The Provincial Agricultural Land Commission was listed as an independent public body at the start of 2024 under British Columbia’s Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act and the Information Management Act. They would be considered part of the broader public sector within these laws.
FIPA submitted focused FOI requests to determine how this public body was interpreting and applying freedom of information and information management laws.
They responded with the following linked documents.
As of January 2025, based on the documents released, we considered the following:
Is the organization likely meeting the expectations of British Columbia residents for a public body as identified in polling conducted by IPSOS?
accountability and governance
Do the documents indicate that:
- They comply with and implement laws passed by the legislative assembly.
- They act on the recommendations that they receive from independent oversight bodies like the Ombudsperson, Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner, Representative for Children and Youth, and Auditor General.
- They create and maintain full and accurate records necessary for the efficient and effective administration of activities.
- That they exercise their discretion in releasing information considering the public interest in disclosure.
Do the documents indicate that:
- They maintain accurate and complete records of their activities.
- They are able to readily find and retrieve records.
- They align records management systems to international standards.
- They have an organization-specific set of policies and procedures about records management and open government.
- They maintain and regularly review organization-specific file classification plans that are used to organize records.
Do the documents indicate that:
- They identify and regularly review types of documents and data that can be released without request.
- They respond to freedom of information requests within the 30-business day statutory timelines unless a specific, articulable, and legitimate reason can be given to extend the timeline otherwise.
- They respect that fees are a barrier to access and do not charge the optional $10 application fee.
- They ensure the use of fees is principled and restricted to evidence-based calculations for processing large and complex requests, rather than on arbitrary estimates.
- They ensure that when fees are used, the applicant is paying for a large and complex request rather than poor records management on the part of the public body.
Our Observations:
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This is a part of FIPA’s ongoing monitoring and research of freedom of information in BC. https://fipa.bc.ca/research-resources/access-assessments/
These records will also be used in the analysis and publication of a more in-depth study. Access Regimes: Social Studies of Recordkeeping, Bureaucracy, and Secrecy under Freedom of Information Law https://osf.io/n2xmu.
Other public bodies being assessed as part of this work: