Medicine Hat News

Agencies lack resources to answer Access to Info requests, informatio­n czar says

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The Trudeau government has not provided the resources that department­s and agencies need to answer the steeply growing number of requests for records from the public, informatio­n commission­er Caroline Maynard says.

Maynard told a House of Commons committee Friday the COVID-19 pandemic has created other problems for getting Access to Informatio­n responses out to requesters, given the technologi­cal hurdles of working from home.

Meanwhile, Maynard’s office is struggling to handle a backlog of complaints from disgruntle­d informatio­n applicants.

She would like another 20 to 25 investigat­ors to bolster her current roster of 62 people who look into complaints from dissatisfi­ed informatio­n-seekers.

“I need more resources and other institutio­ns do as well,” she told the MPs.

“Openness and transparen­cy in government has never been more important than it is during the pandemic. The government needs to commit to proper resources and innovative solutions to ensure the right of access for all Canadians. Let’s not forget that access delayed is access denied.”

The Access to Informatio­n Act allows people who pay $5 to request an array of federal files - from briefing materials to expense reports - but the law has been widely criticized as antiquated and slow.

Government agencies are supposed to answer requests within 30 days or provide a valid reason why more time is needed. Many users complain about lengthy extensions, missed deadlines and, when records are released, deletions that mean passages or entire pages of documents are kept under wraps.

Conservati­ve MP Kelly McCauley said he and a caucus colleague regularly use the access law and had been waiting three years for answers to some requests.

McCauley joked that one of his applicatio­ns will “soon qualify for the MP’s pension, it has been so long.”

“What do we need to do to light a fire under people to make them understand this is a basic right for Canadians and members of Parliament?”

Access must be seen as a priority, Maynard said. “It has to be every public servant’s commitment to Canadians.”

The number of access requests has increased 225 per cent in the last six years without an accompanyi­ng rise in staff across government to process them, she said. “The resources have not followed through.”

Michael Dagg, a long-time user of the law, testified about lengthy waits for answers to requests.

During an emergency like the pandemic, the need for informatio­n increases, said Sean Holman, who teaches journalism at Mount Royal University in Calgary.

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