Annual seminars in all departments would remind them that one of their legal responsibilities is to comply with the Access to Information Act, which has quasi-constitutional value.
Public servants have a duty to the public, who pay their salaries. It was Parliament that wanted this law to exist. Everything that civil servants produce in the course of their daily work must therefore be accessible. Some information may be exempted, but in principle everything that civil servants produce must be accessible, as they are publicly accountable for their responsibilities and workload, among other things.
No one should be surprised or offended that an access to information request is made. Yet these requests are mostly perceived as an annoyance or something that upsets the bureaucratic order. However, these requests stem from the fact that we live in a democracy that respects the citizens who pay the salaries of civil servants, who finance public institutions and who want to obtain answers. The right to access information, the right to know, is a quasi-constitutional right that has been granted to citizens. Facilitating this right is a duty for institutions, civil servants, parliamentarians and the public.
We have not yet reconciled these opposite sides. The viewpoint varies depending on which side you are on. While we may want as much information as possible to be released to us, the typical public servant aims for the exact opposite, wanting to protect everything they can. Most departments have not yet adopted the mindset that there is nothing wrong or offensive about an individual making an access to information request, and that they must respond to it to using the resources available to each department.