Consultation Document July 2017 | Page 7

Evolving Regulatory Landscape Professional regulation, while in existence internationally since the late 1700’s and in Canada since the 1860’s, has experienced some of its greatest evolution and debate over the last 20 years. The United Kingdom and Australia have fundamentally altered their models to ensure greater public accountability and efficiency, with an aim to consolidate the functions of multiple regulators under one agency. Meta-regulation, or umbrella legislation, was also introduced in Ontario with the Regulated Health Professions Act (RHPA) in 1993 and the Fairness Commission under the Fair Access to Regulated Professions and Compulsory Trades Act in 2006. More specifically, however, all of these changes speak to several trends in occupational regulation: • a decrease in exclusive scope of practice models, acknowledging team based care and public demand for direct access to lower risk services by practitioners of the public’s choosing, • an increase in mandatory quality assurance programs as continuing competence has clearly become a factor in assuring safe practice over time, Achieving a Modern Approach to the Regulation of Veterinary Medicine in Ontario EVOLVING REGULATORY LANDSCAPE • an increased focus on public risk and harm and ensuring professional standards and programs are developed with these in mind, • an increased emphasis on regulating the system, and not just the individual licensee, to ensure that risks are mitigated. In the case of veterinary medicine, this speaks to the regulation of veterinary technicians within the model to better ensure standards of animal care are met, • an increased role of public members on Councils and Boards of Directors, demonstrating a strong balanced public voice in overall regulatory governance and decision making, • an increasing preference for legislation that is less prescriptive; providing powers in regulation and bylaw that afford for greater nimbleness in change over time, • an increase in the regulator’s accountability to the public through government, and • an increase in public expectation of the transparency of regulatory processes and the appropriate legislative tools to manage risk within the respective profession. Achieving a Modern Approach to the Regulation of Veterinary Medicine in Ontario  7