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Groupe d'étude de
l'accès à l'information
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Observations reçues par le Groupe d'étude
Retour aux objectifs de la liberté de l'information
RÉSUMÉ DE LA PRÉSENTATION (préparé
par Ad IDEM)
Les Canadiens ont droit à un accès opportun à
l'information produite par leur gouvernement à leurs frais.
Pour une variété de raisons structurelles et pratiques,
le système ne facilite pas cet accès opportun. Ad
IDEM - Advocates in Defence of Expression in the Media, un organisme
d'avocats canadiens en médias, suggère des façons
de retourner aux objectifs initiaux de la Loi dans la pratique.
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Soumission complète
Auteur : Ad IDEM - Advocates in Defence of Expression in
the Media
Envoyé : le 1er juin 2001
(Soumis en anglais seulement.)
Ad IDEM is an organization of lawyers who act for
almost all major media organizations across Canada. It is dedicated
to the protection and enhancement of free expression in Canada and abroad.
Its aim is to achieve this objective through public and professional
education, advocacy and law reform initiatives, and cooperation with
related professional organizations.
We welcome this opportunity to participate in a review
of the principles underlying the Freedom of Information Act, and look
forward to the opportunity to provide input into any draft legislation.
For now, our suggestions will be general, in keeping with the nature
of the exercise.
The principal concern we have is that the Act does not
achieve its original promise. Canadians are entitled to timely access
to information generated by their government at their expense. For a
variety of structural and practical reasons, the system does not facilitate
this timely access. In fact, it inhibits it. This appears to be especially
so in the case of information which the media has already identified
through its sources as existing, interesting, and important to public
debate.
- We note to begin that the incentives in the Act are the opposite
of the Act's goals. A civil servant can be held accountable for improperly
releasing information, but not for delaying or inhibiting its release.
The resulting delay and frustration is inevitable. A civil servant
should be encouraged to release information, unless there is a real
risk of injury to an important interest. If a civil servant in good
faith releases information that should have, in hindsight, been withheld,
that person should be protected from liability. Deliberately misleading
a person seeking access, or obstructing a requester's access should
be an offence. Consideration should be given to a tax on departments
that do not release information on time in accordance with the Act,
and that tax should be payable directly to requesters.
- There should not be categories of information that are per se exempt
from access. There should be a public interest override on all exemptions.
There should be greater use of an injury test for determining the
release of information.
- The government should consider mandatory or routine contractual
provisions indicating that contracts will be open to public access.
This will prevent later delays in access.
- "Personal information" as a concept should be reviewed,
with a view to limiting the information exempted. There is a cost
to living in a society. That includes the fact that others are entitled
to know something about you. The mere fact that a name is associated
with data should not automatically bring access requests to a halt.
The nature of the data must be taken into account, and whole categories
of information ought not to raise red flags. Effort should be expended
in determining what kind of personal data is problematic, with the
understanding that the rest can be released.
- The book setting out federal government data banks should be available
online, and forms should also be available online to facilitate access
requests.
- There should be no fees for access, and reproduction costs should
be minimized. Government data shows that the government spends approximately
$20 million and recovers only $200,000 from fees. This demonstrates
that the fees are simply a disincentive for citizens to obtain access,
which is contrary to the philosophy of the Act. If there is concern
that free access would inundate government departments with requests,
this could be phased in so that patterns of requests could be discerned
and accommodated more efficiently. If many applications come in for
a particular kind of information, consideration could be given to
standardizing responses, or making them electronic. Existing experience
with the Act should make it evident what types of information are
commonly requested and need to be accommodated. The cost of administering
a fee system that generates so little revenue is probably itself unjustifiable.
Those resources would be better aimed at providing requested access.
- Crown copyright should be reviewed and possibly removed, to eliminate
any impediments to redistribution of information created by the Crown
and obtained through access to information. Encouraging this redistribution
would require the government to publish its information on a timely
and cost efficient basis, due to the potential for competition. Wider
publication of government information would facilitate general access.
- The rulings of the Information Commissioner should be binding on
the government, thereby removing another level of delay in access
to information.
- The separation of the Information Commissioner and Privacy Commissioner
should remain. It is important that current sentiment in favour of
privacy, for example, does not obstruct advocacy within government
for access to information.
- There should be regular reviews of the Act. Consultation should
bring different groups together to facilitate resolution of common
concerns. Separate consultations can lead to difficulties in reconciling
some positions which may appear to be in conflict, when they are not.
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Observations reçues par
le Groupe d'étude
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