Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Privacy Commissioner Alerts RCMP, Claims B.C. Employee Gave False Testimony

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Oct, 2015 01:38 PM
    VICTORIA — B.C.'s privacy commissioner has alerted RCMP after releasing a scathing report identifying major failures in the access to information practices of Premier Christy Clark's office and two ministries.
     
    Elizabeth Denham found it's likely that Transport Ministry assistant George Gretes deleted emails, didn't completely respond to freedom of information requests and then lied about it under oath.
     
    Denham said she has referred the matter to Mounties for investigation.
     
    "I cannot overstate the gravity with which I view the false testimony given during this investigation by George Gretes," she wrote. "I am deeply saddened that the evidence in this case has required me to take this course of action."
     
    The commissioner said her investigation uncovered negligent searches for records, failure to keep adequate email records, a failure to document searches and the wilful destruction of records in response to FOI requests.
     
    "Taken together, these practices threaten the integrity of access to information in British Columbia," she said in a statement.
     
    The issue came to light when Tim Duncan, a former executive assistant in the Transport Minister's office, submitted a complaint alleging Gretes "triple deleted" computer records that would have been needed for an FOI request. 
     
    Government emails need to be deleted three times before they are completely expunged from an account.
     
     
    Denham found Duncan to be a credible witness and that his account of events was truthful. In contrast, she said Gretes was not reliable and admitted to giving false testimony under oath.
     
    The commissioner also examined additional access requests directed at the Ministry of Advanced Education and the Premier's office which were brought forward after the initial complaint.
     
    Technology, Innovation and Citizens' Services Minister Amrik Virk responded in a statement thanking Denham for her report.
     
    "All government employees have a responsibility to ensure they are properly responding to freedom of information requests. The commissioner has made a number of important findings that we take seriously and government is committed to acting on her recommendations," he said.
     
    The minister said Gretes has tendered his resignation and that has been accepted by government.  
     
    Virk said he has asked former B.C. information and privacy commissioner David Loukidelis to advise government on how to address the recommendations.
     
    Privacy commissioner's recommendations for B.C. government on access requests
     
    British Columbia's privacy commissioner has issued a highly critical report of the government's freedom-of-information practices. Elizabeth Denham said her investigation uncovered major issues in the FOI process and that immediate action is needed. Here is a list of her 11 recommendations:
     
    — The Ministry of Transportation should release the 36 pages of records initially identified in an applicant's request that set off the investigation. The request was for records related to missing women along B.C.'s so-called Highway of Tears.
     
    — Government should develop an hourly, daily and monthly backup of data and monitor compliance.
     
    — The Ministry of Advanced Education should release records connected to an FOI request for emails sent by the chief of staff to Minister Amrik Virk.
     
    — Executives in the Office of the Premier should change their access to information process to ensure requests for records are communicated by email in a timely manner and properly documented.
     
    — Government should clarify access requests with applicants where necessary to ensure it does not interpret requests too narrowly.
     
    — Government should clearly train and guide employees on how to conduct a thorough search for potential records to an access request.
     
    — Government should provide mandatory records management training to all employees.
     
    — Government should legislate independent oversight of information management requirements to include the destruction of records, including sanctions when those requirements are not met.
     
    — Government should configure settings in Microsoft Office to recover deleted items for just over one month to ensure all government emails are captured in monthly backups.
     
    — Government should create legislation requiring it to document the Freedom of Information process with  accurate records of its key decisions and actions to indicate it does not endorse "oral government."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Australian-Indian woman Sonia Singh Awarded For Recycling Discarded Dolls

    Australian-Indian woman Sonia Singh Awarded For Recycling Discarded Dolls
    Sonia Singh, from Tasmania's capital Hobart, has won the Etsy Design Award for her project "Tree Change Dolls" by beating 52 other finalists selected by a panel 

    Australian-Indian woman Sonia Singh Awarded For Recycling Discarded Dolls

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced After Second Conviction For Young Woman's 1993 Murder

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced After Second Conviction For Young Woman's 1993 Murder
    Neil Snelson was found guilty in June of manslaughter for the killing of 19-year-old Jennifer Cusworth, who was beaten to death after leaving a Kelowna house party where the pair met.

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced After Second Conviction For Young Woman's 1993 Murder

    Union Says Ontario Nurses Can't Be Forced To Wear Masks In Flu Season

    Union Says Ontario Nurses Can't Be Forced To Wear Masks In Flu Season
    The Ontario Nurses Association says hospitals will no longer be allowed to shame health-care workers into getting a flu shot following an arbitrator's ruling striking down a "vaccinate or mask" policy.

    Union Says Ontario Nurses Can't Be Forced To Wear Masks In Flu Season

    NDP Would End Canada's Mission In Iraq, Syria; Harper Hints At Help For Refugees

    NDP Would End Canada's Mission In Iraq, Syria; Harper Hints At Help For Refugees
    Tom Mulcair says Canadian military personnel will immediately come home from Iraq and Syria this fall — months earlier than planned — if the NDP wins the Oct. 19 federal election.

    NDP Would End Canada's Mission In Iraq, Syria; Harper Hints At Help For Refugees

    Parti Quebecois Leader Pierre Karl Peladeau Says Quebecor Shares Put In Trust

    Parti Quebecois Leader Pierre Karl Peladeau says he is placing his controlling shares of Quebecor Inc. into a trust administered by a well-known financier.

    Parti Quebecois Leader Pierre Karl Peladeau Says Quebecor Shares Put In Trust

    Fiat Chrysler Recalls Ram Pickup Trucks To Fix Airbag, Steering Problems

    Fiat Chrysler Recalls Ram Pickup Trucks To Fix Airbag, Steering Problems
     Fiat Chrysler is recalling more than 250,000 trucks sold in Canada to deal with problems that may affect driver-side airbag deployment and steering in Ram pickups and Chassis Cabs.

    Fiat Chrysler Recalls Ram Pickup Trucks To Fix Airbag, Steering Problems