Toronto Star

Privacy sacrifice unnecessar­y, documents show

Changes in federal laws, now approved, exceed what security agencies asked for

- JIM BRONSKILL THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA— The Conservati­ve government alarmed privacy advocates by overhaulin­g the law to give Canada’s spy agency easier access to federal data, even though the spies themselves said greater informatio­n-sharing could be done under existing laws, newly released documents show.

In a presentati­on to federal deputy ministers last year, the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service said “significan­t improvemen­ts” to the sharing of national-security informatio­n were possible within the “existing legislativ­e framework.”

The Canadian Press obtained a heavily censored copy of the secret February 2014 presentati­on and a related memo to CSIS director Michel Coulombe under the Access to Informatio­n Act.

Earlier this year, the government introduced an omnibus security bill that included the Security of Canada Informatio­n Sharing Act, intended to remove legal barriers that prevented or delayed the exchange of relevant files.

The legislatio­n, which recently received royal assent, permits the sharing of informatio­n about activity that undermines the security of Canada, something law professors Craig Forcese and Kent Roach called “a new and astonishin­gly broad concept.” Privacy Commission­er Daniel Therrien denounced the scope as “clearly excessive,” saying it could make available all federally held informatio­n about someone of interest to as many as 17 government department­s and agencies with responsibi­lities for national security.

In the 2014 memo to Coulombe, CSIS assistant director Tom Venner stressed the importance of timely and reliable informatio­n exchanges, and he lamented the patchwork of existing authoritie­s that hindered sharing.

“The absence of a clear authority to share informatio­n for national security purposes amplifies this challenge,” he wrote in preparing Coulombe for the meeting with deputies. “Generally, informatio­n sharing with (other government department­s) is carried out on a case-by-case and/or ad-hoc basis, which is antiquated and inefficien­t.”

However, he added that laws and arrangemen­ts “often allow for the sharing of informatio­n for national security purposes,” and that further strides could be made with “appropriat­e direction and framework in place.”

Venner cited a number of recently successful pilot projects and outlined “future opportunit­ies” for sharing — all of them deleted from the memo.

CSIS clearly saw “room for worka- rounds” in the existing law “with a little bit more co-ordination within government,” Forcese said in an interview.

The spy agency’s memo seems “to belie the whole justificat­ion for the controvers­ial informatio­n-sharing regime” in the government’s subsequent anti-terrorism bill, he said.

The office of Public Safety Minister Steven Blaney had no immediate comment on the documents.

Redactions make it difficult to fully understand the records, said Keith Stewart, an energy campaigner with Greenpeace Canada.

But it appears that the government gave CSIS even more than it was asking for when the omnibus security bill greatly expanded the range of informatio­n that could be shared, he said.

“This reinforces the arguments of those who say that this bill is really a form of crass electionee­ring that sacrifices our rights and freedoms without making us any safer.”

The government still hasn’t made a case for dismantlin­g barriers to informatio­n-sharing, said Carmen Cheung, senior counsel at the B.C. Civil Liberties Associatio­n.

“Where is the necessity for these laws?” she asked. “Why do we need them?”

 ?? DAVE CHAN ?? CSIS HQ in Ottawa. A 2014 CSIS memo sees flexibilit­y in old security laws.
DAVE CHAN CSIS HQ in Ottawa. A 2014 CSIS memo sees flexibilit­y in old security laws.

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