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Title: Access to Information:


1
Access to Information
Access to Information Jamaica
Procedural and Substantive Issues A selection of
decided , FOI and ATI cases
2
  • "When government begins closing doors, it
    selectively controls information rightfully
    belonging to the people."
  • Judge Damon Keith, U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of
    Appeals

3
ATI Laws around the World
  • Over 50 countries now have ATI laws
  • Older democracies United States, Canada and
    Australia, Ireland
  • Central and Eastern Europe- Bulgaria Hungry,
    Czech Republic
  • Americas- Mexico, Columbia
  • East- Thailand, Japan, Philippines
  • Europe- Sweden , Ireland, United Kingdom
  • Caribbean- Trinidad, Belize, Jamaica, Bermuda

4
Enforcement models
  • There is no one approach used around the world in
    the hearing or review of access to information
    decisions.
  • United States and South Africa, aggrieved
    information requesters must appeal directly to
    the Federal Court.
  • Mexico, Australia, and the US State of
    Connecticut, the law provides for an intermediary
    body with the power to hear complaints and order
    the release of information

5
Enforcement models
  • Sweden and Hungary, the authority of the
    intermediary body is limited to providing
    recommendations only.
  • Canada has an information commissioner who if
    their decision is not followed may take matters
    to Court for judicial review.
  • The United Kingdom only passed a law this year
    2005
  • The international trend is to establish an
    intermediary body, like Jamaicas Appeals
    Tribunal, to review agency decisions with the
    power to order the public authority to comply
    with its findings and decisions.

6
How to find case law on the worldwide web
  • USA Freedom of Information Act 1966
  • www.citizen.org/litigation/
  • Canada Access to Information Act
  • http//www.infosource.gc.ca/bulletin/2003/bulletin
    07_e.asp
  • Australian Freedom of Information Act 1982
  • www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/aat/
  • Ireland
  • http//www.oic.gov.ie/djudge.htm

7
Access to Information What does it mean?
  • Exempting documents should be the exception
    rather than the rule.
  • Bacon International Inc. v. Department of
    Agriculture and Agri-Food CanadaReference
  • 2002 A.C.F. No.776 (QL) (F.C.T.D.)

8
Access to Information What does it mean?
  • It is unacceptable, in a democratic society,
    that there should be a restraint on the
    publication of information relating to government
    when the only vice of that information is that
    it enables the public to discuss, review and
    criticize government action.
  • Commonwealth of Australia v John Fairfax and Sons
    Ltd and Others (1980) 32 ALR 485, Mr Justice
    Mason

9
Relevance of ATI /FOIA case law from other
jurisdictions
  • The decision of a court of another jurisdiction
    only acts as persuasive authority. It is NON-
    BINDING . However it may be PERSUASIVE. The
    degree of persuasiveness is dependent upon
    various factors, including,-
  • First, the nature of the other jurisdiction.
  • Second, the degree of persuasiveness is dependent
    upon the level of court which decided the
    precedent case in the other jurisdiction.
  • Thirdly the date of the precedent case,
  • Fourthly, the judge's reputation may affect the
    degree of persuasiveness of the authority

10
Relevance of ATI /FOIA case law from other
jurisdictions
  • Where a lawyer cannot find a binding precedent,
    he or she may rely on a non-binding precedent
    from another jurisdiction.
  • While not obliged to do so, the court may be
    impressed with or be persuaded by the reasoning
    and be prepared to adopt the rule established by
    the foreign case.

11
Relevance of ATI /FOIA case law from other
jurisdictions
  • Usually the court will establish whether-
  • The facts, statute and judgment are relevant and
    applicable in Jamaica
  • The legal system is based on common law
    principles, a colonial heritage from the United
    Kingdom.
  • Specific Similar tribunals /Information
    Commissioners have utilized this Approach

12
Relevance of ATI /FOIA case law from other
jurisdictions
  • Australia -In Harris v Australian Broadcasting
    Corporation and Others (1984) 51 ALR 581, at 587,
    the Full Court of the Federal Court of Australia
    has taken into consideration Us freedom of
    Information Act decisions. In this case they
    decided that the FOI Act must be interpreted
    according to its own terms. However guidance, as
    the Court found in Harris's case, may be had from
    the US legislation.

13
Relevance of ATI /FOIA case law from other
jurisdictions
  • The only way in which these judgments can be
    utilized by attorneys is if they are published
    and easily accessible.
  • Ireland-The Information Commissioner makes
    legally binding decisions arising from reviews
    conducted under section 34 of the Freedom of
    Information Acts.
  • It publishes some of these decision and also
    those which are of general interest or contain
    points of interpretation or of application of
    provisions of the FOI Acts which warrant broader
    release.These matters may be brought before the
    courts on APPEAL. Such Judgments are also
    published .

14
Substantive and Procedural Issues
  • Procedural and Substantive
  • Information already in the Public Domain
  • Inappropriate Application of Exemptions
  • Deliberative Process and Public Interest Test
  • Cabinet Documents and Exclusions
  • Legal Privilege and Personal Privacy
  • Breach of Confidence
  • Commercial Information
  • Deletion of Exempt Matter/Severance

15
Information already in the public domain
  • S.6 ATI where an official document is open to
    access by the public pursuant to any other
    enactment as part of a public register or
    otherwise-access to that document shall be
    obtained in accordance with the provisions of
    that enactment or those procedures

16
Information already in the public domain
  • Canadian National Railway Company v. Attorney
    General of Canada 2002 F.C.J. No. 1283 (QL)
    (F.C.T.D.)
  • Every year, a list of the non-rail assets was
    send by a privatized railway to Transport Canada
    by an agreement.
  • Transport Canada received a request to disclose
    the list for 1996 and 1997, but refused the
    request at the Railway companies request based on
    information given in confidence. The documents
    contain the following information name of the
    purchaser, the municipality of the property, its
    approximate surface area, the selling price, the
    date of sale, the costs of the sale and the net
    revenue of the sale.

17
Information already in the public domain
  • The parties agreed that the costs associated with
    the sale and the net revenue of the sale must not
    be disclosed.
  • The person requesting access filed a complaint
    regarding the decision not to disclose the
    information.
  • Transport Canada decided it would disclose the
    contents of this list for the years in question.
    The reasons for this decision included the fact
    that the information requested was accessible to
    the public because it was registered at the
    registry offices of various provinces.

18
Information already in the public domain
  • Pelletier J. noted that confidentiality cannot
    not be raised in a case where the public has
    access to information or when the information can
    be obtained from sources to which the public has
    access
  • The Court then examined the issue whether the Act
    only requires that the public have access to
    sources containing the information in question,
    or if it is necessary that the public actually be
    able to have access to this information. The
    applicant alleges that, although the information
    was registered at registry offices, it would be
    impossible to access this information by only
    knowing the purchaser's name or that the
    applicant was the vendor.
  • In the Court's view, any ambiguity with respect
    to this question must be resolved in favour of
    disclosure and the files were to be disclosed.

19
Substantive Issues -Deliberative Process
Exemption and PI
  • Deliberative Process s.19 ATI- Exempt if contains
  • (a) opinions, advice or recommendations prepared
    for
  • (b) a record of consultations or deliberations
    arising in the course of proceedings of Cabinet
    or committee. Excludes document of a factual
    nature, studies, tests, surveys of a scientific
    or technical nature
  • This exemption could include
  • Advice to Ministers by civil servants,
  • Discussions between Ministers or between
    Ministers and their official advisors
  • Advice or recommendations on policy decisions
  • Expert advise and studies
  • THE PUBLIC INTEREST TEST MUST BE APPLIED s.19(3)

20
Substantive Issues -Deliberative Process
Exemption and PI
  • The relevant provisions of the Australian Act is
    s.36 of the FOI Act
  • "36. (1) a document is an exempt document if
    it is a document the disclosure of which under
    this Act
  • (a) would disclose matter in the nature of, or
    relating to, opinion, advice or recommendation
    obtained, prepared or recorded, or consultation
    or deliberation that has taken place, in the
    course of, or for the purposes of, the
    deliberative processes involved in the functions
    of an agency or Minister, or of the Government of
    the Commonwealth and
  • (b) would be contrary to the public interest." 
  • (5) This section does not apply to a document by
    reason only of purely factual material
    contained in the document."

21
Substantive Issues -Deliberative Process
Exemption
  • Australia Freedom of Information Act 1982
  • THOMAS LINCOLN CHAPMAN and WENDY JENNIFER CHAPMAN
    v. MINISTER FOR ABORIGINAL AND TORRES STRAIT
    ISLANDER AFFAIRS
  • Application for the review of a decision of the
    Minister for Aboriginal Affairs to refuse access
    to the contents of a letter sent by the Minister
    to the Prime Minister.
  • The letter concerned a declaration to be made in
    relation to protection of Aboriginal sites from
    the effects of the construction of a bridge.

22
Substantive Issues -Deliberative Process
Exemption
  • The reasons for the refusal by the Minister was
    that the letter would disclose matter in the
    nature of, deliberative process and that it
    would not be in the public interest.
  • NOTEThe declaration was not raised in Cabinet,
  • The appellants claimed that what the Minister was
    doing in his letter, was giving the Prime
    Minister the opportunity to comment on, or
    overrule, the Minister's proposed declaration and
    that under the Act the Minister was not entitled
    to act upon the direction of either the Cabinet
    or his colleagues .

23
Substantive Issues -Deliberative Process
Exemption
  • The Tribunal first determined if the document was
    consultative or deliberative Found it was
    consultative i.e. sought advice or counsel from a
    person
  • Then the Tribunal considered whether the letter
    contains any statements of fact which, may not be
    exempt from disclosure and if so, whether those
    parts of the letter can or should be severed and
    released The Tribunal determined that part of
    letter contained proposals part conclusions.
    Conclusions facts and severed the letter

24
Substantive Issue The Public Interest
  • The court found the following reasons irrelevant
    in relation to making a decision on whether or
    not a release was in the public interest
  • The fact that the letter involves consultation at
    the highest level of government between a
    Minister and the Prime Minister .
  • That the issues were highly controversial
  • The stated need of the Minister to consult with
    the Prime Minister "with complete frankness".

25
Substantive Issues -Deliberative Process
Exemption
  • If a request was made for correspondence between
    the Minister of Land and Environment and the
    Prime Minister (that contains the reservations of
    the Minister to the declaration, requests advise
    and discusses the value of the land) on a
    proposal for the declaration of a Protected Area
    in Trewlany, Jamaica,would you recommend this be
    released, or claim an exemption and why?

26
Cabinet Documents
  • S.15 of ATI Act Document is exempt if it is a
    Cabinet Document that is
  • (a) a Cabinet Submission, Note, or other document
    created for submission to Cabinet and it has been
    or is intended to be submitted,
  • (b) a Cabinet Decision, or other official record
    of deliberation of Cabinet
  • DOES NOT apply to documents appended that contain
    material of a factual nature, reports, studies
    scientific or technical nature or document that
    publishes a decision

27
Canadas Access to Information Act- Exclusion
  • S.69 (1)This Act does not apply to confidences
    of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada,
    including, without restricting the generality of
    the foregoing,      
  • (a) memoranda the purpose of which is to present
    proposals or recommendations to Council
  • (b) discussion papers the purpose of which is to
    present background explanations, analyses of
    problems or policy options to Council for
    consideration by Council in making decisions
  • (c) agenda of Council or records recording
    deliberations or decisions of Council
  • (d) records used for or reflecting communications
    or discussions between ministers of the Crown on
    matters relating to the making of government
    decisions or the formulation of government policy

28
Canadas Access to Information Act
  • (e) records the purpose of which is to brief
    ministers of the Crown in relation to matters
    that are before, or are proposed to be brought
    before, Council or that are the subject of
    communications or discussions referred to in
    paragraph (d)
  • (f) draft legislation and
  • (g) records that contain information about the
    contents of any record within a class of records
    referred to in paragraphs (a) to (f).
  •   Paragraph 69(3)(b) of the Access Act states
  • (3) Subsection (1) does not apply to
  •  (b) discussion papers described in paragraph
    1(b)
  • (i) if the decisions to which the discussion
    papers relate have been made public, or
  • (ii) where the decisions have not been made
    public, if four years have passed since the
    decisions were made. R.S. 1985, c. A-1, s.69
    1992, c.1 s.144 (F).

29
Cabinet Documents
  • CANADA (INFORMATION COMMISSIONER) V. CANADA
    (MINISTER OF THE ENVIRONMENT), 2003 F.C.J. NO.
    197 (C.A.)
  • The requester applied under the Access to
    Information Act for access to Cabinet information
    dealing with a specific fuel additive, held by
    Environment Canada. In 1995 Cabinet had made
    public its decision to prohibit the
    inter-provincial trade and import of the additive
    for commercial purposes, and the relevant
    legislation was passed in 1997.
  • The REQUEST- Discussion Papers, the purpose of
    which is to present background explanations,
    analysis of problems or policy options to the
    Queen's Privy Council for Canada for
    consideration by the Queen's Privy Council for
    Canada in making decisions with respect to
    Methylcyclopentadienyl Managenese Tricarbonyl
    (MMT)

30
Cabinet Documents
  • Environment Canada denied access to the records
    on the basis of the Cabinet confidences exclusion
  • On review, the Information Commissioner decided
    that portions of the records consisting of
    background explanations, analyses of problems or
    policy options should be disclosed, since they
    fell within the discussion papers exception to
    the exclusion. The Commissioner applied for
    judicial review.
  • The Government argued that the Cabinet confidence
    was an exclusion which was not reviewable by the
    courts in Judicial Review proceedings

31
Cabinet Documents
  • The Federal Court, Trial Division, agreed with
    the Commissioner that any information that could
    be described as background explanations, analyses
    of problems or policy options was not excluded
    and should be disclosed.
  • The Court specified that this exercise does not
    require a line-by-line analysis of the documents.
    What is required, according to the Court, is that
    the person reviewing the documents determines
    whether there is, within or appended to the
    documents, an organized body or corpus of words
    which, looked upon its own, meets the definition
    of "discussion papers and that such corpus be
    severed and released to the requester .

32
Canadas Access to Information Act- Cabinet
documents
  • You have done up a draft Cabinet decision on the
    acquisition of a computer system that allows the
    Jamaican Government to store fingerprints and
    track the number of times persons who have
    committed crimes have been identified by
    fingerprint evidence. The draft Cabinet document
    has appended to it a technical study of an Expert
    from Canada on the use of this system in Canada
    and its track record. You then submit it to
    Cabinet for a decision which you are awaiting.
  • You receive a request for Any draft Cabinet
    decision on computer systems that store
    fingerprints and all documents appended to such a
    draft Cabinet submission , note or other document
    created for submission to Cabinet, the purpose of
    which is to present information of a technical
    nature , and all reports, studies and tests
    appended there to for consideration of the
    Cabinet
  • Would you release this document(s)? and why?

33
Legal Professional Privilege
  • The principle is based upon the need to protect a
    clients confidence that any communication with
    his/her professional legal adviser will be
    treated in confidence and not revealed without
    consent.
  • Legal professional privilege protects
    communications between a professional legal
    adviser and client from being disclosed, even to
    a court of law. However the Jamaican Courts have
    applied the leading case of Buttes Gas and Oil
    Co. v. Hammer 1980 3 All E.R. 475, at page 485,
    to look at these documents. Lord Denning M.R.
    described the practice of judges calling for and
    looking at the documents themselves as
    (something) we often do nowadays.
  • Privilege attaches to the information itself and
    belongs to the client

34
Legal Professional Privilege
  • Advice privilege where no litigation is
    contemplated or pending
  • Litigation privilege where litigation is
    contemplated or pending
  • Litigation privilege attaches to all documents,
    reports, information, evidence and the like
    obtained for the sole or dominant purpose of the
    proposed or on-going litigation.
  • For legal professional privilege to apply,
    information must have been created or brought
    together for the dominant purpose of litigation
    or the seeking or provision of legal advice.

35
Legal Privilege and Personal Privacy
  • British Columbia
  • Legal Services Society v. British Columbia
    (Information and Privacy Commissioner), 2003
  • B.C.J. No. 1093 (C.A.)
  • The Legal Services Society is the provincial body
    that administers the legal aid program in British
    Columbia.
  • A newspaper reporter asked for a list of the top
    five criminal billers by name and amount billed
    during a specified period. The Society decided to
    disclose the amounts billed by the 10 lawyers,
    but not their names. The Society indicated that
    it was withholding the names on the basis of the
    solicitor-client privilege and personal privacy
    exemptions.

36
Legal Privilege and Personal Privacy
  • On appeal, the Commissioner held that the names
    of the lawyers are not privileged because, in
    this case, they were not associated with any
    specific client (Order 322-1999).
  • The Commissioner stated that the names of the
    lawyers alone could not be privileged, because
    the purpose of the solicitor-client privilege
    exemption is to protect confidentiality on behalf
    of clients, not lawyers.

37
Legal Privilege and Personal Privacy
  • On judicial review, the Supreme Court quashed the
    Commissioners decision, holding that the
    privilege applied because a diligent individual
    could ascertain the identity of specific clients
    from the information at issue, and this in turn
    would reveal privileged information, i.e., the
    fact that the person received legal aid.
  • The British Columbia Court of Appeal upheld the
    lower courts decision. Specifically, the Court
    of Appeal ruled that the possibility of a breach
    of solicitor-client privilege is a material
    one, and that the Commissioners decision was
    therefore incorrect. The Court stated that a
    decision by the commissioner that places
    solicitor-client privilege at risk is not
    acceptable even if it would be considered
    reasonable.

38
Actionable Breach of Confidence
  • Actionable breach of confidence
  • A duty of confidence arises when one person is
    provided with information by another in the
    expectation that the information will only be
    used or disclosed in accordance with the wishes
    of the confider. The duty is not absolute
  • If there is an actionable breach of confidence,
    the party affected must have the right to take
    action though the courts.

39
Actionable Breach of Confidence
  • This duty will only arise based on the
    circumstances under which information was
    provided to the authority and second based on the
    nature of the information. This may be done by
    contract or may be implicit from the
    circumstances. An authority cannot contract out
    their right to provide information under the Act.
  • The courts have applied a public interest test to
    determine whether a duty to keep information in
    confidence may be outweighed by the public
    interest in disclosure e.g. information
    concerning misconduct, illegality or gross
    immorality

40
Information given in confidence
  • Bacon International Inc. v. Department of
    Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada 2002 A.C.F.
    No.776 (QL) (F.C.T.D.)
  • This is a case in which an application was made
    for judicial review by a third party following
    the Governments decision to disclose a record.
    The applicants requested non-disclosure based on
    the fact the information was provided in
    confidence.
  • The applicants ran a slaughterhouse and meat
    processing plant in Quebec. The Government
    conducts inspections and gives the facilities
    overall ratings in carrying out its mandate of
    protecting the public in the food industry.

41
Information given in confidence
  • The Government received a request for access to
    information to obtain the rating given by the
    Department to all facilities specializing in
    slaughtering and meat processing in Quebec and
    informed the owners of the factories about the
    request for information and invited them to send
    their written comments with respect to the
    reasons why the record should not be disclosed.
  • The applicant parties all argued that the
    information was given in confidence and that if
    the information was revealed it would result in
    a financial loss. The Government decided to
    disclose it.

42
Information given in confidence
  • The Court ordered that the records be disclosed
    and decided that when a third party opposed the
    disclosure of the information they must prove,
    according to the balance of probabilities, that
    the requested information should not be
    disclosed.
  • The Judge confirmed that the third party claiming
    the exception provided by the Act must prove
    that the record
  • is confidential in the objective sense of this
    expression and
  • That the information was consistently treated in
    a confidential manner by the third party.

43
Information given in confidence
  • The Court decided that the record for which the
    Companies are trying to obtain an exemption to
    disclosure contains a rating for facilities
    issued by the Government in carrying out its
    mandate of protecting the public in the food
    industry.
  • The Court stated that the companies must submit
    evidence demonstrating to the Court how and why
    the disclosure would probably cause the alleged
    harm and must demonstrate a probability of harm
  • This case is on appeal

44
Commercial Information
  • S.20ATI Act
  • (1) an official document is exempt if (b) it
    contains information concerning the commercial
    interests of any person or organization including
    a public authority and the disclosure of that
    information would prejudice those interests

45
Commercial Information
  • USA Exemption 4 Permits an agency to withhold
    commercial or financial information that was
    obtained from a person and is privileged or
    confidential. Information is considered
    confidential if it is likely to cause substantial
    harm to the competitive position of the person
    from whom the information was obtained.
  • A citizen made a FOIA request to the Food and
    Drug Administration for all documents concerning
    clinical studies for all prescription drugs which
    had a discontinuance because of death or serious
    injury of patients for 1990-1993

46
Commercial Information
  • The appellant argued that the information should
    be released because it prevent other drug
    companies from making the same mistake and avoid
    risk to human health.
  • The Court found that the FOIA was enacted to
    ensure the public can learn directly about the
    workings of Government and that it is not open
    to the public citizen to bolster the case for
    disclosure by claiming an additional public
    benefit in that it would prevent risky human
    trials.They found the data on the anti fungal
    drug if released could be used to create a
    competitive product.

47
Commercial Information
  • They found that if disclosure would provide
    competitors with valuable insights into
    operational strengths and weaknesses of a company
    while they hold their cards close to their
    chests then this falls within the exemption.
  • The court then found that conclusory and
    generalized allegations of substantial
    competitive harm cannot support an agencys
    decision to withhold requested documents.
  • Finally in releasing some of the documents and
    exempting some the court found that an agency
    cannot justify withholding an entire document
    simply by showing that it contains some exempt
    material.

48
  • "Secrecy has its place, but governments are
    always tempted to overuse the 'secret' stamp.
    When that happens, it can come at the cost of the
    public's stake in such other values as safety or
    clean air and water."
  • Sens. Patrick Leahy and Carl Levin, Restore
    America's Freedom of Information, 2003
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