Blogger Takes Ontario Government to Court over
Suppression of Information
OTTAWA , July 18, 2013– “In January 2012, the Ontario Liberal government amended its freedom of information law to exempt any abortion-related data from Freedom of Information (FOI) requests. As a blogger and a member of the new media, I’m taking on the government and challenging them over this undemocratic move. Tax-payers should know how their tax dollars are being spent,” explains Patricia Maloney.
By means of Bill 122, the Broader
Public Sector Accountability Act, the Ontario government amended
the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act
(FIPPA) to restrict data relating to the “provision of abortion
services” from the public. There is no recorded debate in Hansard
of this amendment, and it did not come to the public’s attention
until after the provision came into effect and Maloney exposed it.
Maloney, the author behind the blog Run
with Life, discovered the amendment when the Ministry of
Health responded to an FOI request she made in March 2012. After
breaking the story on her blog, the amendment caught the attention of
the national media. Among others, Margaret Somerville covered it for
the Calgary Herald and Barbara Kay wrote about it in the
National Post.
“I’m not interested in patient or
physician names, or the identification of hospitals. I respect the
dual purposes of freedom of information laws; to ensure government
accountability by providing information to taxpayers while ensuring
the privacy of Canadian citizens. But data relating to provincial
trends and rates of a publicly funded medical procedure are fair
game,” elaborates Maloney. “The government has not restricted
this type of generalized data for any other medical procedure. This
amendment is without precedent or justification.”
“And without this data, how will we
know if safe-sex campaigns are effective? Or the sex-education
program that Premier Kathleen Wynne has promised to introduce?”
Maloney asks. “Or if there is a sudden spike in tween or teen
abortions? This is an important healthcare issue. And now the public
is running blind on a government expenditure previously identified as
costing as much as 30 to 50 million dollars each year. ”
In March 2013, the Ministry of Health
denied Maloney’s FOI request. Maloney retained constitutional
lawyer Albertos Polizogopoulos, and appealed the decision to the
Information and Privacy Commissioner (IPC). The IPC upheld the
Ministry’s decision stating that the new section to the FIPPA
was clear in its exclusion of documents relating to the provision
of abortion services. Maloney is now seeking a reconsideration of the
IPC’s Order (by the IPC) and a Judicial Review of the Order (by the
Ontario Divisional Court).
“As a blogger,
Ms. Maloney benefits from the freedom of expression and freedom of
the press guaranteed by the Charter of Rights and Freedoms,”
explains Polizogopoulos. “The Charter protects her right to
comment on matters of public interest. The allocation of taxpayer
funds for a medical procedure which remains the source of much
controversy is certainly a matter of public interest and the
suppression of that information cannot be justified in law.”
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Maloney’s counsel, Albertos
Polizogopoulos, is available for comment and interviews. He can be
reached at 613-241-2701. For more information on this case, the
amendment to FIPPA and additional news coverage, please visit
Maloney’s
blog at http://run-with-life.blogspot.ca/p/blog-page.html.
Thank you Patricia for holding the government accountable! Keep up the great work.
ReplyDeletePeter