Toronto Star

Ontario says tribunals are not courts

The Star is taking the province to court over access to records

- BRENDAN KENNEDY STAFF REPORTER

Ontario’s quasi-judicial tribunals are not courts and should not be subject to the same principles of openness when it comes to their records, the province argued in a court filing Thursday.

Responding to a constituti­onal challenge from the Toronto Star that calls on Ontario’s various administra­tive tribunals — such as the Landlord and Tenant Board, and the Ontario Municipal Board, among others — to disclose hearing records as readily as courts do, the province’s lawyers said that while openness and transparen­cy are “important features” of tribu- nals and the hearings themselves are typically open to the public, the right to access documents related to those hearings must be balanced against privacy concerns.

“(The Star) ignores the critical legal, institutio­nal and practical difference­s between courts and tribunals that make the open courts principle an inappropri­ate foundation for access to tribunal files,” the province’s factum reads.

The Star launched its legal challenge against the province last year in an effort to gain faster and fuller access to documents the paper argues are a matter of public interest. While reporters can attend and report on what happens at the tribunals’ public hearings, obtaining documents related to those hearings after they occur is inconsiste­nt, onerous and of- ten significan­tly delayed, the Star has argued.

“Tribunals appear, on the surface, no different than traditiona­l courts — with adjudicato­rs, hearing rooms, dockets and generally open hearings — but they depart dramatical­ly from open court rules when it comes to providing records,” the Star wrote in an editor’s note published last year.

Unlike courts, some of Ontario’s tribunals require members of the public, including the media, to file formal freedom of informatio­n requests in order to access to documents related to a case. That process, the Star argues, can take months or years and the documents are often heavily redacted. Some tribunals do not even make their dockets or schedules public, which makes it almost impossible for reporters to cover cases.

The province argues this is necessary to address “legitimate” privacy concerns for the people involved in the hearings, who often represent themselves. It describes freedom of informatio­n requests as a “relatively minor administra­tive burden” that doesn’t “substantia­lly impede” reporters’ abilities to cover tribunals.

The Star, meanwhile, is arguing that the way freedom of informatio­n legislatio­n restricts access to tribunal records amounts to an “unjustifia­ble infringeme­nt” on the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. “Newsgather­ing requires timeliness,” the paper’s factum reads. “Delay in public access has a deleteriou­s effect on the ability of the media to report, and as a result, on the public’s right to be informed.”

Freedom of informatio­n legislatio­n was intended to apply to government­s and its agencies, not judicial bodies, the Star argues. The function of all the tribunals were once the domain of the courts, it states. Tribunals were created to relieve the burden on an increasing­ly backlogged court system, but the fundamenta­l principle of openness should still apply.

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