If I may, I can speak to the B.C. legislation, of course. And we do have, as Mr. Tromp mentioned, an obligation in the legislation—the so-called public interest override—that applies directly to public bodies and that requires them, without delay and without access request, to disclose to the public or an affected group of people information about a risk to public health or safety.
It could include an issue such as the one you have raised. It's used quite regularly here in B.C. to warn the public about dangerous offenders, usually violent sexual offenders, who are being released from custody at the end of sentence and who are at high risk of reoffending.
My office gets those notices, and I've yet to disagree with one of them, after ten years. That's an example of how public interest notification can be used. But it is a positive obligation, without access requests, to make that information known publicly, so that the public is warned about risks to health or safety.