Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Conservatives' open government plan silent on updating Access to Information Act

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Oct, 2014 11:17 AM
  • Conservatives' open government plan silent on updating Access to Information Act

OTTAWA - The Conservatives' new draft plan on open government makes no mention of reforming the Access to Information Act, despite widespread calls to revise the 32-year-old law.

The draft plan would see the government make information and data — including scientific research, federal contract details and archival records — more readily available by default.

But it proposes no legislative changes to the 1982 access law, which allows people who pay $5 to request government records ranging from correspondence and briefing notes to cabinet ministers' hospitality expenses.

Reform of the law was suggested during federal online consultations for the plan and during meetings in Vancouver, Edmonton, Ottawa and St. Catharines, Ont.

The federal information watchdog, opposition parties and pro-democracy groups have also pushed for modernization, saying the law allows agencies to withhold too much information.

The government is accepting feedback on the draft plan through noon ET Mon., Oct. 20.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Schools Back In Session After Weeks Of Delay

B.C. Schools Back In Session After Weeks Of Delay
VANCOUVER - Many parents and students in B.C. are relieved school is finally starting on Monday after three weeks of delay, and some say there is even a silver lining to the provincewide teachers strike.

B.C. Schools Back In Session After Weeks Of Delay

Plan To Revoke Canadian Passports Raises Concerns

Plan To Revoke Canadian Passports Raises Concerns
MONTREAL - A human rights lawyer is raising concern about the federal government's plan to strip Canadian passports of those suspected of travelling abroad to join extremist groups.

Plan To Revoke Canadian Passports Raises Concerns

Activists Rally Against Climate Change In B.C.

Activists Rally Against Climate Change In B.C.
VANCOUVER - Hundreds marched through downtown Vancouver on Sunday in support of a United Nations meeting that hopes to stifle climate change.

Activists Rally Against Climate Change In B.C.

New Brunswick Voters Go To The Polls

New Brunswick Voters Go To The Polls
FREDERICTON - After a 32-day election campaign fought largely on jobs, voters in New Brunswick decide Monday between a Liberal plan to turn the economy around through government stimulus or a Progressive Conservative promise to allow greater development of the province's natural resources.

New Brunswick Voters Go To The Polls

Why Winnipeg? How Canada's National Lab Became An Ebola Research Powerhouse

Why Winnipeg? How Canada's National Lab Became An Ebola Research Powerhouse
When Dr. Frank Plummer talks about the first experimental Ebola drug used in an outbreak, he pronounces it "Zed Map." "I do it consciously," says Plummer, who retired this year after serving for nearly 14 years as the head of Canada's National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg.

Why Winnipeg? How Canada's National Lab Became An Ebola Research Powerhouse

Fight To Stop Huge Ontario Wind Farm In Court

Fight To Stop Huge Ontario Wind Farm In Court
The first court phase of a legal fight aimed at scuttling what would be one of Ontario's largest wind-energy developments kicks off Monday with a farm family trying to force an immediate stop to its construction.

Fight To Stop Huge Ontario Wind Farm In Court