Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Good morning, Ms. Legault. I'd like to thank you for your report and your staff for all their hard work in preparing it.
I notice on page 31 of your report that you refer to the government's ending of the CAIRS system, and that you will be describing your investigations on this matter in your next report. This is something that I've been interested in for a while.
There was an interesting article published in the Toronto Star by a reporter named Ann Rees, who is actually an academic herself, entitled “Red File Alert: Public Access at Risk”. It was dated November 1, 2003. It talked about the CAIRS system and the amber lighting that happened when certain requests came from the media or members of Parliament.
It refers to and records the comments of Professor Alasdair Roberts, whom I'm sure you're familiar with. He's a law professor and a well-regarded expert in the area of access to information. He said that no other country in the world maintains a database like CAIRS. He went on to note that, “CAIRS is the product of a political system in which centralized control is an obsession.”
That was under the previous government.
I appreciate Mr. Wrzesnewskyj's line of questions regarding requests to PCO.
Former Information Commissioner John Reid was also quoted in that same article:
“What we are seeing,” he says, “is a greater use of the time-delay factors that are built into the act: 'We can't do it in 30 days, we need 90 days.' “I have now instigated a study to find out whether there is anything going on at all.” Delays are the order of the day for Red File requests to the Privy Council Office, which handles requests for information involving the Prime Minister and his staff.
I'm a little confused about the difference between a red file and an amber light. Anyway, he went on to say that
Records of all PCO requests completed last year show one out of every four media requests--14 of 58 requests--were tagged for further review. The average time to process these requests was eight months.
That would have been in 2002, I assume.
That's pretty interesting. It sounds like there has been a great delay coming from the Prime Minister's Office for a lot of years.
Have you studied Professor Roberts' analysis in your review of the CAIRS system? Are you revealing what he's written on that system and what took place before and during 2003?