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Democracy Watch and Open Government Coalition call on federal Liberals to make many key open government changes to Bill C-58

Given past consultations, committee reports and private member bills all calling for the same key changes, federal parties can and should make the changes now

Democracy Watch co-founder applied to be Information Commissioner to test federal Cabinet appointment system – despite almost 30 years’ experience in open government, he has still not been contacted by headhunting firm Liberals hired (and likely other well-qualified people have also not been contacted)

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Monday, October 23, 2017

OTTAWA – Today, testifying before the House of Commons Access, Privacy and Ethics Committee, Democracy Watch and the Open Government Coalition it coordinates called on the MPs on the Committee to make many key changes to Bill C-58 to strengthen the federal Access to Information Act and open government system (SEE the changes listed further below). The Liberals have a majority on the Committee so if all the changes are not made it will clearly be their fault.

The Trudeau Liberals promised several changes not included in Bill C-58 in the Open Government section of their 2015 election platform, and in the specific Access to Information section of the platform. Bill C-58 also includes changes that were not promised in the Liberals’ platform, changes that are big steps backwards in access rights. The Liberals have also failed to keep their international Open Government Partnership commitments, weak as those commitments were. Bill C-58 also ignores many of the recommendations made in the unanimous June 2016 report of the House of Commons Access, Privacy and Ethics Committee.

Tens of thousands of voters have sent messages through Democracy Watch’s Open Government Campaign page calling on federal parties to make these key changes. Democracy Watch also signed the open letter issued recently by a global coalition of organizations and individuals calling for similar changes.

“To be credible, the Liberals on the House committee must agree to key open government changes to Bill C-58 that many groups, and past committees and reports, have called for over the past 15 years,” said Duff Conacher, Co-founder of Democracy Watch and Part-time Professor of law and politics at the University of Ottawa. “Given that the federal Access to Information Act and open government system have been reviewed several times in the past 15 years, and that there is a consensus on key changes that must be made, there is no justifiable reason for any further delay in making the changes.”

“If these key changes are finally made, the current federal ‘Guide to Keeping Secrets Act’ will finally become a real access to information act,” said Conacher.

The public was consulted on changes to the Act and system in 2000, and again in 2009 when a House Committee issued a unanimous report calling for changes, and again in 2011 and in 2013 (twice) through the international Open Government Partnership (OGP) process. The Information Commissioner issued a report in late March 2015 recommending many key changes. And, then, as mentioned above, the Liberals have consulted on their weak international Open Government Partnership 2016-2018 plan. Every consultation has resulted in a broad, strong call from the public and citizen groups to make the key changes listed below.

In addition to the changes the Liberals promised in their 2015, election campaign, the Conservatives promised several key changes in their 2006 election platform and federal Conservative Treasury Board minister Tony Clement agreed in 2014 that the Access to Information Act needs to be changed (as did Rob Nicholson in 2009). Also, the NDP and Liberals both introduced private member bills aimed at changing the Act when the Conservatives were in power.

Democracy Watch’s Co-founder Conacher also disclosed that, to test the Liberals’ Cabinet appointment process, he applied last July to be the federal Information Commissioner. He first worked in the Ontario Information and Privacy Commissioner’s office in 1988, and has almost 30 years’ experience addressing open government issues, including teaching law and politics university courses on the issues for the past six years, and meets all the requirements for the positon. He has not even been contacted by the headhunting firm the Liberals have hired to conduct the search for nominees.

The Trudeau Liberals have falsely claimed that they have changed the Cabinet appointment process to make it merit-based and independent of Cabinet. In fact, as in past governments, Cabinet ministers still control the whole process so it is still political and partisan (as several of the Liberals appointments have made clear).

Tens of thousands of voters have sent a letter through Democracy Watch’s Stop Bad Government Appointments Campaign or signed a petition on Change.org calling for key changes to make Cabinet appointments actually merit-based.

Conacher believes that, as with the fiasco that resulted from the Liberals’ attempt to appoint Madeleine Meilleur as Official Languages Commissioner, there are very likely many other well-qualified candidates who have applied that are not even being considered because the Trudeau Cabinet doesn’t want them in the position of Information Commissioner.

“Is the Trudeau Liberal Cabinet’s appointment process really merit-based, and are they really looking to appoint a qualified, fair watchdog to enforce the federal open government law, if they don’t even contact an applicant who has spent as much time as anyone in Canada over the past 20 years focused on strong, non-partisan enforcement of the federal and provincial open government laws?” asked Conacher. “The Trudeau Cabinet is also in a conflict of interest that prohibits it from choosing the next Information Commissioner as the Commissioner regularly investigates the departments of Trudeau Cabinet ministers.”

The key changes that Democracy Watch and the Open Government Coalition have been advocating for more than 15 years are as follows:

  1. any type of record created by any entity that receives significant funding from or is connected to the government, or was created by the government and fulfills public interest functions, should be automatically covered by the access to information law and system (as in the United Kingdom);
  2. all exemptions under the access to information law should be discretionary, and limited by a proof of harm test and a public interest override (as in B.C. and Alberta);
  3. the access to information law and system should require every entity covered (as in the United Kingdom, U.S., Australia and New Zealand): to create detailed records for all decisions and actions and factual and policy research; to routinely disclose records that are required to be disclosed; to assign responsibility to individuals for the creation and maintenance of each record, and; to maintain each record so that it remains easily accessible;
  4. the access to information law and system should allow anyone who does factual or policy research for the government to speak to the media and publicly about the topic, findings and conclusions of their research without being required to seek approval first from anyone (including their superior, the Privy Council, the Prime Minister, a Cabinet minister, or any ministerial staff person);
  5. severe penalties should be created for not creating records, for not maintaining records properly, and for unjustifiable delays in responses to requests;
  6. the Information Commissioner should be given explicit powers under access to information: to order the release of a record (as in the United Kingdom, Ontario, B.C. and Quebec); to penalize violators of the law with high fines, jail terms, loss of any severance payment, and partial clawback of any pension payments, and; to require systemic changes in government departments to improve compliance (as in the United Kingdom);
  7. funding to the access to information system and enforcement should be increased to solve backlog problems instead of increasing administrative barriers such as limiting requests in any way, and fees for access should be lower overall and standardized for every entity covered by the access to information law and system; and
  8. Parliament must be required to review the ATI Act every 5 years to ensure that problem areas are corrected, and;
  9. establish a fully independent, non-partisan appointments commission (with members, appointed by non-governmental organizations like the Canadian Judicial Council, serving fixed terms of office) to conduct a merit-based search for nominees for Information Commissioner and all other officers of Parliament, and to present a short list to the Cabinet that the Cabinet has to choose from after at least consulting with all federal party leaders (even better, require that a majority of party leaders approve of the Cabinet’s choice).

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FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT:
Duff Conacher, Co-founder of Democracy Watch
Tel: (613) 241-5179
Cell: 416-546-3443
[email protected]

Democracy Watch’s Open Government Campaign and Stop Bad Government Appointments Campaign