labradore

"We can't allow things that are inaccurate to stand." — The Word of Our Dan, February 19, 2008.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Pease in a pod (II)

Campbell Clark, Globe and Mail, February 26, 2009:
In the 2006 election that brought them to power, Mr. Harper's Conservatives promised to introduce a new law, drafted by former information commissioner John Reid, to reform the access system.

But it shelved the promise when it took office.
Rob Antle, The Telegram, January 10, 2009:

The Williams government came to power on a promise of unprecedented openness, transparency and accountability.

"A comprehensive and effective freedom of information act is the best safeguard against the tendency of governments to descend into official secrecy and elitism," the 2003 Tory blueprint of campaign promises said.

In the past year, however, the province has moved to exempt more and more information from public access.

Legislation passed in 2008 exempted Nalcor, the government-owned energy corporation, from public tendering laws, and broadened the class of "commercially sensitive" records that can be withheld from freedom of information requests.

Bill 63, which passed in December, created a special, wide-ranging class of cabinet records under laws governing the management of provincial information. Cabinet records are exempt from public disclosure.

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