RESOURCES 

Read the COG April 8 news release and media coverage on Bills 16 & 18

Read the Fall 2007 Campaign Update

Read Colin Gabelmann's speech at the 2007 BC Information Summit
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COG Response to Bill 25
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Detailed Analysis of Bill 25
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Analysis of all Amendments to FOIPP Act since 2001
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Top Ten FOI News Stories of 2006
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ACCESS DENIED: Analysis of BC Government’s response to FOI requests, 2000 – 2005
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How Does BC Rank on Openness and Accountability? by Keith Reynolds
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Gordon Campbell's letter supporting the first Campaign for Open Government
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Summary of Recommendations from the 2004 Special Committee to Review the FOIPPA
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The Campaign for Open Government is a program of BC Freedom of Information and Privacy Association (FIPA), a registered sponsor under the Election Act, 604-739-9788. 



Home arrow The Campaign arrow History of Freedom of Information in BC
History of FOI in BC PDF Print E-mail
The BC Freedom of Information Act

In 1992, the BC Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FOIPPA) was passed. The Act was intended to allow citizens to request copies of government records and receive them in a timely and affordable manner.

Then-Attorney General Colin Gableman said the Act will “empower citizens so that they can fully exercise their democratic rights. The reality is that if government has information which is denied to citizens, it becomes extremely difficult to make informed judgments about government policy or to endeavour to influence public policy.”1

Over the last fourteen years, the Act has been used by thousands of people: citizens adversely affected by government decisions, journalists working to uncover corrupt government deals, environmental organizations fighting to protect endangered species, opposition parties working to hold the government accountable, and many others.

Click here to read the FOIPP Act.

The Act under Attack

Unfortunately, since its creation, the Act has been under attack, first by the former NDP government led by Glen Clark, and now by the BC Liberals. As a result, over the past 10 years a government “culture of denial” has developed that employs every possible tactic to discourage and delay requests for information that it considers in any way “sensitive”. This begs the question, why do governments choose secrecy over openness and public engagement?

The BC Liberals were elected in 2001 with positive intentions toward freedom of information.  They promised to be “the most open, accountable and democratic government in Canada.”2 They promised a new era of accountability that would “deliver real, transparent, [and] accountable government.”3

Following the election, the Liberals broke this pledge almost immediately by slashing the Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner’s budget by 35 percent over three years (the Commissioner is an Officer of the Legislature and oversees privacy issues and FOI requests). The Office was forced to cut its staff to a skeleton crew of just 17. As a comparison, the office of the Alberta Commissioner, with about one-quarter the workload, has a staff of 30 and almost twice the budget.

Unfortunately, conditions have not improved much. When inflation is accounted for, the real terms funding in 2006/2007 by the BC Liberal government to the Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner was more than $100,000 less than it was in 2001/2002.

The Liberal government also took steps to increase Cabinet secrecy by amending the FOIPP Act to extend traditional Cabinet secrecy to Liberal Caucus Committees. This step was without precedent in BC history,

Two other sets of Liberal amendments to the FOIPP Act gave public bodies more time to respond to FOI requests. Here are some examples:

  • Previously, public bodies had to respond to requests within 30 days; now they have 30 "working” days. 
  • The clock may be stopped on the above time limit for a large number of reasons, including the transfer of an FOI request from one body to another. 
  • The allowable time for an above transfer of a request has been doubled to 20 days.

Today, fewer than half of FOI requests for general information are processed within the required 30-day time period.

The Liberals have also greatly increased fees for FOI requests. In 2005 a Tyee request for a copy of the provincial government’s contract with Maximus Ltd received a price tag of $1,200.00. The Sierra Legal Defence Fund was quoted a fee of $172,000 for access to information about the top corporate polluters in the province.  This information was formerly provided routinely and free of charge by the NDP government – a practice that was discontinued when the Liberals took office in 2001.

These fee increases have resulted in a drastic decline in the number of FOI requests. In 2002 there were 302 FOI requests made by interest groups, in 2004 this number was down to 143. The irony is that in 2000, when the BC Liberals were in the Official Opposition, they were responsible for 30% (or 734) of the total of FOI requests that year.


1British Columbia, Legislative Assembly, Hansard, Vol. 4, No. 20, (18 June 1992) at 2737 (Colin Gabelmann)

2New Era Document, pg 3

3Ibid pg. 8
 

To read the Declaration by the Friends of FOI, learn who all the Friends are, and how to become a Friend click here.

FRIENDS OF FOI

The Friends of FOI are growing! Here are just some of the BC opinion leaders who recently became Friends of FOI:

- Libby Davies Member of Parliament, Vancouver East
- David Flaherty First Information and Privacy Commissioner for British Columbia
- Peter Ladner Vancouver City Councillor
- Troy Lanigan Canadian Taxpayers Federation
- Stephen Owen Member of Parliament, Vancouver Quadra
- Shane Simpson Member of the Legislative Assembley, Vancouver Hastings