Alberta Passes Controversial Bill Limiting Access to Government Information
The legislation introduces broad exemptions and extended timelines, drawing criticism from the province's privacy commissioner over reduced transparency.
- Alberta's legislature has passed a bill that significantly limits public access to government documents, now awaiting royal assent.
- The bill exempts documents created by or for the premier, ministers, and the Treasury Board, including emails and internal communications.
- Privacy commissioner Diane McLeod warned the changes would 'significantly degrade' transparency, but her concerns were not addressed by the government.
- The legislation also extends the response time for freedom of information requests to 30 business days and allows requests to be dismissed if deemed 'unreasonable.'
- Minister Dale Nally defended the bill, asserting it protects confidential political conversations, while critics argue it undermines accountability.