The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

ANTI-SECRECY WATCHDOGS STAY SHTUM

- By Craig McDonald cmcdonald@sundaypost.com

Freedom of informatio­n chief: We can’t tell you how many staff we gag

Scotland’s freedom of informatio­n watchdog has refused to say whether it has gagged any of its own staff.

Daren Fitzhenry, the Scottish Informatio­n Commission­er (SIC), who promotes and enforces freedom of informatio­n laws, refused to confirm or deny if any workers had been asked to sign controvers­ial non-disclosure agreements.

His response to a request under freedom of informatio­n laws states it would not “be appropriat­e to confirm whether the informatio­n exists or is held by the Commission­er”.

He leads a team of 25 people but the organisati­on’s response cites the “very small” size of the organisati­on as the reason for the refusal.

Conservati­ve MSP Donald Cameron said: “The Informatio­n Commission­er is meant to lead by example on these matters.

“It can hardly hold other public bodies to account if it is refusing to disclose informatio­n itself. There’s no reason this should not be in the public domain, and this taxpayer-funded agency should reconsider.”

The SIC said: “The very small size of our organisati­on was relevant to the considerat­ion of identifiab­ility, whether or not the informatio­n existed and was held.

“We have received a request for review of the response we issued, which we are currently looking at.”

FOI requests were sent to a number of public bodies asking for details on non-disclosure agreements which have been accused of being used to gag departing staff and block them speaking out about problems within organisati­ons in return for a cash settlement.

Meanwhile, the Scottish Court Service replied it has been involved in six settlement agreements involving “current or former individual­s which contain standard confidenti­ality clauses”.

It said the total settlement figure for all six agreements was £157,113.

They added: “All six were concluded between the period July 2013 and December 2015.”

Police watchdog PIRC stated: “According to our current records there have been no NDAs since PIRC began in 2013.”

But it added it “regularly disposes of informatio­n” and so “although there may have been NDAs issued we do no hold informatio­n to confirm this”.

Carole Ewart, convener of the Campaign for Freedom of Informatio­n in Scotland, said that posed more questions than it answered, adding: “PIRC’s response requires to be clarified.”

The Crown Office states it does not “as an organisati­on apply non-disclosure agreements as part of its engagement with staff or suppliers”.

PIRC and the SCS declined to add to informatio­n supplied in the FOI responses.

Meanwhile, a new law will be announced today to tackle the misuse of non-disclosure agreements in the workplace.

The legislatio­n is intended to stop confidenti­ality clauses being used to cover up sexual harassment, racial discrimina­tion and assault.

The change will outlaw NDAs being used to prevent individual­s disclosing informatio­n to the police or other profession­s such as doctors, lawyers or social workers.

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