Ottawa Citizen

Liberals ‘misled public’ on gas emails

Privacy chief blasts ‘unpreceden­ted’ actions

- KEITH LESLIE

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne’s government “misled the public” about the ability to recover deleted emails related to the $585-million cancellati­ons of two gas plants, Ontario’s privacy watchdog said Tuesday.

“The provision of inaccurate and incomplete informatio­n in my initial investigat­ion is unpreceden­ted during my (16 years) as commission­er,” Informatio­n and Privacy Commission­er Ann Cavoukian wrote in a followup to a report on the deleted emails she released two months ago.

“I am left with the inescapabl­e conclusion that they did not take my investigat­ion very seriously.”

Cavoukian issued a scathing report in June that found Liberals in former premier Dalton McGuinty’s office broke the law by deleting all their emails on the cancelled gas plants in Oakville and Mississaug­a.

The privacy watchdog was told at the time that the deleted emails could not be recovered, but it turned out there were ways to get the data back, and the Ministry of Government Services has since unearthed another 39,000 gas plant documents.

“I remain saddened at the failure of (ministry) staff to dedicate adequate resources to provide accurate and complete informatio­n to my office,” wrote Cavoukian in her addendum released Tuesday.

“As a direct consequenc­es of the incomplete response, the public has been misled ... about the ability of staff to retrieve potentiall­y relevant informatio­n.”

Opposition members of the justice committee, which is holding public hearings into the cancellati­on of the gas plants, said they were not surprised the privacy commission­er had trouble getting the documents she requested.

“What we had in place under Dalton McGuinty has continued under Kathleen Wynne, that getting at the heart of this scandal is not something that’s a government priority,” said NDP energy critic Peter Tabuns.

“Obscuring it seems to be the government priority, and the informatio­n and privacy commission­er was just another victim of that approach.”

The Progressiv­e Conservati­ves said Cavoukian ran into the same obstructio­nist tactics that the committee has faced as it pushes for correspond­ence on the decisions to cancel the gas plants and Liberal attempts to delay release of related documents.

“The committee had either been led around by the nose or allowed to let our wheels spin, and I think they treated the privacy commission­er’s request in exactly the same way,” said PC energy critic Vic Fedeli.

Earlier Tuesday, William Bromm, legal adviser to the powerful Cabinet Secretaria­t, testified Wynne had been one of four cabinet ministers who signed an arbitratio­n agreement with TransCanad­a Enterprise­s over the cancellati­on of the Oakville gas plant that still allowed the huge energy company to sue the government.

“This particular package was a ‘walk around,’” said Bromm. “It was outside of the normal cabinet process, so four ministers signed as the quorum of cabinet and two weeks after this the item would be reported into cabinet as an informatio­n item.”

David Phillips, a former director in McGuinty’s office, rejected opposition suggestion­s that there had been a conspiracy among senior Liberals to delay the release of the gas plant documents to the committee. “I never received any order to obstruct anything,” he said.

McGuinty prorogued the legislatur­e and resigned as premier last October, just hours before the committee hearings into the contempt motion and the cancellati­on of the gas plants were to begin.

 ?? PETER J. THOMPSON/POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Informatio­n and Privacy Commission­er Ann Cavoukian says government ‘did not take my investigat­ion seriously.’
PETER J. THOMPSON/POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Informatio­n and Privacy Commission­er Ann Cavoukian says government ‘did not take my investigat­ion seriously.’

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