The Peterborough Examiner

Watchdog says PM’s records should be available to public

Trudeau says changes to Access to Informatio­n are being considered

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA — The federal informatio­n watchdog is calling for the offices of the prime minister and other cabinet members to be included under the Access to Informatio­n Act.

Informatio­n commission­er Caroline Maynard says the records these offices hold, with the exception of those of a personal or political nature, should be accessible to the public.

Maynard makes the recommenda­tion in a newly released submission to the Liberal government, which is conducting a full review of the access law, intended to be a key accountabi­lity tool for Canadians.

Bringing ministeria­l offices under the access law would honour a promise Justin Trudeau made in the 2015 election campaign but backed away from after assuming power.

Instead, the Liberals introduced a requiremen­t that ministers publish informatio­n including mandate letters, certain briefing materials, and travel and hospitalit­y expenses.

However, Maynard says, ministers’ offices have other materials relating to their duties that fall outside this obligation.

“It is important to provide the public with access to records that are of interest to them, not just those that are proactivel­y made available to them,” says the submission, posted on her website.

During a news briefing Tuesday, Trudeau defended the government’s initial wave of changes to Access to Informatio­n but he acknowledg­ed the wider re

view now underway.

“We’re going to allow that review process to continue and make recommenda­tions about how best to move forward.”

The access law allows users who pay $5 to ask for files ranging from internal memos and email correspond­ence to briefing notes and research reports.

However, the legislatio­n introduced in1983 has been widely criticized as antiquated and poorly administer­ed. That has prompted many formal complaints to the commission­er about prolonged delays and blacked-out pages in documents.

The Trudeau government announced the review of the access law in June, but has yet to provide any details on how the public might participat­e, citing challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Some openness advocates have expressed skepticism about the review, given the many calls for wide-ranging reform over the years.

The access regime had already entered a critical phase before the COVID-19 pandemic and “could soon be beyond repair” if certain serious problems are not resolved, Maynard says. She points to:

> Inadequate leadership and a lack of clear guidelines on transparen­cy and disclosure expectatio­ns;

> A pressing need to innovate and to allocate enough resources to the access regime;

> A need to properly document decisions and to efficientl­y manage institutio­ns’ informatio­n; and

> The lack of timely declassifi­cation of historical records.

Maynard recommends the access law apply to any agency that provides government services or carries out activities of a government­al nature, including those to whom the government has outsourced the delivery of programs.

Among her other recommenda­tions:

> Set a maximum length of time for consultati­ons that agencies conduct with other department­s when processing access requests;

> Narrow a provision that allows agencies to decline to release material considered to be government advice;

> Make the law applicable to cabinet confidence­s, which would allow the informatio­n commission­er to determine if records indeed contain cabinet secrets;

> Allow agencies to disclose personal informatio­n when it is not an unwarrante­d invasion of privacy; and

> Permit release of a deceased person’s personal informatio­n to their spouse or close relatives on compassion­ate grounds.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised changes to the Access to Informatio­n Act but backed away from them after assuming power.
SEAN KILPATRICK CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised changes to the Access to Informatio­n Act but backed away from them after assuming power.

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