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The Implementation of PIPEDA

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Title: The Implementation of PIPEDA


1
The Personal Information Protection and
Electronic Documents Act
  • The Implementation of PIPEDA
  • Access and Privacy in E-Government Conference
  • February 13, 2002
  • Richard Simpson, DG Electronic Commerce Branch
  • Industry Canada

2
The Implementation of PIPEDAOutline
  • PIPEDA - Key Features Implementation
  • Federal - Provincial Harmonization
  • Process for determining Substantially Similar
    Privacy Legislation
  • International Harmonization
  • European Data Protection Directive recognition
    of PIPEDA
  • Regulations Specifying Investigative Bodies

3
PIPEDA - Key Features
  • Broad-based application
  • all sectors
  • all provinces and territories
  • Through constitutional trade and commerce powers
  • coverage of all sectors of the economy essential
    to provide level playing field across all
    industries, provinces
  • Promotes harmonization of privacy laws
  • encourages provinces and territories to legislate
    in their own areas of jurisdiction

4
Implementation Schedule
  • January 1, 2001
  • applies to federally regulated organizations and
    cross-border disclosures of personal information
    for consideration (information is sold, leased,
    bartered)
  • January 1, 2002
  • application extended to personal health
    information in federally regulated organizations
    cross-border disclosures for consideration
  • January 1, 2004
  • the Act will apply to all private sector
    organizations and all cross-border flows of
    information
  • Organizations located in provinces or territories
    that have substantially similar private sector
    privacy legislation will be exempt from PIPEDA
    for intra-provincial transactions

5
Exemption of Substantially Similar Laws
Paragraph 26(2)(b) of the PIPEDA gives the
Governor in Council the power to exempt from the
Act any collection, use and disclosure of
personal information occurring within a province,
which is subject to "the legislation of a
province that is substantially similar" to the
federal law.
  • Aims to harmonize private sector privacy
    legislation across Canada
  • Promotes equivalent privacy protection in all
    areas of the economy
  • eg.employee information, healthcare, credit
    reporting
  • Minimizes duplication of legislative regimes
  • avoids two-tiered regulation
  • Provides greater certainty

6
Development of Substantially Similar Process
  • Informal consultations with federal and
    provincial departments/agencies and with ad-hoc
    business advisory group
  • Formal consultations through publication of
    proposed process in Part 1 of Canada Gazette on
    September 22, 2001
  • Comments received from ten organizations

7
Scope of Exemption
  • A substantially similar exemption can
  • apply to an organization, an activity or a class
  • capture various levels of legislation
  • sector-specific legislation
  • the legislative regime of an entire province or
    territory
  • a single comprehensive privacy law (e.g. Quebec)
  • multiple provincial/territorial laws within or
    across jurisdictions (eg. credit reporting)

8
Determination of Substantially Similar
  • Determination can be triggered by a province, a
    territory or organization.
  • a province/territory can advise Industry Canada
    of provincial/territorial privacy legislation
    that may be substantially similar
  • the Minister can also act of his own initiative
  • Minister of Industry informs the Privacy
    Commissioner of request for exemption - seeks his
    views
  • Request published in Canada Gazette and public
    comments invited

9
Determination of Substantially Similar
  • Minister consults relevant provinces, territories
    and federal departments and agencies
  • Minister considers and includes opinion of
    federal Privacy Commissioner
  • Analysis and recommendations finalized
  • Minister makes a recommendation to the Governor
    in Council
  • Determination made by Governor in Council

10
Determination of Substantially Similar
  • Provincial/territorial legislation should
    incorporate
  • Principles found in Schedule 1 of PIPEDA
  • 10 principles must be represented
  • distinct and separate enumeration not necessary
  • special emphasis on consent, access and
    correction rights
  • Independent oversight and redress
  • including powers to investigate
  • Collections, uses and disclosures to be
    restricted to appropriate purposes
  • reasonable person test

11
EU Recognition of PIPEDA
  • EU Data Protection Directive requires that data
    about Europeans may only be transferred to
    countries that provide privacy protection
    equivalent to that in EU
  • Canada and EU have been collaborating since 2000
    to recognize the equivalency of the privacy
    protection regimes in both jurisdictions
  • Unanimous EU Decision regarding Canadian
    equivalency allows continued data flows between
    EU countries and Canada
  • Canada is the first non-European nation to be
    recognized as providing legislated privacy
    protection equivalent to that in EU

12
Regulations specifying Investigative Bodies
  • Many fraud investigations are initially
    undertaken by private sector organizations by way
    of an independent, non-governmental investigative
    body
  • PIPEDA regulation specifying investigative bodies
    allows
  • Organizations captured by PIPEDA to disclose
    information to the investigative body without the
    knowledge or consent of the individual involved.
  • Investigative body to report its finding back to
    the organizations
  • Two bodies currently listed as investigative
    bodies
  • Insurance Crime Prevention Bureau
  • Bank Crime Prevention and Investigation Office of
    the Canadian Bankers Association

13
Regulations specifying Investigative Bodies
  • Currently examining investigative activities
    surrounding
  • forensic accounting and auditing
  • law societies (investigations of professional
    misconduct and unauthorized practice of law)
  • private investigators
  • Expect to publish regulation proposals in second
    quarter of 2002
  • Canada Gazette Part 1
  • Due to the phased-in application of the Act,
    other candidate investigative bodies are yet to
    emerge
  • Future regulation will be considered on a case by
    case basis.
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