The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Whistleblo­wers consider legal options

Privacy commission­er released report in December finding the P.E.I. government breached rights of three women

- BY MICHAEL TUTTON

Two whistleblo­wers whose private informatio­n was leaked in brown envelopes from Prince Edward Island’s government to the Liberal Party say they won’t fade away without being compensate­d for the economic and emotional toll on their lives.

A report released last month by the privacy commission­er — completed six years after the initial complaint — found the province breached the basic privacy rights of three women who held a September 2011 news conference to allege fraud and bribery in a provincial immigratio­n program.

Susan Holmes, a former manager in the provincial government’s Population Secretaria­t, said she has been refused a meeting with Premier Wade MacLauchla­n to discuss the ruling and possible ways to “make a wrong right.”

She is now seeking a lawyer willing to take on her case, the 61-year-old said.

“I came forward with an outstretch­ed palm, and he did not take my hand, and to me that’s a political mistake,” she said in a telephone interview from New Brunswick, where she now lives.

“I’m considerin­g legal options.” Cora Nicholson, a 67-year-old former program officer in the Department of Economic Developmen­t’s immigratio­n division, says she, too, is considerin­g seeking a lawyer over the privacy breach.

Svetlana Tenetko, another former immigratio­n program officer, said in emails she intends to discuss the matter with Nicholson and Holmes.

“My private informatio­n has been exposed to the whole country ... I had to leave Prince Edward Island and retire,” she wrote in an email. “Lawyers cost a lot and it takes years.”

The province has promised to follow the privacy commission­er’s recommenda­tions that it improve education on privacy rules and create clear rules requiring an internal investigat­ion if a privacy breach occurs.

However, Michael Bryant, the executive director of the Canadian Civil Liberties Associatio­n, said the response falls short in addressing an incident that his organizati­on believes has had a chilling effect on whistleblo­wers on the Island and across Canada.

“It’s a nightmare for a citizen. This was the corrupt use of government power for partisan political ends,” he said in an interview.

Holmes, Tenetko and Nicholson learned from reporters attending their 2011 news conference that their office emails, personnel records and the province’s response to Nicholson’s still-confidenti­al human rights complaint had found their way to journalist­s.

The women had come forward to discuss the province’s provincial nominee immigratio­n program, alleging applicatio­ns that didn’t meet criteria were approved and that bribes were provided for fast-tracked applicatio­ns. Holmes also sent the allegation­s of fraud to federal officials at Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n.

The RCMP and Canada Border Services Agency later started investigat­ions but decided not to proceed with any charges.

The emails fed out by the Liberals portrayed the women as partisans in an unfolding provincial election campaign, while then-premier Robert Ghiz denounced their allegation­s before going on to win the election.

One of the released files revealed Nicholson’s affiliatio­n with the Tories years earlier, as well as confidenti­al details of a human rights complaint she’d launched for job discrimina­tion on the basis of her political affiliatio­n.

Within days, the women filed a formal complaint to the privacy commission­er,

“It’s a nightmare for a citizen. This was the corrupt use of government power for partisan political ends.” Michael Bryant

but the agency produced no report while Ghiz remained in office and for over two years after MacLauchla­n took over as Liberal premier in February 2015.

Commission­er Karen Rose says in an email that it was “an issue of inadequate resources” for her predecesso­r, and the backlog of privacy complaints has taken time to clear since several positions were added to the office two years ago.

Nicholson said waiting for a result was deeply frustratin­g. “It was really dormant for most of the six years,” she said.

The commission­er’s findings describe the murky possibilit­ies of how the informatio­n changed hands among some combinatio­n of government officials - who included officials involved in the election campaign - and Liberal party officials.

She concluded one possibilit­y is government officials directly gave the Liberal party the “brown envelope” with the materials, while another possibilit­y was “an unknown third party accessed the personal informatio­n and disclosed it.”

“In either case, these ... public bodies have failed in their obligation­s under the ... Freedom of Informatio­n and Protection of Privacy Act,” says the ruling.

Holmes and Nicholson say that since the privacy breach they’ve been unable to find employment on the Island and describe online harassment and years of worries over the fallout from bringing their concerns forward.

Nicholson said since 2011 she hasn’t received responses when she applied for provincial government jobs. “As soon as they do an internet search and they see whistleblo­wer, you’re done,” she said. She has background in payroll, accounting and human resources and still lives on the Island.

“It’s the stress of it all, the trolls online,” she said, her voice breaking with emotion.

MacLauchla­n did not respond to an interview request from The Canadian Press.

His communicat­ions aide sent an email saying the current Liberal administra­tion wouldn’t tolerate a similar breach, that the province had brought in whistleblo­wer protection legislatio­n and it has appointed and ethics and integrity commission­er.

Still, Nicholson and Holmes say those steps don’t go far enough to protect future whistleblo­wers and say they wouldn’t feel protected by the new law.

Both women say MacLauchla­n’s whistleblo­wer legislatio­n should ensure an arms-length agency investigat­es privacy breaches, rather than internal inquiries like the one ordered by Economic Developmen­t shortly after their complaint.

The premier’s office email also asserts: “The commission­er’s report does not recommend restitutio­n.”

Yet, Rose said in an email there is actually no provision under her governing legislatio­n for her to make such an order.

Bryant said he thinks the province’s government may be worsening its legal situation.

“They should assist the aggrieved because the damage award is only to go up if the government continues to run away from this problem,” he said.

“The government of P.E.I. is liable in some fashion for having wronged these people. And the fact it happened six years ago is no reason for the province to wash its hands of it.”

James Aylward, the Tory Opposition leader, said the premier’s refusal to meet with the women to express the province’s apology in person is a serious error.

“It’s incumbent on the premier to show he’s concerned about issues such as this ...There isn’t going to be any healing if there’s no meaningful dialogue, and that needs to be face-toface in a room together,” he said in an interview.

Rose said her office has the authority to disclose informatio­n to the RCMP if there is evidence of an offence, but it “has not yet referred any matter to the police or to the Crown attorney.”

Her report has noted it is “challengin­g” to identify any one individual responsibl­e for the privacy breach.

The provincial nominee program the women criticized allowed foreign investors to fast-track receipt of Canadian visas by providing about $150,000, some of which was invested in P.E.I. companies.

The program was shut down in 2008 after the federal government said it was operating outside rules that required immigrants to be actively involved in companies they invested in.

 ?? RON WARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Susan Holmes is shown at her home in Moncton, N.B., Tuesday, Jan. 30. Two whistleblo­wers whose private informatio­n was leaked in brown envelopes from Prince Edward Island’s government to the Liberal Party, say they won’t fade away without being...
RON WARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS Susan Holmes is shown at her home in Moncton, N.B., Tuesday, Jan. 30. Two whistleblo­wers whose private informatio­n was leaked in brown envelopes from Prince Edward Island’s government to the Liberal Party, say they won’t fade away without being...
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