Dominion Elections Act Dominion Elections Act, s. 67A introduced an exception to the original Act: • Anyone who has voted in a Dominion election after October 7, 1917, is ineligible and incompetent to obtain an exception by reason of being a Mennonite or Doukhobor. And an additional exemption, alongside an removed exemption, to the act: • British subjects naturalized after March 31, 1902 (together with their sons not yet of legal age) who were either born in an enemy country, or came from any European country and whose mother tongue is a language of an enemy country, are exempted from military service. • Anyone who has voted in a Dominion election after October 7, 1917, is ineligible and incompetent to obtain an exemption on conscientious grounds.
Regulations Regulations under P.C. 919 of April 20, 1918 retooled the classes, stating; • Class 1 and Class 2 shall include all those have attained the age of nineteen years, but were born on or since October 13, 1897, and are resident in Canada. • Any person who subsequently reaches the age of nineteen, and is unmarried or a widower with no child, becomes immediately subject to military law and must present himself to the local registrar within the following ten days for the purpose of being placed on active service. It also introduced a redefinition: • The words "in any theatre of actual war" shall not include the
high seas or Great Britain and Ireland. Lastly, it removed previously granted and instead permitted ministerial discretion in individual cases: • Any exemptions previously granted under the Act shall cease forthwith, but the Minister may grant leave of absence without pay by reason of death, disablement or service by other members of the same family while on active service in any actual theatre of war. Regulations under P.C. 1250 of May 22, 1918 • Leave of absence without pay extended to those men being the sole support of widows, an invalid father, or other helpless dependants. A system of local and appeal tribunals was in place for determining exemptions claimed under the act. The men of Class 1 were called up to report for military service on November 10, 1917, with the deadline delayed until December 12, 1917, for those living in the
Yukon Territory (who did not need to report for duty until January 7, 1918). Men within any class who, after August 4, 1914, had moved to the United States or elsewhere were also required to submit to the provisions of the act. Further regulations issued on April 30, 1918, required all persons claiming an exemption to carry documentation supporting such a claim, with lack of documentation resulting in detention without recourse to
habeas corpus, and public notices of these regulations were published across Canada. This left farming operations across Canada short of much-needed labour. ==Conscripts raised==