Skip to content

The consultation radar

Don't find out the window closed — draft your submission while it's open.

A proposed regulation is published with a comment window, and that window is where a GR team can still change the rule. Clarion surfaces every open consultation from Canada Gazette Part I and the Gazette officielle du Québec, with its closing date, tags each one to the topics you already track, and hands you a cited first draft grounded in your own dossier — a structured starting point, ready to review and file on the official channel.

Honest scope: the drafting is key-gated — with an AI-advisor key Clarion writes the first draft; without one it gives you the same structured skeleton plus the matched records, never a fabricated submission. Clarion indexes the consultation's title, teaser, and deep link — it has not read the full proposed regulation, and the draft marks every spot it can't confirm. Scope today is Canada Gazette Part I and the Québec Gazette, expanding. You review, edit, and submit on the official channel — Clarion never files anything.

Comment-window radar · open now
  • Clean Fuel Regulations — proposed amendmentClosing soon

    Gazette I · Closes Jul 4 · matched to Energy & climate · High

  • Projet de règlement — électrification du transportOpen

    Québec · Closes Jul 22 · matched to Transport · High

  • Health-product labelling — proposed regulationNew

    Gazette I · Closes Aug 15 · matched to Health policy · Medium

Canada Gazette Part I + Québec Gazette · closing soonest first

Two official gazettes, every open window

The comment windows that move your files, in one feed.

Open consultations are scattered across gazette notices nobody reads daily until a window has already closed. Clarion watches the two gazettes that publish them — federal and Québec — and pulls every notice that carries a comment period into one feed, each with the date it closes. You read the windows that touch your topics; you stop scanning gazettes by hand.

  • Canada Gazette Part I — federal proposed regulations open for public comment, English and French.
  • Gazette officielle du Québec — Québec draft regulations and projets de règlement in their comment period.
  • Each window carries its closing date, so the radar can sort by what's about to shut.
  • Title, teaser, and the deep link to the official notice — Clarion points you to the source, it doesn't replace it.
Open consultation · matchedCanada Gazette Part I

Clean Fuel Regulations — proposed amendment

Comment window open · closes July 4

Matched to your topic

Energy & climate policy

High relevance
  • Indexed: notice title, teaser, deep link to the gazette
  • Not indexed: the full text of the proposed regulation
  • Deep link → read the official notice before you file

What the co-pilot does

From an open window to a draft you can edit, in one workspace.

You already track topics in Clarion. The co-pilot reads the open consultations against those topics, grades the match, and turns the relevant ones into a cited draft you can work from — the four steps a GR analyst would do by hand, in the workspace where the file already lives.

01Open-window radar

See every comment window that's still open.

Clarion lists the open consultations from Canada Gazette Part I and the Québec Gazette, each with its title, its source gazette, and the date the window closes — sorted by what shuts first. No reminder you had to set; the closing date comes from the notice itself.

Comment-window radar · open now
  • Clean Fuel Regulations — proposed amendmentClosing soon

    Gazette I · Closes Jul 4 · matched to Energy & climate · High

  • Projet de règlement — électrification du transportOpen

    Québec · Closes Jul 22 · matched to Transport · High

  • Health-product labelling — proposed regulationNew

    Gazette I · Closes Aug 15 · matched to Health policy · Medium

Canada Gazette Part I + Québec Gazette · closing soonest first

02Tagged to your topics

Only the windows that touch your files, graded.

Each open consultation is matched against the topics you already track and graded for relevance, so a transit-electrification file surfaces the transport notice and skips the rest. You see the windows that matter to your clients first — not a gazette table you have to read end to end.

Open consultation · matchedCanada Gazette Part I

Clean Fuel Regulations — proposed amendment

Comment window open · closes July 4

Matched to your topic

Energy & climate policy

High relevance
  • Indexed: notice title, teaser, deep link to the gazette
  • Not indexed: the full text of the proposed regulation
  • Deep link → read the official notice before you file
03Cited first draft

Start your submission from a draft, not a blank page.

For a matched window, Clarion drafts a structured first submission grounded in your own topic dossier — the position, the evidence already in your file, the asks — with each claim cited to the record it came from. It's the cold-start a GR analyst dreads, done: a starting point to sharpen, not a finished filing.

First-draft submission · citedGrounded in your dossier

Submission — Clean Fuel Regulations amendment

Structured starting point · review before filing

  • Position — drawn from your tracked topic [cited]
  • Evidence — three records already in your file [cited]
  • [CLIENT TO CONFIRM against the proposed regulation]

A draft you review and file — never submitted for you

04Honest placeholders

It marks exactly what it couldn't confirm.

Clarion indexes the consultation's title, teaser, and deep link — not the full proposed regulation. So wherever the draft would need the proposal text, it inserts a visible "[CLIENT TO CONFIRM against the specific proposed regulation]" placeholder instead of inventing a detail. You confirm against the official notice; the draft never pretends to have read what it hasn't.

No AI key · structured skeleton

Submission skeleton

With an AI key · drafts the prose
Without a key
Sections + matched records · you write the prose

Degrades honestly — never a fabricated submission.

What happens without an AI key

Drafting is an upgrade, not a requirement — and it never bluffs.

The drafting is key-gated. With an AI-advisor key, Clarion writes the cited first draft. Without one, it degrades visibly: you still get the open-window radar, the topic match, the closing dates, and a structured submission skeleton built from your matched records — the same sections, ready for you to fill. What you never get is a fabricated submission dressed up as a finished filing. An honest empty state beats a confident wrong one.

No AI key on the workspace? The window still surfaces, still graded to your topic, with the skeleton and the matched records — minus the drafted prose. Add the key and the same window drafts itself. Either way, nothing is submitted for you.

Why it matters

The comment window is the one chance to shape the rule — before it sets.

Once a regulation is final, the GR work is reaction. While the window is open, a well-cited submission can still move it. Clarion's job is to make sure you never miss that window, and never start the draft from zero.

Timing01

Never miss a window that closes on a file you track.

Comment periods are short and quietly posted. The radar surfaces every open window on your topics with its closing date, so the chance to file is something you act on — not something you read about after it shut.

Grounded02

The draft is built from your dossier, with citations.

It isn't generic boilerplate. The first draft draws on the evidence already in your tracked topic and cites each claim to its record, so what you hand a partner to review starts from your file — not from a blank document and a deadline.

One workspace03

Read the file, catch the window, draft the response.

The consultation, the topic it matches, and the dossier the draft draws on all sit in the same workspace. The monitoring and the response live together — so the window you spot is the window you can act on, in one place.

Catch the next open window — and start the draft today.

Start free, track a topic, and Clarion surfaces the open consultations on Canada Gazette Part I and the Québec Gazette that touch it — each with its closing date and a structured draft to work from. You review, you edit, you file on the official channel. No demo gate to see the radar.