Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Federal Access To Information Law 'Effectively Crippled': New Study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Oct, 2015 10:25 AM
    OTTAWA — A new report says Canada's access-to-information law remains "effectively crippled" as a means of promoting accountability.
     
    The latest annual study by lobby group Newspapers Canada says long delays, staff shortages and blacked-out pages add up to an Access to Information Act that just doesn't work.
     
    The organization, which represents more than 800 newspapers, sent almost 450 access requests to federal government departments and Crown corporations, ministries, departments and agencies in all provinces and territories and to municipalities and police forces.
     
    The report says the results revealed familiar, entrenched patterns, and some new ones.
     
    People who want information from Canada's cities could expect reasonably speedy service, while provinces, on average, took a little longer and the federal government trailed far behind.
     
    The report says requesters who file a request under the federal Access to Information Act should be prepared for a long wait and to see more information blacked out. 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Childrens' Advocate Says She Was Misled About Teen Who Died In Care In Abbotsford Hotel

    B.C. Childrens' Advocate Says She Was Misled About Teen Who Died In Care In Abbotsford Hotel
    Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond issued a sharp rebuke following the death of 18-year-old Alex Gervais, an aboriginal teen in care who was killed after falling from a fourth-floor window of an Abbotsford hotel last Friday.

    B.C. Childrens' Advocate Says She Was Misled About Teen Who Died In Care In Abbotsford Hotel

    Bland Tourism Slogan Draws Unexpected But Welcome Attention To Alberta Town Of Okotoks

    Bland Tourism Slogan Draws Unexpected But Welcome Attention To Alberta Town Of Okotoks
    The slogan "There are a number of things to do in Okotoks" was photographed on a Calgary transit train and mocked on the Internet this week.

    Bland Tourism Slogan Draws Unexpected But Welcome Attention To Alberta Town Of Okotoks

    Rare Event: Supermoon Phenomenon To Coincide With Total Lunar Eclipse On Sunday

    Rare Event: Supermoon Phenomenon To Coincide With Total Lunar Eclipse On Sunday
    Stargazers across Canada are preparing for a rare and spectacular celestial light show this Sunday night.

    Rare Event: Supermoon Phenomenon To Coincide With Total Lunar Eclipse On Sunday

    Ottawa Posts $150 Million Surplus For July, $5.16 Billion For Fiscal Year To Date

    Ottawa's surplus after four months of the 2015-16 financial year was $5.16 billion — including July's $150 million surplus.

    Ottawa Posts $150 Million Surplus For July, $5.16 Billion For Fiscal Year To Date

    Clayton Ness Sentenced For Shooting That Injured Sheriff Allan Buttree At Alberta Courthouse

    Clayton Ness Sentenced For Shooting That Injured Sheriff Allan Buttree At Alberta Courthouse
    A man who shot a sheriff during an escape attempt at a northwestern Alberta courthouse has been sentenced to 14 years in prison.

    Clayton Ness Sentenced For Shooting That Injured Sheriff Allan Buttree At Alberta Courthouse

    Squirrel And Surveillance Case: Montreal-Area Man Fought The Law And The Law Won

    Lawrence Klepper, 73, received nine violations between 2006 and 2011 from the City of Westmount, a community located just west of downtown Montreal.

    Squirrel And Surveillance Case: Montreal-Area Man Fought The Law And The Law Won