Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
I'm pleased to be with you for a little while this afternoon.
I am delighted to have this opportunity to appear before you in order to discuss the 12 recommendations from the Information Commissioner and a reform of the Access to Information Act.
What I propose to do in the next few minutes is to give this committee some background information on access reform and then to make some comments on certain of the commissioner's recommendations. I think these comments will give you food for further reflection and analysis. Finally, I'd be pleased to take any questions you may have.
As the members of this committee will remember, the government's first major piece of legislation was the Federal Accountability Act. This was tabled in the spring of 2006 and received royal assent on December 12, 2006. With the Federal Accountability Act, the government brought forward significant reforms to the Access to Information Act. This act had not been comprehensively amended since coming into force on July 1, 1983.
One of the reforms in the Federal Accountability Act extended the Access to Information Act to a number of officers and agents of Parliament, several foundations, and the Canadian Wheat Board. Mr. Chairman, I would like to take a moment to describe a couple of the other important reforms that were introduced in the Access to Information Act by the Federal Accountability Act.
For quite a number of years there had been an ongoing debate as to whether or not crown corporations should be covered by the Access to Information Act. On one side there was the argument that the crown corporations operate essentially in the private sector and therefore should not be burdened by the Access to Information Act. On the other side, the argument was that the crown corporations are connected to the government and therefore people should be able to submit access to information requests to them.
The government saw this as an issue of transparency and accountability and therefore came down on the side of extending the coverage of the Access to Information Act to crown corporations. But the reform didn't stop there. By this I mean that the government could have listed a number of crown corporations that would be covered by the act; instead, what we did was amend the act to state that it covers all parent crown corporations and their wholly owned subsidiaries. For now and for the future, the matter is simple: all crown corporations or wholly owned subsidiaries of a parent crown corporation are covered by the Access to Information Act.
I want to mention one other specific improvement to the Access to Information Act that was accomplished by the Federal Accountability Act, and that's the duty to assist. This provision states that the head of a government institution shall make every reasonable effort to assist a requester in connection with an access to information request, respond to the request accurately and completely, and provide timely access to the record in the format requested. This duty applies regardless of the identity of the person making the access request. The Federal Accountability Act has also brought forward a number of administrative reforms that I will not get into here.
As you may recall, in April 2006, when the bill containing the Federal Accountability Act was introduced, the government announced a two-pronged approach to access reform. The first step consisted of the amendments included in the Federal Accountability Act, which reflected a number of the reform proposals put forward by the previous Information Commissioner. The second step was a discussion paper that raised a number of areas of concern on the part of Mr. Reid, who was then commissioner. These areas required further analysis and stakeholder consultation before reforms could be introduced. That's why my colleague, the then Minister of Justice, Vic Toews, in the spring of 2006 tabled with this committee a discussion paper entitled, “Strengthening the Access to Information Act: A Discussion of Ideas Intrinsic to the Reform of the Access to Information Act”.
This paper stated in its introduction that:
The government is committed to consulting with citizens on ongoing policy development processes and to ensuring that members of Parliament have the benefit of input from all Canadians.
This commitment still stands.
The paper also stated that the Access to Information Act had a broad constituency across many sectors of society with widely divergent views on its administration. For this reason, it's appropriate to hear a wide range of views on reform proposals and to develop approaches for reform in a public forum before the government introduces or prepares or considers a bill.
This is also still true today.
Mr. Toews appeared before this committee on June 19, 2006, to highlight certain concerns and issues explained in the discussion paper and to invite members of this committee to consider these issues further.
More specifically, my colleague said in part:
As the Minister of Justice, I have confidence that the government would benefit from the committee's views on access reform. It is your work as parliamentarians that will be important in shaping this reform. Therefore, it is my hope that your committee will [discuss and] study the discussion paper.....
Clearly, the paper was presented to this committee with the intent of involving parliamentarians in this highly important process. At this time, it is my understanding that you are not consulting with a wide range of stakeholders whose views could be of critical importance in this area, so I'm going to take the opportunity again to remind this committee that as the minister responsible for this, we would like to have any input that you would like to make with respect to it.
I'm going to therefore add my voice to my predecessor's and encourage the committee to perform the very valuable work that it is best positioned to carry out, which is to study the challenging issues raised by the discussion paper.
Turning to the commission's recommendations, I should note that some of the commissioner's 12 proposals are dealt with in the discussion paper. I'm not going to go over those in detail unless they're raised in the subsequent question period; I'll just mention them briefly. Those items are cabinet confidences, universal access, coverage of Parliament, allowing time extensions when responding to multiple and simultaneous requests from the same requester, and imposing a deadline on the commissioner for the completion of administrative investigations.
Let's start with Mr. Marleau's fourth proposal. The Information Commissioner recommends that the act be amended to allow the commissioner discretion on whether to investigate complaints or not. In my mind, this proposal is intricately connected with his recommendation 11, which proposes that complainants have the option of going directly to the Federal Court if they have a complaint about a refusal of access. Interestingly, these two recommendations closely resemble two of the Privacy Commissioner's recommendations. When I appeared before you last year to discuss those ten “quick fixes”, I expressed a concern that I'm going to repeat today.
My concern about the Information Commissioner's recommendations 4 and 11 can be boiled down to one of ease of access to justice. Under the current ombudsman model, an access requester can complain to the commissioner about a refusal of access. The commissioner is obliged to investigate, and upon the completion of the investigation, the commissioner will make a finding and a non-binding recommendation. If the requester is unhappy with the result, he or she can then go to the Federal Court.
I believe the crucial point is this. Under the current act, if the requester decides to go to Federal Court, he will then have the benefit of all the work that went into the commissioner's investigation and its results.
Under the commissioner's proposed reform, if the commissioner exercises his discretion and declines to investigate a requester's complaint, then the requester would be obligated to go directly to the Federal Court to complain. In this case, the requester then would not have the benefit of the commissioner's investigation; that is, the requester will have to start from scratch, attempting to investigate the refusal of access without any of the significant investigative powers the commissioner possesses. In short, I encourage you to consider these access to justice issues when you examine these two recommendations.
Recommendation 3 is that the commissioner be provided with order-making power for administrative matters. The commissioner describes this as a third model, a hybrid of the ombudsman model and the tribunal model. As this recommendation stands, a government institution could decide to appeal the commissioner's orders regarding, for example, extensions of time. As a result, the resources of the Federal Court could be increasingly occupied with disputes about the Access to Information Act's administrative or procedural matters.
In addition, the committee should be aware of the possible increased need for resources that may be necessary in order for government institutions to comply with the commissioner's orders.
Finally, recommendation 7 is in part that the Access to Information Act be extended to cover records related to the general administration of the courts.
I strongly encourage you to have thorough consultations with the courts on this issue, given the critical importance of judicial independence.
In closing, I would like to remind the committee that the Access to Information Act is an important statute of crucial importance to government accountability. It's a fundamental part of our democracy, and we're fortunate to have a statutory right to check up on the government. We must not allow this democratic right to be altered in any way that is not entirely thoughtful and cognizant of all the interests at stake.
Accordingly, I urge your committee to call on stakeholders to discuss the potential areas for reform in order to arrive at a balanced approach that reflects the needs and concerns of all affected parties.
Thank you, Mr. Chair, and I look forward to any questions you may have.