance and liability insurance taken out by the council under this paragraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the officers and employees mentioned in that paragraph.
Every by-law adopted under this paragraph may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the insurance policy or the amendment to it, as the case may be.
(11)  To provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
However, the council may exercise its powers under subparagraphs 8, 10 and 11 of the first paragraph by resolution.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80; 1982, c. 2, s. 34; 1984, c. 38, s. 12; 1986, c. 31, s. 6; 1987, c. 42, s. 4; 1989, c. 38, s. 268; 1992, c. 27, s. 6; 1992, c. 21, s. 123; 1994, c. 23, s. 23; 1996, c. 2, s. 169; 1996, c. 27, s. 18.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  To indemnify persons whose property has been destroyed or injured, either wholly or in part, by rioters or persons tumultuously assembled, within the territory of the municipality.
The council may levy, over and above any other tax, on the taxable property in the territory of the municipality, the amount which the municipality may be held to pay for damages occasioned to property by rioters or persons riotously assembled.
In default of the council paying such damages within six months, according to the decision of arbitrators, the municipality may be sued before any competent court for the damages so occasioned;
(2)  To relieve any person who has received any wound or contracted any sickness or disease at a fire;
(3)  To grant rewards, in money or otherwise, to any person who performs a meritorious action at a fire, or who saves or endeavours to save anyone from drowning or from other serious danger;
(4)  To provide for the wants of the family of any person who loses his life at a fire, or while saving or endeavouring to save any one from a serious danger;
(5)  To contribute to the maintenance or support of poor persons residing in the territory of the municipality, who, from infirmity, age or other causes, are unable to earn their own livelihood;
(6)  To establish and maintain houses of refuge, and other establishments for the support and relief of the destitute, and to subsidize institutions operating a hospital centre within the meaning of the Act respecting health services and social services (chapter S-4.2) or within the meaning of the Act respecting health services and social services for Cree Native persons (chapter S-5) or charitable institutions established in the territory of the municipality or elsewhere in Québec;
(7)  To offer and give rewards for the discovery and arrest of criminals;
(8)  To establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a retirement pension fund for the benefit of the officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a retirement fund; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a corporation or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of such fund; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and their contributive shares to the pension fund; to constitute a commission whose members are chosen among the members of the council and the officers or employees who benefit from the by-law, to administer the pension fund and determine the by-laws for the internal management of such commission; to cause to be assumed by the municipality the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for pension purposes, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating the pension fund.
A by-law passed under this paragraph may establish classes of officers or employees and prescribe that the pension plan is restricted to a certain class or that separate plans are established for each class.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by a resolution approved by the majority of its employees, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to the said fund which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
A by-law establishing a retirement pension fund requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees contemplated by the by-law even if the by-law prescribes a loan.
Every by-law to establish or amend a pension fund may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the pension fund or any amendment to it under the Supplemental Pension Plans Act (chapter R-15.1).
The Supplemental Pension Plans Act applies to every pension fund so established;
(9)  To aid, by any means deemed advisable, the settlement of Québec, and agriculture, horticulture, arts and sciences, within the territory of the municipality or, where that territory is comprised within that of an agricultural society, within the territory of the society;
(10)  To take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by resolution, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the preceding paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to such fund, which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
The council may, by by-law, take out liability insurance for the benefit of its officers and employees.
The members of the council, as long as they remain in office, may participate in the group insurance and liability insurance taken out by the council under this paragraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the officers and employees mentioned in that paragraph.
Every by-law adopted under this paragraph may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the insurance policy or the amendment to it, as the case may be.
(11)  To provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
However, the council may exercise its powers under subparagraph 10 of the first paragraph by resolution.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80; 1982, c. 2, s. 34; 1984, c. 38, s. 12; 1986, c. 31, s. 6; 1987, c. 42, s. 4; 1989, c. 38, s. 268; 1992, c. 27, s. 6; 1992, c. 21, s. 123; 1994, c. 23, s. 23; 1996, c. 2, s. 169.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  To indemnify persons whose property has been destroyed or injured, either wholly or in part, by rioters or persons tumultuously assembled, within the municipality.
The council may levy, over and above any other tax, on the taxable property of the municipality, the amount which the municipality may be held to pay for damages occasioned to property by rioters or persons riotously assembled.
In default of the council paying such damages within six months, according to the decision of arbitrators, the municipality may be sued before any competent court for the damages so occasioned;
(2)  To relieve any person who has received any wound or contracted any sickness or disease at a fire;
(3)  To grant rewards, in money or otherwise, to any person who performs a meritorious action at a fire, or who saves or endeavours to save anyone from drowning or from other serious danger;
(4)  To provide for the wants of the family of any person who loses his life at a fire, or while saving or endeavouring to save any one from a serious danger;
(5)  To contribute to the maintenance or support of poor persons residing in the municipality, who, from infirmity, age or other causes, are unable to earn their own livelihood;
(6)  To establish and maintain houses of refuge, and other establishments for the support and relief of the destitute, and to subsidize institutions operating a hospital centre within the meaning of the Act respecting health services and social services (chapter S-4.2) or within the meaning of the Act respecting health services and social services for Cree Native persons (chapter S-5) or charitable institutions established in the municipality or elsewhere in Québec;
(7)  To offer and give rewards for the discovery and arrest of criminals;
(8)  To establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a retirement pension fund for the benefit of the officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a retirement fund; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a corporation or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of such fund; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and their contributive shares to the pension fund; to constitute a commission whose members are chosen among the members of the council and the officers or employees who benefit from the by-law, to administer the pension fund and determine the by-laws for the internal management of such commission; to cause to be assumed by the corporation the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for pension purposes, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating the pension fund.
A by-law passed under this paragraph may establish classes of officers or employees and prescribe that the pension plan is restricted to a certain class or that separate plans are established for each class.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by a resolution approved by the majority of its employees, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to the said fund which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
A by-law establishing a retirement pension fund requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees contemplated by the by-law even if the by-law prescribes a loan.
Every by-law to establish or amend a pension fund may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the pension fund or any amendment to it under the Supplemental Pension Plans Act (chapter R-15.1).
The Supplemental Pension Plans Act applies to every pension fund so established;
(9)  To aid, by any means deemed advisable, the settlement of Québec, and agriculture, horticulture, arts and sciences, in the municipality, or within the limits of the agricultural society within which such municipality is situated;
(10)  To take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by resolution, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the preceding paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to such fund, which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
The council may, by by-law, take out liability insurance for the benefit of its officers and employees.
The members of the council, as long as they remain in office, may participate in the group insurance and liability insurance taken out by the council under this paragraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the officers and employees mentioned in that paragraph.
Every by-law adopted under this paragraph may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the insurance policy or the amendment to it, as the case may be.
(11)  To provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
However, the council may exercise its powers under subparagraph 10 of the first paragraph by resolution.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80; 1982, c. 2, s. 34; 1984, c. 38, s. 12; 1986, c. 31, s. 6; 1987, c. 42, s. 4; 1989, c. 38, s. 268; 1992, c. 27, s. 6; 1992, c. 21, s. 123; 1994, c. 23, s. 23.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  To indemnify persons whose property has been destroyed or injured, either wholly or in part, by rioters or persons tumultuously assembled, within the municipality.
The council may levy, over and above any other tax, on the taxable property of the municipality, the amount which the municipality may be held to pay for damages occasioned to property by rioters or persons riotously assembled.
In default of the council paying such damages within six months, according to the decision of arbitrators, the municipality may be sued before any competent court for the damages so occasioned;
(2)  To relieve any person who has received any wound or contracted any sickness or disease at a fire;
(3)  To grant rewards, in money or otherwise, to any person who performs a meritorious action at a fire, or who saves or endeavours to save anyone from drowning or from other serious danger;
(4)  To provide for the wants of the family of any person who loses his life at a fire, or while saving or endeavouring to save any one from a serious danger;
(5)  To contribute to the maintenance or support of poor persons residing in the municipality, who, from infirmity, age or other causes, are unable to earn their own livelihood;
(6)  To establish and maintain houses of refuge, and other establishments for the support and relief of the destitute, and to subsidize institutions operating a hospital centre within the meaning of the Act respecting health services and social services (chapter S-4.2) or within the meaning of the Act respecting health services and social services for Cree and Inuit Native persons (chapter S-5) or charitable institutions established in the municipality or elsewhere in Québec;
(7)  To offer and give rewards for the discovery and arrest of criminals;
(8)  To establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a retirement pension fund for the benefit of the officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a retirement fund; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a corporation or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of such fund; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and their contributive shares to the pension fund; to constitute a commission whose members are chosen among the members of the council and the officers or employees who benefit from the by-law, to administer the pension fund and determine the by-laws for the internal management of such commission; to cause to be assumed by the corporation the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for pension purposes, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating the pension fund.
A by-law passed under this paragraph may establish classes of officers or employees and prescribe that the pension plan is restricted to a certain class or that separate plans are established for each class.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by a resolution approved by the majority of its employees, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to the said fund which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
A by-law establishing a retirement pension fund requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees contemplated by the by-law even if the by-law prescribes a loan.
Every by-law to establish or amend a pension fund may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the pension fund or any amendment to it under the Supplemental Pension Plans Act (chapter R-15.1).
The Supplemental Pension Plans Act applies to every pension fund so established;
(9)  To aid, by any means deemed advisable, the settlement of Québec, and agriculture, horticulture, arts and sciences, in the municipality, or within the limits of the agricultural society within which such municipality is situated;
(10)  To take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by resolution, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the preceding paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to such fund, which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
The council may, by by-law, take out liability insurance for the benefit of its officers and employees.
The members of the council, as long as they remain in office, may participate in the group insurance and liability insurance taken out by the council under this paragraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the officers and employees mentioned in that paragraph.
Every by-law adopted under this paragraph may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the insurance policy or the amendment to it, as the case may be.
(11)  To provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
However, the council may exercise its powers under subparagraph 10 of the first paragraph by resolution.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80; 1982, c. 2, s. 34; 1984, c. 38, s. 12; 1986, c. 31, s. 6; 1987, c. 42, s. 4; 1989, c. 38, s. 268; 1992, c. 27, s. 6; 1992, c. 21, s. 123.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  To indemnify persons whose property has been destroyed or injured, either wholly or in part, by rioters or persons tumultuously assembled, within the municipality.
The council may levy, over and above any other tax, on the taxable property of the municipality, the amount which the municipality may be held to pay for damages occasioned to property by rioters or persons riotously assembled.
In default of the council paying such damages within six months, according to the decision of arbitrators, the municipality may be sued before any competent court for the damages so occasioned;
(2)  To relieve any person who has received any wound or contracted any sickness or disease at a fire;
(3)  To grant rewards, in money or otherwise, to any person who performs a meritorious action at a fire, or who saves or endeavours to save anyone from drowning or from other serious danger;
(4)  To provide for the wants of the family of any person who loses his life at a fire, or while saving or endeavouring to save any one from a serious danger;
(5)  To contribute to the maintenance or support of poor persons residing in the municipality, who, from infirmity, age or other causes, are unable to earn their own livelihood;
(6)  To establish and maintain houses of refuge, and other establishments for the support and relief of the destitute, and to subsidize hospital centres or charitable institutions established in the municipality or elsewhere in Québec;
(7)  To offer and give rewards for the discovery and arrest of criminals;
(8)  To establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a retirement pension fund for the benefit of the officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a retirement fund; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a corporation or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of such fund; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and their contributive shares to the pension fund; to constitute a commission whose members are chosen among the members of the council and the officers or employees who benefit from the by-law, to administer the pension fund and determine the by-laws for the internal management of such commission; to cause to be assumed by the corporation the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for pension purposes, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating the pension fund.
A by-law passed under this paragraph may establish classes of officers or employees and prescribe that the pension plan is restricted to a certain class or that separate plans are established for each class.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by a resolution approved by the majority of its employees, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to the said fund which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
A by-law establishing a retirement pension fund requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees contemplated by the by-law even if the by-law prescribes a loan.
Every by-law to establish or amend a pension fund may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the pension fund or any amendment to it under the Supplemental Pension Plans Act (chapter R-15.1).
The Supplemental Pension Plans Act applies to every pension fund so established;
(9)  To aid, by any means deemed advisable, the settlement of Québec, and agriculture, horticulture, arts and sciences, in the municipality, or within the limits of the agricultural society within which such municipality is situated;
(10)  To take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by resolution, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the preceding paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to such fund, which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
The council may, by by-law, take out liability insurance for the benefit of its officers and employees.
The members of the council, as long as they remain in office, may participate in the group insurance and liability insurance taken out by the council under this paragraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the officers and employees mentioned in that paragraph.
Every by-law adopted under this paragraph may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the insurance policy or the amendment to it, as the case may be.
(11)  To provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
However, the council may exercise its powers under subparagraph 10 of the first paragraph by resolution.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80; 1982, c. 2, s. 34; 1984, c. 38, s. 12; 1986, c. 31, s. 6; 1987, c. 42, s. 4; 1989, c. 38, s. 268; 1992, c. 27, s. 6.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  To indemnify persons whose property has been destroyed or injured, either wholly or in part, by rioters or persons tumultuously assembled, within the municipality.
The council may levy, over and above any other tax, on the taxable property of the municipality, the amount which the municipality may be held to pay for damages occasioned to property by rioters or persons riotously assembled.
In default of the council paying such damages within six months, according to the decision of arbitrators, the municipality may be sued before any competent court for the damages so occasioned;
(2)  To relieve any person who has received any wound or contracted any sickness or disease at a fire;
(3)  To grant rewards, in money or otherwise, to any person who performs a meritorious action at a fire, or who saves or endeavours to save anyone from drowning or from other serious danger;
(4)  To provide for the wants of the family of any person who loses his life at a fire, or while saving or endeavouring to save any one from a serious danger;
(5)  To contribute to the maintenance or support of poor persons residing in the municipality, who, from infirmity, age or other causes, are unable to earn their own livelihood;
(6)  To establish and maintain houses of refuge, and other establishments for the support and relief of the destitute, and to subsidize hospital centres or charitable institutions established in the municipality or elsewhere in Québec;
(7)  To offer and give rewards for the discovery and arrest of criminals;
(8)  To establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a retirement pension fund for the benefit of the officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a retirement fund; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a corporation or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of such fund; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and their contributive shares to the pension fund; to constitute a commission whose members are chosen among the members of the council and the officers or employees who benefit from the by-law, to administer the pension fund and determine the by-laws for the internal management of such commission; to cause to be assumed by the corporation the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for pension purposes, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating the pension fund.
A by-law passed under this paragraph may establish classes of officers or employees and prescribe that the pension plan is restricted to a certain class or that separate plans are established for each class.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by a resolution approved by the majority of its employees, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to the said fund which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
A by-law establishing a retirement pension fund requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees contemplated by the by-law even if the by-law prescribes a loan.
Every by-law to establish or amend a pension fund may have effect retroactively to the effective date of the pension fund or any amendment to it under the Supplemental Pension Plans Act (chapter R-15.1).
The Supplemental Pension Plans Act applies to every pension fund so established;
(9)  To aid, by any means deemed advisable, the settlement of Québec, and agriculture, horticulture, arts and sciences, in the municipality, or within the limits of the agricultural society within which such municipality is situated;
(10)  To take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by resolution, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the preceding paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to such fund, which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
The council may, by by-law, take out liability insurance for the benefit of its officers and employees.
The members of the council, as long as they remain in office, may participate in the group insurance and liability insurance taken out by the council under this paragraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the officers and employees mentioned in that paragraph.
(11)  To provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80; 1982, c. 2, s. 34; 1984, c. 38, s. 12; 1986, c. 31, s. 6; 1987, c. 42, s. 4; 1989, c. 38, s. 268.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  To indemnify persons whose property has been destroyed or injured, either wholly or in part, by rioters or persons tumultuously assembled, within the municipality.
The council may levy, over and above any other tax, on the taxable property of the municipality, the amount which the municipality may be held to pay for damages occasioned to property by rioters or persons riotously assembled.
In default of the council paying such damages within six months, according to the decision of arbitrators, the municipality may be sued before any competent court for the damages so occasioned;
(2)  To relieve any person who has received any wound or contracted any sickness or disease at a fire;
(3)  To grant rewards, in money or otherwise, to any person who performs a meritorious action at a fire, or who saves or endeavours to save anyone from drowning or from other serious danger;
(4)  To provide for the wants of the family of any person who loses his life at a fire, or while saving or endeavouring to save any one from a serious danger;
(5)  To contribute to the maintenance or support of poor persons residing in the municipality, who, from infirmity, age or other causes, are unable to earn their own livelihood;
(6)  To establish and maintain houses of refuge, and other establishments for the support and relief of the destitute, and to subsidize hospital centres or charitable institutions established in the municipality or elsewhere in Québec;
(7)  To offer and give rewards for the discovery and arrest of criminals;
(8)  To establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a retirement pension fund for the benefit of the permanent officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a retirement fund; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a corporation or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of such fund; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and their contributive shares to the pension fund; to constitute a commission whose members are chosen among the members of the council and the officers or employees who benefit from the by-law, to administer the pension fund and determine the by-laws for the internal management of such commission; to cause to be assumed by the corporation the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for pension purposes, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating the pension fund.
A by-law passed under this paragraph may establish classes of officers or employees and prescribe that the pension plan is restricted to a certain class or that separate plans are established for each class.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by a resolution approved by the majority of its employees, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to the said fund which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
A by-law establishing a retirement pension fund requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees contemplated by the by-law even if the by-law prescribes a loan. The by-law may have effect retroactively to the date the contributions began to be paid.
Every by-law to amend or to repeal a by-law establishing a retirement pension fund takes effect only from its approval by the Régie des rentes du Québec.
The Act respecting supplemental pension plans applies to every by-law contemplated in this paragraph;
(9)  To aid, by any means deemed advisable, the settlement of Québec, and agriculture, horticulture, arts and sciences, in the municipality, or within the limits of the agricultural society within which such municipality is situated;
(10)  To take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by resolution, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the preceding paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to such fund, which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
The council may, by by-law, take out liability insurance for the benefit of its officers and employees.
The members of the council, as long as they remain in office, may participate in the group insurance and liability insurance taken out by the council under this paragraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the officers and employees mentioned in that paragraph.
(11)  To provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80; 1982, c. 2, s. 34; 1984, c. 38, s. 12; 1986, c. 31, s. 6; 1987, c. 42, s. 4.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  To indemnify persons whose property has been destroyed or injured, either wholly or in part, by rioters or persons tumultuously assembled, within the municipality.
The council may levy, over and above any other tax, on the taxable property of the municipality, the amount which the municipality may be held to pay for damages occasioned to property by rioters or persons riotously assembled.
In default of the council paying such damages within six months, according to the decision of arbitrators, the municipality may be sued before any competent court for the damages so occasioned;
(2)  To relieve any person who has received any wound or contracted any sickness or disease at a fire;
(3)  To grant rewards, in money or otherwise, to any person who performs a meritorious action at a fire, or who saves or endeavours to save anyone from drowning or from other serious danger;
(4)  To provide for the wants of the family of any person who loses his life at a fire, or while saving or endeavouring to save any one from a serious danger;
(5)  To contribute to the maintenance or support of poor persons residing in the municipality, who, from infirmity, age or other causes, are unable to earn their own livelihood;
(6)  To establish and maintain houses of refuge, and other establishments for the support and relief of the destitute, and to subsidize hospital centres or charitable institutions established in the municipality or elsewhere in Québec;
(7)  To offer and give rewards for the discovery and arrest of criminals;
(8)  To establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a retirement pension fund for the benefit of the permanent officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a retirement fund; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a corporation or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of such fund; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and their contributive shares to the pension fund; to constitute a commission whose members are chosen among the members of the council and the officers or employees who benefit from the by-law, to administer the pension fund and determine the by-laws for the internal management of such commission; to cause to be assumed by the corporation the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for pension purposes, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating the pension fund.
A by-law passed under this paragraph may establish classes of officers or employees and prescribe that the pension plan is restricted to a certain class or that separate plans are established for each class.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by a resolution approved by the majority of its employees, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to the said fund which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
A by-law establishing a retirement pension fund requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees contemplated by the by-law and that of the Commission municipale du Québec even if the by-law prescribes a loan. The by-law may have effect retroactively to the date the contributions began to be paid.
Every by-law to amend or to repeal a by-law establishing a retirement pension fund takes effect only from its approval by the Commission municipale du Québec and by the Régie des rentes du Québec.
The Act respecting supplemental pension plans applies to every by-law contemplated in this paragraph;
(9)  To aid, by any means deemed advisable, the settlement of Québec, and agriculture, horticulture, arts and sciences, in the municipality, or within the limits of the agricultural society within which such municipality is situated;
(10)  To take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by resolution, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the preceding paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to such fund, which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
The council may, by by-law, take out liability insurance for the benefit of its officers and employees.
The members of the council, as long as they remain in office, may participate in the group insurance and liability insurance taken out by the council under this paragraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the officers and employees mentioned in that paragraph.
(11)  To provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80; 1982, c. 2, s. 34; 1984, c. 38, s. 12; 1986, c. 31, s. 6.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  To indemnify persons whose property has been destroyed or injured, either wholly or in part, by rioters or persons tumultuously assembled, within the municipality.
The council may levy, over and above any other tax, on the taxable property of the municipality, the amount which the municipality may be held to pay for damages occasioned to property by rioters or persons riotously assembled.
In default of the council paying such damages within six months, according to the decision of arbitrators, the municipality may be sued before any competent court for the damages so occasioned;
(2)  To relieve any person who has received any wound or contracted any sickness or disease at a fire;
(3)  To grant rewards, in money or otherwise, to any person who performs a meritorious action at a fire, or who saves or endeavours to save anyone from drowning or from other serious danger;
(4)  To provide for the wants of the family of any person who loses his life at a fire, or while saving or endeavouring to save any one from a serious danger;
(5)  To contribute to the maintenance or support of poor persons residing in the municipality, who, from infirmity, age or other causes, are unable to earn their own livelihood;
(6)  To establish and maintain houses of refuge, and other establishments for the support and relief of the destitute, and to subsidize hospital centres or charitable institutions established in the municipality or elsewhere in Québec;
(7)  To offer and give rewards for the discovery and arrest of criminals;
(8)  To establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a retirement pension fund for the benefit of the permanent officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a retirement fund; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a corporation or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of such fund; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and their contributive shares to the pension fund; to constitute a commission whose members are chosen among the members of the council and the officers or employees who benefit from the by-law, to administer the pension fund and determine the by-laws for the internal management of such commission; to cause to be assumed by the corporation the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for pension purposes, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating the pension fund.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by a resolution approved by the majority of its employees, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to the said fund which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
A by-law establishing a retirement pension fund requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees contemplated by the by-law and that of the Commission municipale du Québec even if the by-law prescribes a loan.
Every by-law to amend or to repeal a by-law establishing a retirement pension fund takes effect only from its approval by the Commission municipale du Québec and by the Régie des rentes du Québec.
The Act respecting supplemental pension plans applies to every by-law contemplated in this paragraph;
(9)  To aid, by any means deemed advisable, the settlement of Québec, and agriculture, horticulture, arts and sciences, in the municipality, or within the limits of the agricultural society within which such municipality is situated;
(10)  To take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by resolution, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the preceding paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to such fund, which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
The council may, by by-law, take out liability insurance for the benefit of its officers and employees.
The members of the council, as long as they remain in office, may participate in the group insurance and liability insurance taken out by the council under this paragraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the officers and employees mentioned in that paragraph.
(11)  To provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80; 1982, c. 2, s. 34; 1984, c. 38, s. 12.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  To indemnify persons whose property has been destroyed or injured, either wholly or in part, by rioters or persons tumultuously assembled, within the municipality.
The council may levy, over and above any other tax, on the taxable property of the municipality, the amount which the municipality may be held to pay for damages occasioned to property by rioters or persons riotously assembled.
In default of the council paying such damages within six months, according to the decision of arbitrators, the municipality may be sued before any competent court for the damages so occasioned;
(2)  To relieve any person who has received any wound or contracted any sickness or disease at a fire;
(3)  To grant rewards, in money or otherwise, to any person who performs a meritorious action at a fire, or who saves or endeavours to save anyone from drowning or from other serious danger;
(4)  To provide for the wants of the family of any person who loses his life at a fire, or while saving or endeavouring to save any one from a serious danger;
(5)  To contribute to the maintenance or support of poor persons residing in the municipality, who, from infirmity, age or other causes, are unable to earn their own livelihood;
(6)  To establish and maintain houses of refuge, and other establishments for the support and relief of the destitute, and to subsidize hospital centres or charitable institutions established in the municipality or elsewhere in Québec;
Such grants to such hospital centres or charitable institutions may be paid by equal annual instalments over a period of not more than twenty-five years, and, in such case, only the approval of the Commission municipale du Québec shall be required. If the period exceeds twenty-five years the by-law shall be approved in accordance with section 556;
(7)  To offer and give rewards for the discovery and arrest of criminals;
(8)  To establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a retirement pension fund for the benefit of the permanent officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a retirement fund; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a corporation or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of such fund; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and their contributive shares to the pension fund; to constitute a commission whose members are chosen among the members of the council and the officers or employees who benefit from the by-law, to administer the pension fund and determine the by-laws for the internal management of such commission; to cause to be assumed by the corporation the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for pension purposes, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating the pension fund.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by a resolution approved by the majority of its employees, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to the said fund which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
A by-law establishing a retirement pension fund requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees contemplated by the by-law and that of the Commission municipale du Québec even if the by-law prescribes a loan.
Every by-law to amend or to repeal a by-law establishing a retirement pension fund takes effect only from its approval by the Commission municipale du Québec and by the Régie des rentes du Québec.
The Act respecting supplemental pension plans applies to every by-law contemplated in this paragraph;
(9)  To aid, by any means deemed advisable, the settlement of Québec, and agriculture, horticulture, arts and sciences, in the municipality, or within the limits of the agricultural society within which such municipality is situated;
(10)  To take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by resolution, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the preceding paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to such fund, which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
The council may, by by-law, take out liability insurance for the benefit of its officers and employees.
The members of the council, as long as they remain in office, may participate in the group insurance and liability insurance taken out by the council under this paragraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the officers and employees mentioned in that paragraph.
(11)  To provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80; 1982, c. 2, s. 34.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  To indemnify persons whose property has been destroyed or injured, either wholly or in part, by rioters or persons tumultuously assembled, within the municipality.
The council may levy, over and above any other tax, on the taxable property of the municipality, the amount which the municipality may be held to pay for damages occasioned to property by rioters or persons riotously assembled.
In default of the council paying such damages within six months, according to the decision of arbitrators, the municipality may be sued before any competent court for the damages so occasioned;
(2)  To relieve any person who has received any wound or contracted any sickness or disease at a fire;
(3)  To grant rewards, in money or otherwise, to any person who performs a meritorious action at a fire, or who saves or endeavours to save anyone from drowning or from other serious danger;
(4)  To provide for the wants of the family of any person who loses his life at a fire, or while saving or endeavouring to save any one from a serious danger;
(5)  To contribute to the maintenance or support of poor persons residing in the municipality, who, from infirmity, age or other causes, are unable to earn their own livelihood;
(6)  To establish and maintain houses of refuge, and other establishments for the support and relief of the destitute, and to subsidize hospital centres or charitable institutions established in the municipality or elsewhere in Québec;
Such grants to such hospital centres or charitable institutions may be paid by equal annual instalments over a period of not more than twenty-five years, and, in such case, only the approval of the Commission municipale du Québec shall be required. If the period exceeds twenty-five years the by-law shall be approved in accordance with section 556;
(7)  To offer and give rewards for the discovery and arrest of criminals;
(8)  To establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a retirement pension fund for the benefit of the permanent officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a retirement fund; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a corporation or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of such fund; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and their contributive shares to the pension fund; to constitute a commission whose members are chosen among the members of the council and the officers or employees who benefit from the by-law, to administer the pension fund and determine the by-laws for the internal management of such commission; to cause to be assumed by the corporation the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for pension purposes, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating the pension fund.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by a resolution approved by the majority of its employees, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to the said fund which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
A by-law establishing a retirement pension fund requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees contemplated by the by-law and that of the Commission municipale du Québec even if the by-law prescribes a loan.
Every by-law to amend or to repeal a by-law establishing a retirement pension fund takes effect only from its approval by the Commission municipale du Québec and by the Régie des rentes du Québec.
The Act respecting supplemental pension plans applies to every by-law contemplated in this paragraph;
(9)  To aid, by any means deemed advisable, the settlement of Québec, and agriculture, horticulture, arts and sciences, in the municipality, or within the limits of the agricultural society within which such municipality is situated;
(10)  To take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by resolution, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the preceding paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to such fund, which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
The members of the council may, as long as they remain in office, participate in the group insurance contracted for by the municipality under this paragraph, on the same conditions as those applicable to the employees mentioned in that paragraph;
(11)  To provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14; 1980, c. 16, s. 80.
464. The council may make by-laws:
(1)  To indemnify persons whose property has been destroyed or injured, either wholly or in part, by rioters or persons tumultuously assembled, within the municipality.
The council may levy, over and above any other tax, on the taxable property of the municipality, the amount which the municipality may be held to pay for damages occasioned to property by rioters or persons riotously assembled.
In default of the council paying such damages within six months, according to the decision of arbitrators, the municipality may be sued before any competent court for the damages so occasioned;
(2)  To relieve any person who has received any wound or contracted any sickness or disease at a fire;
(3)  To grant rewards, in money or otherwise, to any person who performs a meritorious action at a fire, or who saves or endeavours to save anyone from drowning or from other serious danger;
(4)  To provide for the wants of the family of any person who loses his life at a fire, or while saving or endeavouring to save any one from a serious danger;
(5)  To contribute to the maintenance or support of poor persons residing in the municipality, who, from infirmity, age or other causes, are unable to earn their own livelihood;
(6)  To establish and maintain houses of refuge, and other establishments for the support and relief of the destitute, and to subsidize hospital centres or charitable institutions established in the municipality or elsewhere in Québec;
Such grants to such hospital centres or charitable institutions may be paid by equal annual instalments over a period of not more than twenty-five years, and, in such case, only the approval of the Commission municipale du Québec shall be required. If the period exceeds twenty-five years the by-law shall be approved in accordance with section 556;
(7)  To offer and give rewards for the discovery and arrest of criminals;
(8)  To establish and maintain, on the conditions prescribed by the by-law, a retirement pension fund for the benefit of the permanent officers and employees of the municipality or to participate in such a retirement fund; to make, for that purpose, if need be, any agreement with a life insurance company or a trust company or with a corporation or government issuing life annuities; to grant subsidies for the establishment and maintenance of such fund; to fix the maximum age of the officers and employees and their contributive shares to the pension fund; to constitute a commission whose members are chosen among the members of the council and the officers or employees who benefit from the by-law, to administer the pension fund and determine the by-laws for the internal management of such commission; to cause to be assumed by the corporation the contributions required to enable the officers and employees to be credited, for pension purposes, with their previous years of service, and borrow the sums required for that purpose by the by-law creating the pension fund.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by a resolution approved by the majority of its employees, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the first paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to the said fund which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required.
A by-law establishing a retirement pension fund requires only the approval of the majority of the officers and employees contemplated by the by-law and that of the Commission municipale du Québec even if the by-law prescribes a loan.
Every by-law to amend or to repeal a by-law establishing a retirement pension fund takes effect only from its approval by the Commission municipale du Québec and by the Régie des rentes du Québec.
The Act respecting supplemental pension plans applies to every by-law contemplated in this paragraph;
(9)  To aid, by any means deemed advisable, the settlement of Québec, and agriculture, horticulture, arts and sciences, in the municipality, or within the limits of the agricultural society within which such municipality is situated;
(10)  To take out insurance policies on the lives of all the officers and employees of the municipality or of any special class of officers or employees which the by-law determines, under the system known as “group insurance”, and pay the whole or part of the premium required, out of the general funds of the municipality; to pay, in whole or in part, on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, out of the general funds of the municipality, the premium required for any group insurance plan respecting medical, surgical and hospital costs for them and their dependents; to pay, in whole or in part, out of the general funds of the municipality, for and on behalf of the officers and employees of the municipality, the premium required for any sickness or disability group salary insurance plan.
The council, on a request by the municipal housing bureau, made by resolution, shall include the employees of the bureau within the scope of the application of a by-law contemplated in the preceding paragraph; the bureau shall deduct from the salary or remuneration of its employees their contributive shares to such fund, which it shall then pay to the council at the same time as its own contributive share. The council shall prescribe such integration by a by-law providing all the terms and conditions of application required;
(11)  To provide for the redemption of the number of sick days accumulated by the employees and officers of the municipality.
R. S. 1964, c. 193, s. 473; 1968, c. 55, s. 126; 1971, c. 48, s. 161; 1974, c. 45, s. 8; 1977, c. 5, s. 14.