Jamaica Gleaner

TAJ fights transparen­cy

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THE PURPORTED invocation of the Data Protection Act (DPA) by Tax Administra­tion Jamaica (TAJ) to deny the disclosure of informatio­n on how it used taxpayers’ money is a worrisome developmen­t that, if allowed to stand, poses a threat to transparen­cy in government.

In the circumstan­ce, rather than standing behind obfuscatio­n, TAJ must be explicit about what sections of the DPA it interprets as providing it with the claimed cover against openness.

At the same time, Celia Barclay, the informatio­n commission­er, who has legal oversight for the management of informatio­n under the DPA, must do two things:

• publicly provide her view on the TAJ’s interpreta­tion of its obligation­s under the DPA;

• and cause to be distribute­d to all government ministries, department­s and agencies (MDAs), guidelines of their responsibi­lities under the law, making it clear that is not to be a shield against the public’s legitimate right to access government informatio­n.

Further, the i nformation minister, Robert Morgan, must assure Jamaicans that it is not the Government’s intention to use the DPA to neuter, or frustrate people’s right to demand informatio­n – often a fraught undertakin­g – from MDAs.

Recently, The Gleaner, following on the auditor general’s (AuG) report that TAJ, the government’s primary tax collector, had over three years spent more than J$400 million leasing two buildings it has not yet occupied, asked the agency for the names of the properties’ lessors.

TAJ declined. It could not provide the informatio­n, TAJ said, because of “prohibitio­ns to general disclosure pursuant to the provisions of the Data Protection Act”.

Asked subsequent­ly to clarify its stance, TAJ was, deliberate­ly in our view, obfuscated. It could not “comment further at this time”.

Significan­tly, Norman Dunn, member of parliament (MP) for South St Mary, and a junior minister i n Prime Minister Andrew Holness’ administra­tion, self-identified as the owner of one of the properties.

UNAUTHORIS­ED DISCLOSURE

Passed in 2020, and coming into force last December, the Data Protection Act is aimed at protecting the personal informatio­n Jamaicans share with myriad institutio­ns in the private and public sectors. Or, as it is put in Section 2 (3) (b) of the act, to “provide for transparen­t oversight thereof, that will enable the public and private sectors to strengthen the protection of personal data”.

In other words, holders of, say, an individual’s health records, are obligated to manage that informatio­n with due care and respect for the person’s privacy. Or, a company that gathers personal informatio­n on its clients cannot – without those people’s consent – seek to monetise that data by selling it to a third party.

It is not this newspaper’s reading of the law that, at least in spirit (presuming contrary interpreta­tions can be brought to its letter), it was intended to prevent the widened access to informatio­n on the decisions and actions of the government, so as to bring it in conflict with the Access to Informatio­n (ATI) Act.

But even if it is assumed that Dr Dunn, the MP and minister, and the other lessor, had a presumed right to privacy, or of TAJ’s non-disclosure of their names on the grounds that disclosure would, presumably, cause them unwarrante­d ‘substantia­l damage or distress’, there is no indication that TAJ sought their views on the matter. It does not appear, as is permitted by the law, that they were given an opportunit­y to waive that right.

Further, while the unauthoris­ed disclosure of personal data is a criminal offence, informatio­n can be released without a person’s specific consent if, according to Section 30 (8) (iii) of the DPA, it is “justifiabl­e in the public interest”.

Already, there are usually significan­t delays – seemingly aimed at frustratin­g and demoralisi­ng users of the law – responding to requests for informatio­n under the ATI Act.

Indeed, it is rare for MDAs to respond, as the law requires, within 30 days of a request. And if they do, it is often to attempt to slither out of acceding to the request by imposing bureaucrac­y on the formatting of questions, or attempting to create lexical ambiguitie­s or similar loopholes.

Nigel Clarke, the finance minister, under whose portfolio TAJ resides, often laments Jamaica’s low trust environmen­t, which causes the erection of bureaucrat­ic structures (as ramparts against corruption) that limits the speed and dexterity with which the Government can pursue its obligation­s.

It is partially in response to this perceived problem that he is now undertakin­g a reform of the Government’s procuremen­t system to make it easier for public officials to acquire and pay for goods and services. His good intention is, however, undermined with actions such as TAJ’s.

The opinions on this page, except for The Editorial, do not necessaril­y reflect the opinions of The Gleaner.

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