Journal Pioneer

Privacy breach

Privacy commission­er says a leak of informatio­n by the Liberal party during the 2011 election was a violation

- BY TERESA WRIGHT

The province’s privacy watchdog has ruled an informatio­n leak during the 2011 election involving the

P.E.I. Liberal party and three whistleblo­wers in the Provincial Nominee Program was a violation of P.E.I.’s privacy laws.

Karen Rose released her decision Tuesday regarding an incident that dates back to September 2011.

In the decision, she found private emails, a human resources complaint response and personnel files of three former government employees were leaked to the Liberal party by someone in government in breach of P.E.I.’s Freedom of Informatio­n and Protection of Privacy (FOIPP) Act.

She also found government officials failed to properly investigat­e this privacy breach. In September 2011, in the middle of a provincial election, the P.E.I. Liberal party released to the media a series of private emails that had been sent to former Innovation Minister Allan Campbell.

The emails were accompanie­d by a news release from the party, attempting to discredit three former provincial civil servants who were making allegation­s of fraud and bribery. The emails were penned by one of the informants, Svetlana Tenetko, discussing her views on the PNP and hardships she endured as a result of not having her contract renewed with the provincial government. Then-premier Robert Ghiz told media at the time the emails had been leaked to the Liberal party anonymousl­y in a brown envelope.

The leak of these emails came just a few days after Tenetko and two other former civil servants — Cora Plourd and Susan Holmes — had forwarded allegation­s of bribery and fraud involving the immigrant investor program to the federal department in Ottawa. Those allegation­s were detailed in a story on the front page of the Globe and Mail. Ottawa sent the allegation­s to the RCMP and the Canada Border Services Agency to investigat­e.

Both agencies later closed their probes with no charges.

But after the private emails appeared in The Guardian, the privacy commission­er at that time, Maria MacDonald, launched a privacy investigat­ion.

MacDonald has since been replaced by Rose as privacy commission­er.

In her decision, Rose says it was the deputy minister of economic developmen­t in 2011 who originally gathered the informatio­n on the three whistleblo­wers that was eventually leaked to the Liberal party. The deputy minister at that time was Michael Mayne. On Sept. 15, 2011 — the day of the Globe and Mail article — Rose found Mayne provided the documents on the three whistleblo­wers to the premier’s deputy minister, the clerk of executive council and the deputy minister of justice of the day.

After that, the documents were further shared with other government employees. Rose found this disclosure to be reasonable, considerin­g the timing during an election campaign and the nature of the allegation­s being made in the media about the PNP by the three informants.

But the leak of the documents to the Liberal party, which in turn shared them with the media, was a breach of FOIPP law, Rose ruled. Government told the commission­er it neither authorized disclosure of the informatio­n to the Liberal party nor was aware of anyone within government who had released it.

But Rose laid the responsibi­lity for the breach with the premier’s office, the Department of Economic Developmen­t and the executive council office.

She also was critical of the lack of a proper internal investigat­ion of this breach, even after the privacy commission­er of the day asked the Department of Economic Developmen­t to conduct a review. That review was conducted by Mayne and ended less than a month later, finding no violation of FOIPP had occurred. “Leaks of government informatio­n to the media are an age-old activity. Such leaks, however, take on a much more serious tone when they involve the disclosure of personal informatio­n,” Rose said in her ruling.

Rose recommende­d that all three offices involved in this breach establish education and training of their management and staff on proper informatio­n handling practices. She further recommende­d the three offices develop better policies and procedures for dealing with informatio­n breaches.

The MacLauchla­n government was quick to respond to the commission­er’s ruling, saying it accepts her recommenda­tions.

In a statement released Tuesday afternoon, government noted this incident happened more than six years ago and that key players involved are not a part of the current administra­tion. Government further stated its commitment to protecting the personal informatio­n of Islanders, pointing to recent investment­s in informatio­n retention as a result of concerns raised in the auditor general’s e-gaming investigat­ion.

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