Medicine Hat News

Info watchdog raps Privy Council Office for terminatin­g access requests from public

- JIM BRONSKILL

The federal informatio­n watchdog has chastised the prime minister’s bureaucrat­s for shutting down several requests from a researcher without good cause.

In a series of decisions made public Tuesday, informatio­n commission­er Caroline Maynard reveals the Privy Council Office simply closed four Access to Informatio­n requests to avoid missing due dates.

In each case, the body that supports the prime minister was waiting for input from other federal agencies on whether Cold War-era intelligen­ce records could be disclosed to Alan Barnes, who filed formal applicatio­ns under the access law.

Maynard ruled the access act does not allow the PCO to fail to respond to an access request on the grounds it has yet to receive recommenda­tions from consulted institutio­ns.

She found, however, that the PCO officials who process access requests were instructed not to keep a file open past its due date because of the agency’s “no late file” policy.

Maynard said the practice explains head-scratching statistics reported by the PCO in its recent annual reports detailing access response times.

For instance, even though Maynard found many complaints from requesters about delays in the 2017-to-2019 period to be well-founded, the PCO reported that 100 per cent of requests were answered on time.

In the first of the four Barnes decisions, dated Oct. 14, Maynard expressed disappoint­ment with the PCO, noting it is a central institutio­n headed by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who has signalled “a commitment to transparen­cy and openness.”

Maynard noted in her three subsequent decisions, all dated Nov. 9, that the PCO had since ended the practice of closing request files while consultati­ons are outstandin­g.

Privacy considerat­ions prevented the informatio­n commission­er’s office from identifyin­g who made the access requests. But Barnes stepped forward Tuesday to voice concerns about the PCO’s actions.

“I was very disappoint­ed in PCO’s response to these and other requests I have made,” said Barnes, a former PCO intelligen­ce analyst who is now a senior fellow at the Centre for Security, Intelligen­ce and Defence Studies at Carleton University’s Norman Paterson School of Internatio­nal Affairs.

Barnes noted the reports on his complaints point out that, contrary to the PCO’s claims, the agency only initiated consultati­ons with other federal institutio­ns once the informatio­n commission­er began investigat­ing his files.

“I am deeply disturbed that PCO would make a claim on four separate occasions that it knew to be untrue.”

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