Edmonton Journal

NAFTA talks poised to put Canadians’ privacy on the line

U.S. seeks freer cross-border data sharing

- Jim Bronskill

OTTAWA • The personal informatio­n of Canadians will be on the negotiatin­g table when North American free trade talks begin this month.

The United States has served notice it wants an end to measures that restrict cross-border data flows, or require the use or installati­on of local computing facilities.

It is among the many American goals for the coming NAFTA renegotiat­ion spelled out by the Office of the U.S. Trade Representa­tive.

Privacy advocates say that means trouble for Canada’s ability to shield sensitive informatio­n such as health or financial data from the prying eyes of foreign agencies by storing it in computer servers on Canadian soil.

The U.S. proposal runs counter to public-sector privacy laws in British Columbia and Nova Scotia that require domestic data storage.

It also seems at odds with the federal government’s strategy on cloud computing — the purchase of digital storage from third parties — that says all “sensitive or protected data under government control will be stored on servers that reside in Canada.”

The B.C. Freedom of Informatio­n and Privacy Associatio­n is urging Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland to ensure legislatio­n already on the books is not undermined by the NAFTA negotiatio­ns.

“Canadians are concerned about their personal informatio­n being shared in any way, shape or form with an increasing­ly erratic United States,” says a recent submission to the minister from associatio­n executive director Vincent Gogolek.

Some American companies

CANADIANS ARE CONCERNED ABOUT THEIR PERSONAL INFORMATIO­N BEING SHARED.

offer a Canadian data storage option in response to market demand and government­s should continue to have freedom to protect citizens’ informatio­n and privacy rights as they see fit, Gogolek says in the submission, part of federal consultati­ons on the NAFTA renegotiat­ion.

Freeland is saying little about the government’s tactics for now, but Canada plans to soon outline broad objectives for the talks.

The Ottawa-based Internatio­nal Civil Liberties Monitoring Group says Canadians must have a say before Canada signs off on any new provisions.

“Privacy rights are something that are really fundamenta­l for Canadians,” said Tim McSorley, the group’s national coordinato­r. “Our first concern is that any agreements made in NAFTA regarding privacy rights should be done in public and open to consultati­on and discussion, both in Parliament and with stakeholde­rs.”

The U.S. trade representa­tive flagged the data storage issue in its 2017 report on foreign trade barriers, noting the B.C. and Nova Scotia laws prevent public bodies such as schools, universiti­es, hospitals and government-owned utilities from using American services when there’s a possibilit­y that personal informatio­n would be stored in, or accessed from, the United States.

The report also highlighte­d the Canadian government’s major consolidat­ion of federal email services, a procuremen­t project that cited national security as a reason for requiring the contracted company to keep data in Canada.

This requiremen­t effectivel­y precludes U.S.-based cloud-computing suppliers from participat­ing in the process, unless they replicate data storage and processing facilities in Canada, the U.S. trade representa­tive noted.

The Informatio­n Technology Industry Council, a Washington-based lobby group, has expressed concerns about the national-security exemption to the Canadian government, according to correspond­ence obtained by Gogolek’s associatio­n through the U.S. Freedom of Informatio­n Act.

The council calls on government­s worldwide to forbid local infrastruc­ture requiremen­ts, denouncing them as discrimina­tory and contrary to the notion of cross-border trade.

In the post-9/11 era, however, many countries remain skittish about U.S. law-enforcemen­t and security agencies getting their hands on sensitive personal records.

The U.S. Patriot Act, passed following the 2001 terrorist attacks, gave the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion broader access to records held by firms in the United States, including data on Canadians.

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