Saturday, June 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada might lack full pandemic record: info czar

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jun, 2021 10:02 AM
  • Canada might lack full pandemic record: info czar

The federal information watchdog says key government decisions during the COVID-19 pandemic might be lost to history because of a sudden shift to new technologies and long-standing poor record-keeping practices.

In her annual report tabled in Parliament today, information commissioner Caroline Maynard says working remotely has meant using different tools, such as online meeting technology and instant messaging.

She says decisions may not be properly recorded when using these methods, raising questions as to how information is being managed, stored, shared with others and disclosed to Canadians.

The commissioner is an ombudsman for requesters under the Access to Information Act, the key federal transparency law.

It allows users who pay $5 to ask for files ranging from briefing memos and expense reports to internal studies and emails.

However, the law introduced in 1983 has been widely criticized as outdated and poorly managed, prompting public complaints about prolonged delays and blacked-out pages in documents.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

559 cases of COVID19 for Tuesday

559 cases of COVID19 for Tuesday
There are 238 people in hospital, up 15, linked to COVID-19. There are 69 people in ICU. There are 7,881 people in self-isolation.

559 cases of COVID19 for Tuesday

Minister Duclos steps aside due to illness

Minister Duclos steps aside due to illness
Duclos says in a statement that he felt persistent chest pain over the past several days.

Minister Duclos steps aside due to illness

B.C. farm ban means culling 10 million fish: study

B.C. farm ban means culling 10 million fish: study
The report by economics firm RIAS Inc. says more than 10.7 million young salmon and eggs will be destroyed over the course of the 18-month phase-out.

B.C. farm ban means culling 10 million fish: study

Teachers at B.C. school protest over COVID safety

Teachers at B.C. school protest over COVID safety
Matt Westphal, the president of the Surrey Teachers Association, says the biggest concern is that students in elementary schools are not required to wear masks inside their classrooms.

Teachers at B.C. school protest over COVID safety

Crown seeks six years for Rideau Hall incident

Crown seeks six years for Rideau Hall incident
Corey Hurren, 46, rammed through a gate at Rideau Hall and headed on foot toward Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s home at Rideau Cottage while heavily armed on July 2.

Crown seeks six years for Rideau Hall incident

B.C. allows restaurants to buy wholesale liquor

B.C. allows restaurants to buy wholesale liquor
The provincial government made temporary changes last June to allow the hospitality industry to buy alcohol at the same cost as liquor stores and it has now made that decision permanent.

B.C. allows restaurants to buy wholesale liquor