The Peterborough Examiner

Info watchdog ‘disappoint­ed’

Suzanne Legault unhappy with Liberal access-to-info bill

- JIM BRONSKILL THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — The federal informatio­n watchdog says she is “generally very disappoint­ed” with a Liberal bill that would revise the law intended to give Canadians access to federal files.

Informatio­n commission­er Suzanne Legault said Tuesday she will present a special report to Parliament this week outlining her concerns about planned changes to the Access to Informatio­n Act.

It is the latest indication the bill, which has been criticized by opposition MPs and leading transparen­cy advocates, will receive a rough reception when it arrives at a House of Commons committee.

The access act, which took effect in 1983, allows people who pay $5 to request everything from correspond­ence and studies to expense reports and meeting minutes.

Agencies must answer requests within 30 days or provide a good reason why more time is necessary.

Many Canadians complain about lengthy delays in processing requests and blacked-out passages in the records that are eventually released.

Government department­s can black out requested records on grounds related to national security, legal privilege, policy advice, commercial secrets, federal-provincial relations and other areas. Records deemed to be federal cabinet secrets are completely offlimits for 20 years.

In addition, dozens of agencies with federal ties fall outside the access act.

Treasury Board President Scott Brison acknowledg­es the need for modernizat­ion, and he describes the government bill introduced in June as the first substantia­l revision of the act.

The bill would give the informatio­n commission­er authority to order the release of records.

The legislatio­n also proposes extending the law — 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. Instead, they would be legally bound to regularly release certain types of records, such as hospitalit­y and travel expenses and contract informatio­n.

Conservati­ve and New Democrat MPs have criticized the Liberals for backpedall­ing on a campaign promise to fully apply the access law to ministeria­l offices. They also say the bill does nothing to narrow the exemptions in the law that allow federal agencies to keep informatio­n under lock and key.

Others have raised concerns about a provision that would allow an agency to refuse to process a request unless the applicant states the type of record being sought, the subject matter and the time frame in which the documents were created.

Legault has long advocated strengthen­ing the access law, and made it clear at a conference Tuesday the legislatio­n doesn’t live up to her expectatio­ns. “Having carefully reviewed the bill, I am generally very disappoint­ed with its content.”

She did not elaborate, but a report she tabled in March 2015 — containing 85 recommenda­tions to reform the law — provide a strong sense of her concerns. Some of her suggestion­s that did not become part of Brison’s bill:

• Fill gaps in the law’s coverage by extending it to agencies including ministers’ offices and institutio­ns that support Parliament and the courts;

• Establish a legal duty to document government decisions;

• Limit time extensions beyond the initial 30 days to 60 additional days, unless the informatio­n commission­er approves more time to answer a request;

• Make current-day cabinet records subject to the law;

• Loosen various restrictio­ns that allow agencies to withhold informatio­n.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Informatio­n commission­er Suzanne Legault said Tuesday she will present a special report to Parliament this week outlining her concerns about planned changes to the Access to Informatio­n Act.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Informatio­n commission­er Suzanne Legault said Tuesday she will present a special report to Parliament this week outlining her concerns about planned changes to the Access to Informatio­n Act.

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