Edmonton Journal

Canada a ‘laggard’ on access to informatio­n

Once a world leader, country now 55th out of 100 under 30-year-old law

- MIKE DE SOUZA

OTTAWA – After releasing a report showing some mixed reviews on delays in federal government response to requests for public records, Parliament’s informatio­n watchdog, Suzanne Legault, said it’s time to correct the flaws in Canada’s access to informatio­n legislatio­n.

The Access to Informatio­n Act, adopted in 1982, requires federal government department­s, agencies and Crown corporatio­ns to release public records to anyone who makes a request and pays a $5 fee.

But Legault, the federal informatio­n commission­er, said the legislatio­n should no longer have exclusions that prevent her office from reviewing all files when officials decide to withhold informatio­n in categories such as federal cabinet secrets, nuclear safety issues, as well as profession­al informatio­n related to CBC journalism or programmin­g activities.

“Exclusions are, in my view, arcane in matters of access to informatio­n if one looks at internatio­nal standards,” Legault said at a news conference on Thursday.

“I think that when we first enacted an Access to Informatio­n Act in 1982, we were considered to be leaders around the world, and now we are considered to be laggards and I don’t think that any Canadian should be happy with this situation.”

Legault has not proposed to remove all exemptions that allow government department­s and agencies to withhold some informatio­n in records.

In these cases, her office would still have the ability to review whether the exemptions were applied appropriat­ely.

The exemptions now allow government officials to withhold informatio­n in a range of categories such as matters under consultati­on within government, personal records, or issues regarding national security.

She noted that a recent evaluation of freedom of informatio­n legislatio­n around the world ranked Canada 55th out of about 100 countries.

Her latest report, winding up a series that examined delays in the response to access requests, praised the CBC, awarding it with an “A” for dramatical­ly improving its response times. But it criticized Canada Post, giving it an “F” for failing to correct a system that is slow in its responses.

Both institutio­ns were added to the Access to Informatio­n Act in 2007.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? “I don’t think any Canadian should be happy” with Canada’s record on access to informatio­n, says federal watchdog Suzanne Legault.
ADRIAN WYLD/ THE CANADIAN PRESS “I don’t think any Canadian should be happy” with Canada’s record on access to informatio­n, says federal watchdog Suzanne Legault.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada