Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner
Province of British Columbia
Order No. 199-1997
November 20, 1997
INQUIRY RE: A decision by the Ministry of Attorney General, Criminal
Justice Branch, to withhold the names of attendees at meetings of the Abortion
Services Working Group
Fourth Floor
1675 Douglas Street
Victoria, B.C. V8V 1X4
Telephone: 250-387-5629
Facsimile: 250-387-1696
Web Site: http://www.oipc.bc.ca
1. Description of the review
As Information and Privacy Commissioner, I conducted a written inquiry at the
Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner (the Office) on August 29,
1997 under section 56 of the Freedom of Information and Protection of
Privacy Act (the Act). This inquiry arose out of a request for review of a
decision by the Ministry of Attorney General, Criminal Justice Branch, (the
Ministry) to withhold the names of attendees at meetings of the Abortion
Services Working Group.
2. Documentation of the inquiry process
On March 24, 1997 the applicant requested records from the Ministry of
Attorney General, Criminal Justice Branch, in relation to 12 issues. The
Ministry responded to the applicant on April 25, 1997 and informed him that
section 3(1)(h) (formerly section 3(1)(g)) of the Act excludes all the
responsive records from coverage by the Act. According to the Ministry, the
matter to which the applicant's request relates is before the Courts.
The applicant requested a review by the Information and Privacy Commissioner
of the Ministry's decision on May 24, 1997. Mediation resulted in the
applicant withdrawing the first 11 issues from the review process, leaving only
the records relating to issue 12: "attendance records of persons who attended
meetings of the Abortion Services Working Group."
During mediation, the Ministry withdrew the application of section 3(1)(h) to
the meeting records and provided the applicant with copies of minutes of the
meetings, with the names of all attendees and the locations of meetings severed
under sections 19 and 22 of the Act. The Ministry disclosed the same records
with the same severing as were previously released by the Ministry of Health in
February 1996 to this applicant.
The applicant requested an inquiry by the Information and Privacy
Commissioner, and on August 7, 1997 the Office of the Information and Privacy
Commissioner gave notice to the applicant and the Ministry of the written
inquiry to be held, by agreement of the parties, on August 29, 1997. The
Ministry of Health and Ministry Responsible for Seniors participated in the
inquiry as an intervenor at my invitation.
3. Issue under review and the burden of proof
The issue to be reviewed by the Information and Privacy Commissioner is the
Ministry of Attorney General's decision to sever the names of attendees at
various
meetings of the Abortion Services Working Group under sections 19 and 22 of the
Act.
The relevant portions of these sections are reproduced below:
Disclosure harmful to individual or public safety
19(1) The head of a public body may refuse to disclose to an applicant
information, including personal information about the applicant, if the
disclosure could reasonably be expected to
(b) interfere with public safety.
Disclosure harmful to personal privacy
22(1) The head of a public body must refuse to disclose personal information to
an applicant if the disclosure would be an unreasonable invasion of a third
party's personal privacy.
22(2) In determining under subsection (1) or (3) whether a disclosure of
personal information constitutes an unreasonable invasion of a third party's
personal privacy, the head of a public body must consider all the relevant
circumstances, including whether
(f) the personal information has been supplied in confidence,
....
22(3) A disclosure of personal information is presumed to be an unreasonable
invasion of a third party's personal privacy if
Section 57 of the Act establishes the burden of proof on parties in an
inquiry. Under section 57(1), where access to information in the records has
been refused under section 19, it is up to the public body, in this case the
Ministry of Attorney General, to prove that the applicant has no right of
access to the record or part of the record.
Under section 57(2), where access to information in the records has been
refused under section 22, it is up to the applicant to prove that disclosure of
the information would not be an unreasonable invasion of the third parties'
personal privacy.
4. The records in dispute
The records in dispute consist of 17 pages of minutes taken at meetings of the
Abortion Services Working Group. The information in dispute on 15 pages of
these records is the names of the persons who attended these meetings. The
other information that has been severed from the records (i.e., locations of
meetings) is not in dispute in this inquiry. (Submission of the Ministry,
Section 4.01)
5. Procedural objections
The applicant objected to my receiving an in camera affidavit in
support of the Ministry of Attorney General's case. Having reviewed it, I am
satisfied that the information contained in the affidavit is properly withheld
by the Ministry under section 19 of the Act.
6. The applicant's case
The following headnotes from the ten-page written submission of the
applicant provide a reasonable summary of why he believes that he has a right
of access to the personal information severed from the records in dispute:
Presumption that the NDP government is hiding something out of corrupt
motive.
Presumption that the right to know public records flows out of section 3 of the
Charter.
Denial of the material constitutes unjustifiable interference by the
Commissioner in politics.
Presumption that there is an a priori right to know for the sake
of criminal investigations.
Public money kickbacks funnelled through false fronts of abortion mills.
Conspiracy to obstruct justice at the Ministerial level.
Government officials who hide material evidence of crimes become parties after
the fact.
Material essential for Constitutional Challenge.
[My] Previous Order void. (Submission of the Applicant, pp. 1-10)
I simply note that the reply submission of the Ministry effectively answers
many of the extraneous arguments advanced by the applicant in the materials
above.
7. The Ministry of Attorney General's case
The Abortion Services Working Group (the ASWG) is an advisory group established jointly by the Ministries of Attorney General, Health, and Women's Equality "to recommend strategies for ensuring safe access to abortion services for providers and clients. The goals of the ASWG are to ensure safety for health care providers and the women who use abortion services, and to consider solutions to the barriers faced by providers of abortion services and the women needing these services." (Submission of the Ministry, Section 1.07) It was set up in the aftermath of the shooting of a Vancouver physician on November 4, 1994. See the discussion of this event in the reasons for judgment of Madame Justice Saunders in R. v. Lewis, [1997] 1 W.W.R. 496 at p. 514-515 (Sections 46 and 47) (Submission of the Ministry, Section 1.08)
The arguments of the Ministry on the application of the relevant sections of
the Act are discussed below.
8. Discussion
Section 19(1): The head of a public body may refuse to disclose to an
applicant information, including personal information about the applicant, if
the disclosure could reasonably be expected to
(a) threaten anyone else's safety or mental or physical health, or
(b) interfere with public safety.
The Ministry's basic submission is that the personal information it has
refused to disclose could reasonably be expected to threaten the safety of
third parties. It relies in particular on my previous Orders dealing with the
disclosure of the names of health care professionals and employees of the
Ministry of Health who are in some way associated with the delivery of abortion
services. See Order No. 7-1994, April 11, 1994, pp. 4-6; Order No. 18-1994,
July 21, 1994, p. 4; Order No. 80-1996, January 23, 1996; pg. 6, and the
submission of the Ministry, Sections 5.01 to 5.09. I agree with the following
submission of the Ministry:
The Public Body submits that based on the Commissioner's previous orders, the
conduct and notoriety of the Applicant, the comments of the Applicant in his
correspondence, and the in camera affidavit, the Applicant can
reasonably be perceived to be a threat to the safety or mental or physical
health of anyone associated with the delivery of abortion services - such as
the members and attendees of the ASWG. (Submission of the Ministry, Section 5.11)
I should add that the reply submission of the applicant provides additional
support for refusing him access to the personal information in dispute. (Reply
Submission of the Applicant, Items 12, 16, 25, 32, 33, 34 to 37, and 38)
I find that the Ministry has appropriately applied section 19 to the
information in dispute.
Section 22: Disclosure harmful to personal privacy
The Ministry seeks to withhold access to the personal information in
dispute on the basis of sections 22(1), 22(2)(a), 22(2)(c), 22(2)(e), and
22(2)(f) of the Act. In the present inquiry, I am persuaded that the two
latter subsections (the third party will be exposed unfairly to financial or
other harm; personal information supplied in confidence) are relevant
circumstances militating against disclosure. In particular, the Ministry
states that all "members of ASWG were informed that their participation would
be completely confidential and that their names would not be released.
Individuals would not have agreed to participate on the committee without these
assurances." (Submission of the Ministry Section 5.20)
I also agree with the reply submission of the Ministry that the reply
submission of the applicant "provides evidence of the unfair exposure to harm
to the third parties which would arise from the disclosure of their names."
(Reply Submission of the Ministry, Section 9)
Since I would normally order disclosure of the names of public servants and
others who attended meetings organized by public bodies, I note simply that
section 19 is a much more powerful protective device than section 22 in the
circumstances of the present inquiry.
10.
Order
I find that the Ministry of Attorney General was authorized under section 19
of the Act to refuse access to information in the records in dispute. Under
section 58(2)(b) of the Act, I confirm the decision of the Ministry to refuse
access to the information in the records.
I also find that the Ministry of Attorney General was required under
section 22 of the Act to refuse access to the third-party personal information in the
records in dispute. Under section 58(2)(c) of the Act, I require the Ministry
to refuse access to the information in the records.
November 20, 1997
David H. Flaherty
Commissioner