Penticton Herald

It’s politics as usual

- — Victoria Times Colonist

Increasing­ly, it feels as if the B.C. Liberals are working their way through a checklist, looking for ways to defuse issues likely to cause trouble in the election campaign.

So six years of inaction on Vancouver Island’s E&N Rail line produced last week’s press conference to announce politician­s would meet to talk about it some more.

Growing concern about B.C.’s lax — or non-existent — political fundraisin­g rules that allow rich donors to buy access to politician­s produced the promise of a commission to talk about that issue. Cynical, perhaps, but politics as usual. But on one critical issue the Liberal government’s response has fallen desperatel­y short of what is needed.

Last week, Finance Minister Mike de Jong introduced legislatio­n he said would help ensure the government lived up to its duty to keep the documents used in reaching decisions and setting policies.

The changes, de Jong said, “respond specifical­ly to recommenda­tions” made in the reviews of the Triple Delete scandal, which found a culture of secrecy and the illegal destructio­n of documents that extended from the premier’s office throughout government.

There are several problems in the legislatio­n.

For starters, it comes almost 18 months after former informatio­n and privacy commission­er Elizabeth Denham’s damning report on the scandal. That is hardly an indication of genuine concern.

And the legislatio­n does not accept Denham’s recommenda­tion that the government “should create a legislativ­e duty to document within the Freedom of Informatio­n and Protection of Privacy Act as a clear indication that it does not endorse ‘oral government’ and that it is committed to be accountabl­e to citizens by creating an accurate record of its key decisions and actions.”

That would also mean the independen­t commission­er would have the ability to investigat­e the government’s performanc­e in fulfilling the requiremen­t.

Instead, de Jong introduced amendments to the Informatio­n Management Act, so a government employee is responsibl­e for the issue. And the amendment says the chief records officer “may” issue guidelines and investigat­e, a weak approach to such an important issue — especially from a government with such an embarrassi­ng record.

This might seem arcane, but it is of great importance.

Records are needed to understand government decisions and comply with freedom-ofinformat­ion laws. They can be critical in allowing a citizen to fight back against arbitrary, unfair or illegal government action, providing the evidence needed in court.

Unless those records have been wrongfully destroyed. That was, the report found, exactly what was happening in the Liberal government, which placed itself above the law.

The government’s actions undermined democracy. De Jong’s late, anemic response shows that it still does not take its responsibi­lity to citizens — or the scandal — seriously.

BC Liberals fall short on record keeping

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