The first document we have is entitled “The Access To Information Act and Recent Proposals For Reform”. It's the bigger document of the two--the longest. This was a library publication we had, and it was updated until 2006. So in the last couple of weeks we have updated it to 2009. It will again become a publication once we've gone through editing and everything. It will be available to the public as well as to the committee.
The first page is the contents page. I will quickly go through what each of these documents is.
The first document in the list is entitled Open and Shut, a report produced by the justice committee in 1987. It was the first study done on reforming the Access to Information Act. The committee conducted an exhaustive review of the legislation, both the Access to Information Act and the Privacy Act, and tabled a unanimous report to Parliament with more than 100 recommendations for amending both acts. The government responded to the report and generally supported the administrative changes proposed, but not the legislative ones.
The second document, A Call for Openness, was published in 2001 further to the work of an ad hoc committee of MPs chaired by Liberal MP John Bryden. The report contained 11 recommendations for improving the provisions of the act. It was tabled in 2001.
The next document is entitled Access to Information: Making It Work for Canadians. It was published in 2002. The report was produced by an access to information review task force consisting of government officials and chaired by Treasury Board and the Minister of Justice. It was a joint effort by both departments. In June 2002, the task force put out a report containing 139 recommendations for changing the Access to Information Act.
The next document is the response to the report of the Access to Information Review Task Force. It is the information commissioner's response to the last document mentioned, which was produced by a group of government officials. This document was published in 2002 by the information commissioner. He was critical of both the process and the results of the task force's review. The commissioner felt that some of the recommendations would weaken the access to information regime.
What followed the task force's report and the commissioner's response were two private members' bills. The first was Bill C-462, which was introduced by John Bryden. Then came Bill C-201, which was introduced by MP Pat Martin in 2004. Both bills died on the order paper.
The next document is the Justice Minister's Comprehensive Framework for Access to Information Reform, which was published in 2005 by then justice minister, Mr. Cotler. It was basically a discussion paper in which he asked this committee for input on a range of policy questions, before the introduction of legislation. The document addressed a variety of aspects of the Access to Information Act. It sought the committee's input.
Rather than embarking on a comprehensive study of the document, the committee asked Information Commissioner John Reid to develop a bill that would amend the Access to Information Act. And he did so, with the help of the Law Clerk of the House of Commons. He presented a draft bill to the committee entitled the Open Government Act. Commissioner Reid's bill was endorsed by Judge Gomery in the second phase of his report.
After the introduction of Commissioner Reid's bill, MP Pat Martin introduced a bill, as did Ms. Lavallée of the Bloc Québécois. They were both very similar to Mr. Reid's bill, and both died on the order paper. Mr. Martin introduced his bill on February 25, 2009, thus in this session of Parliament. So the bill is still active.
The next document is the motion in the House of Commons and the seventh report of the committee. A motion was passed by the House in November 2005, and you have its content in the document.
Immediately afterwards, the committee reported to the House of Commons, recommending Mr. Reid's bill.
The next step was the Federal Accountability Act, which was introduced by the government in April 2006. It amended the Access to Information Act in three areas, essentially. First, it expanded coverage of the act to a greater number of federal institutions. In doing so, the legislation added new exclusions and exemptions for some of the new organizations that were not previously subject to the act. The Federal Accountability Act also created a duty to assist. That briefly summarizes what happened between 2006.
At the same time that Bill C-2, the Federal Accountability Act, was introduced, the Minister of Justice at the time tabled a document, which we did not find. It was a discussion paper entitled “Strengthening the Access to Information Act — A discussion of Ideas Intrinsic to the Reform of the Access to Information Act”. In the discussion paper, the minister examines some of the proposals made by Commissioner Reid in 2005. The government noted in the paper that further consultation, analysis and development were required before additional reforms to what was already set out in the Federal Accountability Act could be proposed. The paper also suggested engaging in consultations with stakeholders representing all aspects of the system. That briefly summarizes the contents of that paper.
The last document in the list, which you may be more familiar with, is the report produced by our committee in June 2009, “Access to Information Act: First Steps Towards Renewal”. It was the committee's response to the 12 brief recommendations of Information Commissioner Marleau. That completes the first document.
The second document,
It's a summary of what happened on the legal panel at the Right to Know Week that was held recently at the end of September, beginning of October. There was a panel of 12 people. It was quite a substantial panel. The Information Commissioner's office has gone through the transcripts and has given us a list of the suggested reform proposals that came out of that panel. So that's in the second document.