Times Colonist

B.C. Liberals’ call for probe of alleged NDP list-sharing rejected

- DIRK MEISSNER

British Columbia’s privacy watchdog has rejected a B.C. Liberal Party request to investigat­e allegation­s that the NDP breached personal informatio­n protection laws for sharing voter-supporter lists with politicall­y friendly groups.

Drew McArthur said in a statement Monday that the Liberal complaint does not meet the threshold for an investigat­ion by his office.

The New Democrats called the complaint an attempt to divert attention from serious issues facing the Liberals on the eve of the election campaign. B.C.’s May 9 election campaign officially starts today.

“[Premier] Christy Clark is the diva of distractio­n,” said Glen Sanford, the NDP’s deputy director. “I feel like this was a deliberate attempt to distract from the problems Christy Clark is facing.”

He said Clark’s Liberals are looking to turn attention away from last week’s report by Ombudsman Jay Chalke into the government’s flawed handling of an investigat­ion that resulted in eight health workers being wrongly fired and one of the workers taking his own life.

Sanford said the Liberals are also reeling over the recent appointmen­t of a special prosecutor to work with the RCMP in an Election Act investigat­ion that alleges illegal donations to political parties. The investigat­ion involves both the Liberals and NDP.

A Liberal official said the party was reviewing McArthur’s response, but did not comment further.

B.C. Liberal Party president Sharon White had requested the investigat­ion in a letter to McArthur on Friday.

McArthur explained that the Personal Informatio­n Protection Act applies to private organizati­ons in B.C., including political parties, and there are two circumstan­ces that can result in an investigat­ion.

“The first is most common: we investigat­e complaints from individual­s whose personal informatio­n has been directly affected,” said McArthur’s statement.

But since there is no individual complaint, an investigat­ion cannot proceed on those grounds, he said.

“The second option is for the commission­er to initiate an investigat­ion into a potential contravent­ion of [the act] if he has ‘reasonable grounds to believe that an organizati­on is not complying.’ We have reviewed the documents submitted by the B.C. Liberal Party and have determined that the informatio­n provided does not meet the threshold for a commission­er-initiated investigat­ion.”

The Liberals alleged the NDP had agreements to share its supporter list with Strategic Communicat­ions, the municipal political parties Vision Vancouver, the Coalition of Progressiv­e Electors and the Surrey Civic Coalition, as well as NDP officials in Saanich.

The complaint included documents dated Oct. 5, 2005, suggesting agreements between the NDP and Vision Vancouver, COPE and Surrey Civic Coalition.

The complaint letter also alleged breaches as recent as November 2014 when the Liberals said the list was used during the municipal election in Saanich.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada