Calgary Herald

Ganley calls shredding of visitor logs a one-off

- EMMA GRANEY egraney@postmedia.com twitter.com/EmmaLGrane­y

EDMONTON Alberta legislatur­e visitor logs shredded in the months following the 2015 election have the Opposition demanding an investigat­ion by the privacy commission­er.

Late last year, the Wildrose Party wanted to know who the NDP government had met with since it swept to power, so it filed a freedom of informatio­n request for visitor logs tracking who signs into the building for official meetings.

What came back were thousands of pages of blacked-out names, redacted because of apparent privacy concerns. But there were four months of documents missing.

That kicked off an independen­t investigat­ion, prepared for the justice department, which concluded the documents had probably been shredded.

Justice Minister Kathleen Ganley said Wednesday it seems the missing documents were due to what she labelled “inappropri­ate” actions of a single person employed with the legislatur­e’s sheriff’s office at the time.

The problem wasn’t someone going rogue, she said, because “you can’t really go rogue off a direction that doesn’t exist.”

“The problem is there was unclear or inconsiste­nt direction over ... what should happen to visitor logs,” she said.

The response from her ministry was to craft and implement such a policy — that log books be retained for two years.

Those documents can be accessed if the person visiting is a public official, but the names of other individual­s are redacted due to privacy concerns.

“There will usually be a lot of people that potentiall­y visit ministers’ offices that don’t necessaril­y want their names out there,” she said.

Ganley didn’t know what the policy was under the former Progressiv­e Conservati­ve administra­tion, and PC caucus leader Ric McIver wasn’t sure, either.

Either way, Wildrose democracy and accountabi­lity critic Nathan Cooper said shredding documents is a clear violation of the transparen­cy the NDP pledged to Albertans.

Cooper said the destructio­n of records means nobody will ever know who met with the NDP in its first months of power.

He said the issue speaks to a larger trend of lack of transparen­cy from the NDP, as outlined by the privacy commission­er in recent reports.

Ganley countered it was a one-off, which the government has taken steps to remedy.

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