Medicine Hat News

Poilievre pledges to fix broken access-toinformat­ion system, release more faster

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR

Conservati­ve Leader Pierre Poilievre is pledging to fix the federal access-to-informatio­n system to speed up response times and release more informatio­n.

He made the commitment during a news conference in Vancouver on Thursday, where the Opposition leader announced a new revenue plan for First Nations alongside leaders in the region.

Successive reviews have concluded the access system is broken and plagued by delays, with the Informatio­n Commission­er of Canada voicing concerns that it is outdated and there is a lack of urgency to fix it.

Canadians can use access law to request an array of government documents for a $5 processing fee. The legislatio­n itself hasn’t been updated in decades.

It’s a striking pivot for a leader who played a prominent role in a Conservati­ve government under Stephen Harper that failed to make good on promises to make more records available through the law.

Now Poilievre is saying that a future Conservati­ve government would fix the system and make sure informatio­n gets in people’s hands faster.

“We will speed up response times,” he said. “We will release more informatio­n.”

“We will give the commission­er more power to override the gatekeeper­s within the government and favour transparen­cy over secrecy.”

Poilievre also said he believes the House of Commons should release more informatio­n automatica­lly, describing the federal access-to-informatio­n system as snarled with bureaucrac­y.

“(What) we need to do is more proactive release of the expenses and the decisions of the parliament­ary precinct, so you have it by default.”

When he was first elected, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised to inject more transparen­cy into the regime as he touted openness as one of the brands of his new government.

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