The Standard (St. Catharines)

Info watchdog ‘disappoint­ed’

Suzanne Legault unhappy with Liberal access-to-info bill

- JIM BRONSKILL

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 off-limits 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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