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Information commissioner, experts call for better disclosure of government pandemic files

#701 of 1611 articles from the Special Report: Coronavirus in Canada
Information Commissioner of Canada Caroline Maynard appears before the House of Commons government operations committee virtually during a meeting on June 19, 2020. OGGO screenshot

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Canada’s information commissioner wants to see the government make the access-to-information regime an essential service, while a group of experts is asking for better legal protections for whistleblowers who expose pandemic-related wrongdoing.

Caroline Maynard reminded the House of Commons government operations committee Friday that Canadians’ right of access has not been suspended during the pandemic.

The government’s push for public servants to work remotely as a result of COVID-19, however, has introduced a range of new obstacles to transparency, she said. Nevertheless, Canadians deserve to know how the programs and policies that came from the crisis — many with big budgetary implications — are being managed.

“I believe that every department should have their ATIP (access to information and privacy) units be part of their essential services, especially when they’re dealing with information related to a crisis like this,” Maynard said. “It should be either through ATIP, or it should be proactively disclosed.”

Meanwhile, the Canadian COVID-19 Accountability Group of transparency experts wants Ottawa to legally require the proactive disclosure of certain types of federal records within 15 days of them being prepared, such as health and safety inspection reports and government contracts.

Canada’s information commissioner wants to see the government make the access to information regime an essential service, while a group of experts is asking for better legal protections for whistleblowers who expose pandemic-related wrongdoing.

The group also wants to see whistleblowers who “witness pandemic-related wrongdoing” in the public service be afforded better legal protections, including through the creation of federal and provincial COVID-19 ombudspersons.

Feds should 'publicly declare' they'd protect COVID-19 whistleblowers

Sean Holman, an associate professor of journalism at Mount Royal University who is part of the accountability group and appeared at the committee Friday, said “the need for information accelerates” during an emergency because Canadians “want to make the best possible decisions to keep themselves safe” and make sure governments and corporations are doing the same.

“We recognize that such reforms, which should include financial protection for whistleblowers, will take time, and that’s why we’re calling on the government to publicly declare that it will protect anyone who reports public- or private-sector wrongdoing related to the crisis,” Holman said.

Maynard told the committee that while most public servants have been working from home since March — “not always by choice” — many don’t have access to the secure networks or restricted tools that they would normally be using at the office.

“If you’re dealing with highly secret or protected information and you’re working from home, often, our network is not secure enough for them to do that,” Maynard said.

As well, she said, she has seen the government use COVID-19 as a reason not to respond to some of her office’s investigations into complaints of federal institutions’ handling of access-to-information requests, or as a reason for a delayed response.

The commissioner also said some access-to-information offices in government have suspended operations entirely, while others are still in a transition phase, limiting their effectiveness.

Patrick Weiler, the Liberal MP for West Vancouver-Sunshine Coast-Sea to Sky Country, asked Holman what factors made it difficult for teleworking employees to complete access-to-information requests. Holman said the government needs better record-keeping practices, and also echoed Maynard’s assessment.

“The very fact that employees are working from home, and perhaps do not have ready access to some records or documents — or perhaps networks that they’re accessing those records or documents through are not secure — all impact the ability of public employees to actually fulfil their obligations under the Access to Information Act,” Holman said.

Weiler also asked how the government should amend the Public Servants Disclosure Protection Act. Holman suggested broadening the definition of what constitutes a reportable wrongdoing, as well as expanding the definition of whistleblower.

Duclos launches access-to-information review

The committee also heard from Anti-Corruption Accountability Canada president Allan Cutler and access-to-information consultant Michael Dagg.

Their comments to the committee came as Treasury Board President Jean-Yves Duclos announced he would ask all Canadians to provide input on the federal access-to-information regime.

Duclos said in a statement that the pandemic “has highlighted the importance of open, accessible and trustworthy information from governments.”

The public’s participation process, however, has not yet been defined, according to the government’s website. More details about how and when to participate “will be available in the coming weeks,” it said.

Carl Meyer / Local Journalism Initiative / Canada’s National Observer

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