Close X
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Improving Public Access To Information Will Make Government Better: Justin Trudeau

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Dec, 2015 01:06 PM
    OTTAWA — Ensuring Canadians have access to federal information will mean more — and sometimes difficult — public scrutiny, but ultimately it will lead to better government, the prime minister says.
     
    The Liberals will conduct a "proper review" of the decades-old Access to Information Act with the aim of figuring out "what is actually going to work," Justin Trudeau said this week in a wide-ranging roundtable interview with The Canadian Press.
     
    He reaffirmed the new government's commitment to modernizing the federal access law, which has changed little since coming into effect on July 1, 1983, when Trudeau's father was prime minister.
     
    It was an era when steel filing cabinets full of paper greatly outnumbered personal computers holding digital files, and many complain the access law has not kept pace with technological change or greater expectations of transparency.
     
    The legislation allows applicants who pay $5 to request information in federal files, such as briefing notes, studies, correspondence and expense claims.
     
    Ideally, requests are supposed to be answered within 30 days, but departments and agencies often take much longer. Not all agencies are covered. Cabinet records are almost completely off-limits for 20 years. And officials can withhold a wide range of information, including advice from bureaucrats and lawyers, security-related material and correspondence from other governments.
     
    Information commissioner Suzanne Legault, an ombudsman for users of the law, recently said she was struggling to clear a backlog of some 3,000 complaints from dissatisfied requesters.
     
    During the election campaign, the Liberals said government data and information should be open by default, in formats that are modern and easy to use.
     
    Trudeau has asked Treasury Board President Scott Brison to work with Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould on a review of the access law to ensure the information commissioner is empowered to order government files to be released — something she cannot do now.
     
     
    He also wants Canadians to have easier access to their own personal information and says the law should be extended to ministerial offices — including his own — as well as to the administrative institutions that support Parliament and the courts.
     
    In addition, Trudeau has directed Brison to accelerate and expand open-data initiatives and make government data available digitally.
     
    In the interview, the prime minister made it clear he was not wedded to those changes alone.
     
    "Access to information is about better governance, and it's about ensuring that the decisions we take are thoroughly justifiable on a broad level," he said. "And that's not always easy, but it is certainly what's going to lead to better outcomes."
     
    In a broad sense, the federal government must dispense with the notion that secrecy is necessary for decision-making behind the doors of cabinet, caucus and the bureaucracy, said Sean Holman, an assistant professor of journalism at Mount Royal University in Calgary.
     
    "That's really the test of openness for any kind of access-to-information reform in this country."
     
    Certain classes of records, such as audits and ministerial calendars, should be released as a matter of course so "we get used to the idea that government should be operating in the sunlight, not in these darkened, private spaces," he said.
     
    Legault tabled a report earlier this year recommending dozens of changes to the access law — the latest in a long line of calls for reform. She welcomes the prospect of a federal review, but hopes it happens "in a timely manner."
     
    Holman said history suggests the Trudeau government's planned study will lead nowhere.
     
    "The fact that this isn't something the government appears to be doing immediately is concerning in and of itself," he said.
     
    "The longer governments stay in power the more seductive secrecy becomes."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau In Malta For Commonwealth Summit

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau In Malta For Commonwealth Summit
    Trudeau meets this evening with Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat before the full Commonwealth heads-of-government summit begins Friday.

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau In Malta For Commonwealth Summit

    RCMP Say Derek Saretzky, Suspect In Alberta Double Murder, Fit To Stand Trial

    RCMP Say Derek Saretzky, Suspect In Alberta Double Murder, Fit To Stand Trial
    LETHBRIDGE, Alta. — RCMP say the man accused of killing a two-year-old southwestern Alberta girl and her father has been found fit to stand trial.

    RCMP Say Derek Saretzky, Suspect In Alberta Double Murder, Fit To Stand Trial

    For Obama, Thanksgiving Is All About Food, Football And Hoping Turkey Doesn't Turn Out Too Dry

    For Obama, Thanksgiving Is All About Food, Football And Hoping Turkey Doesn't Turn Out Too Dry
    There was honey-baked ham with apricot-mustard glaze, and prime rib and creamed horseradish, according to the White House.

    For Obama, Thanksgiving Is All About Food, Football And Hoping Turkey Doesn't Turn Out Too Dry

    Former Olympic CEO Furlong Makes First Major Speech After Abuse Allegations Case

    VANCOUVER — John Furlong felt accused of letting Canada down when a newspaper published allegations that he abused First Nations children, the former Vancouver Olympics boss said in his first major speech in three years.

    Former Olympic CEO Furlong Makes First Major Speech After Abuse Allegations Case

    Federal Energy Minister Meets With Oil Industry Officials In Calgary

    Federal Energy Minister Meets With Oil Industry Officials In Calgary
    CALGARY — Canada's new natural resources minister met with his Alberta counterpart and oil industry executives in Calgary on Wednesday but gave them little to cheer about.

    Federal Energy Minister Meets With Oil Industry Officials In Calgary

    Dennis Oland To Testify In His Own Defence At Murder Trial

    Dennis Oland To Testify In His Own Defence At Murder Trial
    "Let me make one thing perfectly clear: to be sure it is our position that the Crown has not presented a case that satisfies the legal burden on this charge," Miller said.

    Dennis Oland To Testify In His Own Defence At Murder Trial