News Category

News Category


Legislative review of BC’s Personal Information Protection Act gets in gear: All-party committee calls for submissions

The special committee to review BC’s Personal Information Protection Act (PIPA) has issued a call for written submissions. The deadline is February 12, 2008. PIPA is BC’s privacy act covering provincially-regulated private sector organizations, including businesses and non-profit groups. This is the first review of BC’s PIPA since it was passed in 2003. FIPA will […]

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BC Ministry caught red-handed in abuse of freedom of information act

A reporter for the Victoria Times-Colonist has thrown light on how the BC government abuses the freedom of information process to improperly withhold sensitive information from the public. Relying on sweeping sections of the province’s freedom of information law, the Ministry of Children and Family Development tried to block the Times Colonist newspaper from getting […]

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Canada’s new do-not-call list process a farce: Michael Geist

The news over the summer that the CRTC was at long last moving forward with a national do-not-call list generated a sigh of relief from millions of Canadians fed up with intrusive, unwanted and inconvenient unsolicited telemarketing calls. In the past few months, the do-not-call list details have begun to emerge with the CRTC addressing […]

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Harper government continues to ignore election promises to increase transparency

The Freedom of Information and Privacy Association (FIPA) is deeply disappointed in the new Conservative government’s failure in its recent Throne Speech to deliver on their promises to increase government transparency by “strengthening Access to Information legislation.” Harper is misleading Canadians when he claims that he has kept his word about making good on his […]

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BC FIPA Makes Submission for the Customer Name and Address Information Consultation by Public Safety Canada

BC FIPA sent its submission for the Customer Name and Address Information Consultation to Public Safety Canada today. FIPA outlines three main concerns with the CNA proposal. [T]he proposals go beyond maintaining existing powers in order to cope with new technology … [and] would actually lower the threshold currently required to obtain Canadians’ personal information […]

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FOI legislation can’t win when government refuses to be open, says Father of BC’s FOI act

The politician who spearheaded the creation of the B.C. Freedom of Information Act says the 15-year-old legislation has failed to blunt government’s natural instinct to withhold public information. Former NDP attorney general Colin Gabelmann said Friday the act was designed to “foster a culture of openness” so that government officials would automatically release information as […]

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It’s Right to Know Week in Canada

“Right to Know Week” in Canada runs from Friday September 28 to Friday October 5, 2007. Events across Canada will reveal the vital role freedom of information laws play in giving citizens access to government records. All Canadians have a right of access to their own personal information and to records about almost everything else […]

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2007 BC Information Summit will ask, “How can we strengthen the public’s right to know in an adversarial world?”

During the 1990s, the Canadian public enjoyed a steady increase in access to government information. New freedom of information laws were passed in many Canadian provinces. The BC government was at the leading edge of the trend, passing an FOI law that made it much more transparent and accountable. Then came a new century, 9/11, […]

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To avoid embarrassment, the Federal Tories sacrificed your Right to Know

The Federal Court has ordered the federal government to reveal most of what it didn’t want Canadians to know about the Mahar Arar Scandal. Newly declassified information shows that that Canadian agencies worked directly with the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency and also received information known to be likely derived from Syrian torture during a post-9/11 […]

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Access to information reforms urgently needed, says BC’s Information Commissioner

In his annual report, released today, Information and Privacy Commissioner David Loukidelis has called on the Premier and Cabinet to show leadership by amending the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act to restore the public’s access to information rights that were curtailed by a BC Court of Appeal Decision. “The bottom line is […]

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ACTION ALERT: Join Canada’s privacy watchdogs in call for suspension of new no-fly list

Canada’s official privacy watchdogs have formed a united front to call for suspension of the Canadian government’s new no-fly list until it can be overhauled to ensure strong privacy protections for Canadians. FIPA is urging all concerned citizens to join in by emailing the Prime Minister (See last paragraph). The federal, provincial and territorial privacy […]

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Joint Letter by National Organizations Call For Feds to Scrap Plan for a “No Fly List”

Ten national organizations including civil liberties, anti-racism, and groups representing immigrants and refugees are calling for the federal government to scrap plans for a “No Fly List” in a joint letter to the House of Commons Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security. We believe that the [No Fly] List raises grave concerns regarding […]

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