Feds expect to brand less than one per cent of info requests as vexatious
OTTAWA — Federal agencies expect to refuse to process an estimated 275 Access to Information requests from Canadians annually — less than one per cent of the total received — under proposed new powers to reject overly broad or vexatious applications, internal number-crunching suggests.
A federal spokesman acknowledges the Treasury Board Secretariat analysis — based on the experiences of provinces with such provisions — reveals that “only a very small percentage of requests” are turned down.
Transparency advocates wonder why the Liberal government is even bothering to usher in the new refusal powers in a federal bill currently before the Senate.
“The problem with the Access to Information system isn’t the requesters. It’s the responders — in other words, government,” said Sean Holman, an associate professor of journalism at Mount Royal University in Calgary.