Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I am pleased to have the opportunity to appear before your committee today. I will continue in English because it is the language I would rather speak.
As you may know, the Canadian Newspaper Association is the voice of Canada's daily newspapers, and two key areas concern us: our business environment and threats to press freedom.
I have circulated to the committee—I hope you will receive copies of this—a letter of complaint from the Canadian Newspaper Association to the office of the Information Commissioner. This is a letter that was sent in September 2005. In my remarks I will be making reference to it, in a few moments.
Along with it, I distributed the photograph I am holding, which is from the U.S. Department of Defense. It appeared on the front page of the The Globe and Mail one day last week. It shows the Korean Peninsula, seen from space at night. This image is graphic evidence of the radical differences between two systems of government. As you will see in the picture, South Korea is lit up like a Christmas tree, and North Korea is as dark as a tomb.
I need not ask you, members of the committee and Mr. Chairman, which of these images is your preference, because I know that the answer is something that unites all of us in this room. The difference between totalitarianism and democracy—between a country that has a free press and one that does not—is so stark that you can see it from space.
I want to emphasize that while it was the U.S. defence department that took this photograph, it was a Canadian newspaper that put it on its front page. We rely on our journalists to tell us what the world looks like, whether down on the ground or up in space, or especially in the corridors of power. We rely on our newspapers and electronic media to keep our governments accountable, to shine the light of inquiry into the business of government.
The world in which the media exist simply to repeat government handouts is the world of Kim Jong-il. This is not the world Canadians desire. Unfortunately, the fact is that governments in Canada have an uneven record in showing that they share the same desires as Canadian citizens for the greatest possible transparency, the greatest possible illumination. Some in government appear to prefer that we leave them to govern in the dark.
In my opinion and the opinion of the Canadian Newspaper Association, this committee should not be limiting itself to investigating whether laws were breached in this, that, or the other instance; it should be inquiring, in our view, into the systematic spin management processes within government targeted at access to information requests from one group in particular that shines light on government decisions: the media.
Access to information, the Supreme Court of Canada tells us, is a quasi-judicial right and a cornerstone of our democracy. This committee has heard from senior public servants at Treasury Board that the Access to Information Act, the primary tool of transparency, is working well. And you've heard Treasury Board say that there is no widespread problem of disrespect or disregard within government, either for the spirit or the letter of the Access to Information Act, which is the law of the land. However, in May 2002 a former member of the governing party of the day with tremendous access to information wrote an article in which he described the creation of a “secretive Communications Co-ordination Group” at the very centre of government communications operations.
Jonathan Murphy wrote in that article, if I can continue the quotation:
The CCG,chaired by [the communications director to the Prime Minister], is made up of the top Liberal functionaries from ministers' personal staff, along with several of the PMO's senior staff, and the top communications bureaucrats from the supposedly non-partisan Privy Council Office, this latter group led by [the] assistant secretary to cabinet (...)
While the CCG's mandate is supposedly to “co-ordinate” the government message, in practice much of the committee's time each week is taken up discussing ways to delay or thwart access-to-information requests(...)
Did this secretive group, composed of exempt staff as well as senior officials from the Privy Council Office within government, really exist? And was its primary activity to thwart the quasi-constitutional rights of Canadians?
Jason Kenney and James Rajotte, Conservative MPs in opposition in 2004, denounced the existence of this secretive spin control group in the House. They clearly believed that this group existed. Does such a group still exist? Was this spin control mechanism dismantled, or does it survive in some other form? We believe this is the broader issue that should concern the committee.
As you know, the Elizabeth Thompson story suggests that the media requesters are sometimes identified by name in conference calls involving senior communications officials across government. That could point to the continued existence of a group of the type I have described. What should concern us is that media requests are singled out for special treatment. Let's not quibble over whether this is a widespread practice or not. We're dealing with a very small number, after all, of access to information requests in comparison to the total, the 10% of total requests that come from journalists. Why else would Treasury Board assign a special category to requests from media if they did not intend to treat them differently?
We have seen in testimony to the Gomery inquiry that this special treatment can involve toing and froing with the political office of the department and involve efforts to obstruct access. We have seen from the research of Anne Rees, an Atkinson Fellow who uncovered the so-called amber lighting system in her research--and I believe the committee has heard about this and discussed it and made reference to it--and from Professor Alasdair Roberts, whose research established that requests so flagged are subject to extensive delays, that media requests suffer from discrimination in violation of the letter and the spirit of the law.
As another point of illustration, this past spring the Canadian Newspaper Association conducted its second freedom of information audit. It's a sample, a rudimentary test of freedom of information and access to information systems across the country. In this exercise this year, five of six inquiries that went to the federal government were not responded to after five months, whereas the statutory period for response is 30 days. This is something the Canadian Newspaper Association has long complained about, and in fact, it has been the subject of a formal investigation by the Office of the Information Commissioner. The letter of complaint in both languages that I have distributed to you along with this photograph goes into this in more detail.
More than a year after that investigation began, we know nothing about what has been found, because we've been told that counsel for the Treasury Board objects to letting us see the data and is delaying the process. We believe this needs to be cleaned up. The Conservative government had a mandate from the people to do that, and the Canadian Newspaper Association is counting on this committee to hold the government to its promises.
Thank you. I'll be happy to answer questions.