Tuesday, June 16, 2026
ADVT 
National

New Law Protecting Whistleblowers Now In Force

Darpan News Desk, 02 Dec, 2019 09:11 PM

    Current and past government employees who bring forward concerns about serious wrongdoing or who come under investigation have more protection, as the Public Interest Disclosure Act (PIDA) comes into force.


    “This legislation protects whistleblowers if they speak up and requires that any investigation into allegations of serious wrongdoing will be administratively fair,” said David Eby, Attorney General. “It supports high standards of integrity and accountability in our public service, which British Columbians expect and deserve.”


    Government passed the Public Interest Disclosure Act in May 2018 in response to the ombudsperson’s 2017 report, Misfire: The 2012 Ministry of Health Employment Terminations and Related Matters. The report made 41 recommendations aimed at preventing the recurrence of a similar situation in the public service, including a recommendation that government introduce whistleblower legislation. Government has accepted all the recommendations in the ombudsperson’s report.


    PIDA allows whistleblowers to disclose concerns confidentially about issues that affect the public interest to designated officers within their organizations or to the Office of the Ombudsperson, an oversight body independent of government.


    The act protects employees who participate in PIDA investigations from reprisals, such as demotion or termination, and ensures employees under investigation are treated fairly. It also fosters transparency by requiring ministries and the ombudsperson to report the number of disclosures they receive and the results of any investigations they undertake each year.


    PIDA is based on best practices from around the world. It currently applies to employees and former employees of all government ministries, including political staff, as well as employees in the independent offices of the legislature.

     

    Government plans to extend coverage of PIDA to other public sector organizations over the next five years, such as schools, universities, Crown corporations and health authorities.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Surrey Stabbing Leave 32-Year-Old Man With ‘Potentially Life-Altering Injuries’

    Surrey Stabbing Leave 32-Year-Old Man With ‘Potentially Life-Altering Injuries’
    On April 23, 2019 at approximately 8:07 pm, Surrey RCMP responded to a report of a stabbing in the 13700 block of 97A Avenue.    

    Surrey Stabbing Leave 32-Year-Old Man With ‘Potentially Life-Altering Injuries’

    Surrey RCMP Arrest 17-Year-Old With Loaded Handgun In Whalley Athletic Park

    Surrey RCMP Arrest 17-Year-Old With Loaded Handgun In Whalley Athletic Park
    Surrey RCMP is advising the public of an arrest of a youth which took place in the Whalley Athletic park over the weekend.

    Surrey RCMP Arrest 17-Year-Old With Loaded Handgun In Whalley Athletic Park

    Latest Targeted Surrey, B.C., Shooting, Kills 32-Year-Old Sechelt Man Khan Michael Bourne

    Homicide investigators in Metro Vancouver say a 32-year-old Sechelt, B.C., man is the latest victim of a targeted shooting in Surrey.  

    Latest Targeted Surrey, B.C., Shooting, Kills 32-Year-Old Sechelt Man Khan Michael Bourne

    BC SPCA Searches For Person Who Left Day-Old Kittens In Vancouver Dumpster

    BC SPCA Searches For Person Who Left Day-Old Kittens In Vancouver Dumpster
    The society's senior animal protection officer, Eileen Drever, says the kittens were discovered Friday in a dumpster inside a secured parking area of a building in the city's West End.

    BC SPCA Searches For Person Who Left Day-Old Kittens In Vancouver Dumpster

    Surrey Man Arrested For Hateful ‘Pressure Cooker Bomb’ Comments On Facebook Following Vaisakhi Parade

    Mounties in Surrey, B.C., say a man has been arrested as they investigate an allegation that a hateful message was posted on social media.

    Surrey Man Arrested For Hateful ‘Pressure Cooker Bomb’ Comments On Facebook Following Vaisakhi Parade

    Three BC Sikhs Put On Secret Canadian No-Fly List; Disquiet In Community

    In what was seen as a paradigm shift of the Justin Trudeau-led Canadian Federal government towards advocates of Sikh radicals in Canada, three Canadian Sikh activists have been put on the no-fly list under the Secure Travel Act.  

    Three BC Sikhs Put On Secret Canadian No-Fly List; Disquiet In Community