The Niagara Falls Review

Bill would boost info czar’s powers

Proposed legislatio­n backpedals on ministers’ offices

- JIM BRONSKILL THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — The federal informatio­n watchdog would be given powers to order the release of government records under newly tabled legislatio­n.

But the Liberal bill unveiled Monday doesn’t close loopholes that often keep files locked away and it backpedals on a campaign promise to fully apply the Access to Informatio­n Act to ministeria­l offices.

The legislatio­n would place the burden of showing why a record must remain secret on the shoulders of the government or others who object, giving the informatio­n commission­er a stronger hand.

Currently the commission­er, an ombudsman for users of the access law, has to argue the case for release of government files.

The legislatio­n also proposes extending the law — though only in a limited way — to the offices of the prime minister, cabinet members, senators, MPs and administra­tive institutio­ns that support Parliament and the courts.

These offices and institutio­ns would not be required to answer access requests filed by individual­s, which most agencies and department­s must do. Rather, they would be legally bound to regularly release certain types of records, such as hospitalit­y and travel expenses and contract informatio­n.

The new, proactive publicatio­n requiremen­ts would apply to all institutio­ns covered by the access law, though the type of documents that would have to be disclosed would vary. For example, ministers’ offices would be required to publish lists of briefing notes as well as materials prepared for parliament­ary committee appearance­s.

The bill would also require a review of the access law every five years, with the first review to take place within a year of the legislatio­n receiving royal assent.

The legislatio­n would not narrow exemptions in the law that allow agencies to black out passages and deny the release of records — reforms that many transparen­cy advocates have long demanded.

The Access to Informatio­n Act, which took effect in July 1983, allows people who pay $5 to ask for everything from internal federal audits and meeting minutes to correspond­ence and studies. Department­s are supposed to answer within 30 days or provide valid reasons why they need more time.

However, the system has been almost universall­y criticized as slow, out of date and riddled with loopholes that enable agencies to cling to informatio­n, including files more than half-a-century old.

In her recent annual report, informatio­n commission­er Suzanne Legault said the access law was being used as a shield against transparen­cy.

Under the bill, the commission­er’s new powers would also allow her to issue orders related to fees, time extensions and the format of a release — for instance, on access to data in electronic spreadshee­t format. The legislatio­n would also: • Require agencies to justify, with written reasons, why informatio­n is being blacked out;

• Allow government agencies to refuse to process access requests considered vexatious or in bad faith and allow the informatio­n commission­er to refuse to look into complaints on the same grounds.

The government had promised an initial wave of changes by the end of winter — what Treasury Board President Scott Brison called “early wins” on overhaulin­g the antiquated law. In March, Brison’s office cited the complex nature of the task in delaying the Liberal plans. A year ago, a House of Commons committee urged the government to go much further in reforming the 34-year-old access law, calling for steps to:

• Bring cabinet records — now completely excluded from access — under the law and reduce the 20-year period during which they are under wraps;

• Make purely factual or background informatio­n presented to cabinet and records of decisions accessible;

• Broaden access to bureaucrat­ic advice and recommenda­tions by ensuring they are withheld only when there is proof of injury to the government;

• Limit time extensions for answering requests beyond the 30-day limit to a maximum of 30 additional days, with longer extensions available only with the permission of the informatio­n commission­er.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Treasury Board President Scott Brison makes an announceme­nt on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Monday.
SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Treasury Board President Scott Brison makes an announceme­nt on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada