Toronto Star

News editors back anonymous sources bill

Senator’s private member’s bill would help protect identities of journalist­s’ confidenti­al whistleblo­wers from police prying

- ALEX BALLINGALL AND BRUCE CAMPION-SMITH OTTAWA BUREAU

“Canada is one of a few . . . democracie­s without some form of journalist shield law. ” MICHAEL COOKE TORONTO STAR EDITOR

OTTAWA— Editors from some of the country’s largest news organizati­ons are backing a Senate bill that aims to protect confidenti­al sources from unwarrante­d police intrusion.

Speaking before a Senate committee studying the bill, the media executives said the new law would help safeguard the anonymity of whistleblo­wers from official prying and thus protect investigat­ive reporting that aims to expose wrongdoing and corruption in the public interest.

“It’s of particular concern to me that Canada is one of a few . . . Western democracie­s without some form of journalist shield law. It’s a very tiny club and we should not be a member,” said Michael Cooke, editor of the Toronto Star.

“Such revelation­s of public interest . . . would not have been possible without the contributi­on of those anonymous sources who trust journalist­s to protect them,” he said.

The bill, which had its first reading in the Senate last year, seeks to amend two government laws — the Evidence Act and the Criminal Code — to protect journalist­s’ sources from being identified or placed under surveillan­ce by the police.

The bill’s architect, Quebec Sen. Claude Carignan, said sources are “essential” to the work of journalist­s. Without proper protection, institutio­nal wrongdoing such as the sponsorshi­p scandal that embroiled the federal Liberals more than a decade ago could go unexposed, he said.

The changes would stipulate that the identity of sources would be revealed only in rare circumstan­ces, and would involve a hearing before a judge to determine whether the informatio­n could be obtained anywhere else.

Further, any evidence gathered by surveillan­ce of journalist­s’ sources would be sealed. Reporters and their news organizati­ons would be notified and given the right to appeal any move by police to access informatio­n gathered from such investigat­ions, Carignan said.

The concerns around protecting sources have been underscore­d by recent revelation­s that investigat­ors with Montreal’s police force spied on a newspaper columnist to find out which of its members was leaking informatio­n to the media.

The hope is that the bill could put an end to these so-called “fishing expedition­s” for journalist­s’ sources that police want to identify.

“These sources experience immense stress,” said Éric Trottier, associate editor of La Presse. “We think the bill will reassure a lot of people.”

While the police surveillan­ce activities have mainly centred on reporters in Quebec, media executives told the committee that the concerns are felt in newsrooms across the country and has given new urgency to the need for greater protection­s.

Trottier said the disturbing news that his own journalist­s were being shadowed by police laid bare what he called a “new reality” for Canadian journalist­s.

“It is therefore essential that we strike a better balance between police forces and the media. The measures proposed by this bill reset this balance,” Trottier said.

Right now, under common law in most of Canada, as well as in Quebec, the Supreme Court of Canada has held that journalist­ic sources may be protected, but that the protection is to be decided on a case-by-case basis.

David Walmsley, editor-in-chief of the Globe and Mail, said the publicity around the police monitoring of journalist­s has already had a chilling effect on journalist­s’ interactio­ns with sources.

The senators appeared largely in favour of the private member’s bill, though they quizzed Carignan and the news executives about the logistics of its implementa­tion, notably how to define a “journalist.”

Cooke said the definition should draw on the Supreme Court ruling on libel that sets journalism in the public interest as a standard.

“The court will, I think, rightly determine in the end, and it will become common law, what kind of journalism applies to these protection­s,” he said.

As a private member’s bill, it’s far from assured that it will become law. But Carignan is hoping it will win strong support in the Senate and that the Liberal government will move to enact it.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada