It was a counter-narrative.
Many of the people who came before us felt that public bodies, in some cases, were not welcoming of their effort to find information. We discussed it not only in terms of what we were hearing in our province, but we also looked at guidance from other places. We quickly came to the conclusion that the citizen who is coming to a public body for information is coming because they she wanted it. They want some information. They may not know exactly what they want.
As the holder of the information, there is a certain obligation to help them arrive at that happy moment where you can say, “This is what I want.” The first part of it is actually to engage with that person right from the start, to respond to them quickly and say, “Mr./Ms. Smith, we have your request for information. We're starting the process.”
We actually recommended that instead of your having this letter or application going into the system for information and then your hearing that you either will or won't get the information, there be progress reports at specific times. I think that within 10 days there's a requirement that an acknowledgement be sent out.
Part of the duty to assist is not just to say, “You can't have this information because of section whatever”, but to explain to people in language they can understand why that's the case. More importantly, you need to to work with people on their requests to say, “There is some confusion about what you are asking”, and to engage with that person to help them get to a place where they get what they want or what they think they want.
One of the good things that's happened is that all the access coordinators have now gone through customer service training.