I think we're talking essentially—maybe not completely but essentially—about cabinet confidences. Under both statutes, the fact that information is protected by cabinet confidence is grounds to actually exclude the information from the application of one or the other statute.
I understand that this would in practice be more of a problem for my colleague, given the nature of the information. It would be rare that personal information affecting a citizen would be the subject of a cabinet confidence, whereas it would be very frequent in the case of more general information.
That's a long answer to say that the same provision applies in both statutes. In practice, that is not really a problem for us because of the nature of the information.