Condita Research
Decisions/Federal (Canada)

Federal (Canada) Privacy Decisions

Browse privacy decisions from Federal (Canada) — with AI-generated plain-language summaries for every ruling.

1,312 decisions matching
Federal (Canada)Access to Information ActNot well-founded
Dec 28, 20225821-02721· Indexed Apr 21, 2026

Royal Canadian Mounted Police (Re), 2022 OIC 55

Royal Canadian Mounted Police

The complainant alleged that the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) did not conduct a reasonable search for records detailing annual amounts paid due to sexual harassment or assault from 2009 to 2020. The RCMP explained that its general ledger does not record the nature of settlement claims, and they do not maintain a separate list of such payments. Therefore, the RCMP could only identify and disclose information related to publicly known class action settlements. The Information Commissioner was satisfied that the RCMP conducted a reasonable search given these limitations.

Quick View

Access to Information ActNot well-founded

Royal Canadian Mounted Police (Re), 2022 OIC 55

Dec 28, 20225821-02721
Adjudicator: Caroline Maynard
Plain-Language Summary

The complainant alleged that the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) did not conduct a reasonable search for records detailing annual amounts paid due to sexual harassment or assault from 2009 to 2020. The RCMP explained that its general ledger does not record the nature of settlement claims, and they do not maintain a separate list of such payments. Therefore, the RCMP could only identify and disclose information related to publicly known class action settlements. The Information Commissioner was satisfied that the RCMP conducted a reasonable search given these limitations.

Key Issues
  • Whether the RCMP conducted a reasonable search for records.
  • The ability of the RCMP to search its general ledger for specific types of claims.
  • The existence of alternative methods for the RCMP to identify and locate responsive records.
Federal (Canada)Access to Information ActOIC Order (ATIA s.36.1, binding)
Dec 23, 20225822-03070· Indexed Apr 21, 2026

Transport Canada, 5822-03070

The OIC ordered Transport Canada to provide a complete response to the access request no later than December 30, 2022..

Quick View

Access to Information ActOIC Order (ATIA s.36.1, binding)

Transport Canada, 5822-03070

Dec 23, 20225822-03070

The OIC ordered Transport Canada to provide a complete response to the access request no later than December 30, 2022..

Federal (Canada)Access to Information ActWell-founded
Dec 22, 20225820-02762· Indexed Apr 21, 2026

5820-02762 — Environment and Climate Change Canada

Environment and Climate Change Canada

The complainant alleged that Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) improperly withheld information related to the Roberts Bank Terminal 2 Project under several sections of the Access to Information Act, including those related to facilitating offences, personal information, third-party commercial information, and advice or deliberations. ECCC initially withheld records under these exemptions, including a scientific manuscript. During the investigation, ECCC agreed to release the manuscript and some other withheld information. The Information Commissioner found the complaint well-founded, ordering ECCC to disclose the manuscript and correct inconsistencies in disclosure.

Quick View

Access to Information ActWell-founded

5820-02762 — Environment and Climate Change Canada

Dec 22, 20225820-02762
Adjudicator: Caroline Maynard
Plain-Language Summary

The complainant alleged that Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) improperly withheld information related to the Roberts Bank Terminal 2 Project under several sections of the Access to Information Act, including those related to facilitating offences, personal information, third-party commercial information, and advice or deliberations. ECCC initially withheld records under these exemptions, including a scientific manuscript. During the investigation, ECCC agreed to release the manuscript and some other withheld information. The Information Commissioner found the complaint well-founded, ordering ECCC to disclose the manuscript and correct inconsistencies in disclosure.

Key Issues
  • Applicability of exemption for facilitating the commission of an offence (s. 16(2) ATIA)
  • Applicability of exemption for personal information (s. 19(1) ATIA)
  • Applicability of exemption for confidential third-party scientific information (s. 20(1)(b) ATIA)
  • Applicability of exemptions for advice and deliberations (ss. 21(1)(a) and 21(1)(b) ATIA)
Federal (Canada)Access to Information ActOIC Order (ATIA s.36.1, binding)
Dec 22, 20225821-03851· Indexed Apr 21, 2026

Transportation Safety Board of Canada, 5821-03851

The OIC ordered Transportation Safety Board of Canada to provide a complete response to the access request no later than March 15, 2023..

Quick View

Access to Information ActOIC Order (ATIA s.36.1, binding)

Transportation Safety Board of Canada, 5821-03851

Dec 22, 20225821-03851

The OIC ordered Transportation Safety Board of Canada to provide a complete response to the access request no later than March 15, 2023..

Federal (Canada)Access to Information ActOIC Order (ATIA s.36.1, binding)
Dec 21, 20225821-07436· Indexed Apr 21, 2026

Canada Infrastructure Bank, 5821-07436

The OIC ordered Canada Infrastructure Bank to process the remaining records and provide, within 10 days of the order, a complete response to the access request..

Quick View

Access to Information ActOIC Order (ATIA s.36.1, binding)

Canada Infrastructure Bank, 5821-07436

Dec 21, 20225821-07436

The OIC ordered Canada Infrastructure Bank to process the remaining records and provide, within 10 days of the order, a complete response to the access request..

Federal (Canada)Access to Information ActOIC Order (ATIA s.36.1, binding)
Dec 21, 20225821-07094· Indexed Apr 21, 2026

Library and Archives Canada, 5821-07094

The OIC ordered Library and Archives Canada to provide a complete response to the access request no later than February 3, 2023..

Quick View

Access to Information ActOIC Order (ATIA s.36.1, binding)

Library and Archives Canada, 5821-07094

Dec 21, 20225821-07094

The OIC ordered Library and Archives Canada to provide a complete response to the access request no later than February 3, 2023..

Federal (Canada)Access to Information ActWell-founded
Dec 21, 20223217-00082· Indexed Apr 21, 2026

Department of Justice Canada (Re), 2022 OIC 54

Department of Justice Canada

The complainant alleged that the Department of Justice Canada improperly withheld records related to the Alternate Independent Process for St-Anne’s Residential School hearings. The records were claimed to be exempt under various sections of the Access to Information Act, including solicitor-client and litigation privilege (section 23). The Information Commissioner found that the Department did not adequately establish solicitor-client or litigation privilege for many of the withheld records, particularly those communicated outside the scope of the solicitor-client relationship or involving parties without sufficiently common interests. The Commissioner recommended the disclosure of information not meeting the exemption criteria.

Quick View

Access to Information ActWell-founded

Department of Justice Canada (Re), 2022 OIC 54

Dec 21, 20223217-00082
Adjudicator: Caroline Maynard
Plain-Language Summary

The complainant alleged that the Department of Justice Canada improperly withheld records related to the Alternate Independent Process for St-Anne’s Residential School hearings. The records were claimed to be exempt under various sections of the Access to Information Act, including solicitor-client and litigation privilege (section 23). The Information Commissioner found that the Department did not adequately establish solicitor-client or litigation privilege for many of the withheld records, particularly those communicated outside the scope of the solicitor-client relationship or involving parties without sufficiently common interests. The Commissioner recommended the disclosure of information not meeting the exemption criteria.

Key Issues
  • Applicability of solicitor-client privilege
  • Applicability of litigation privilege
  • Demonstration of common interest privilege
  • Reasonable exercise of discretion to withhold records
Federal (Canada)Access to Information ActOIC Order (ATIA s.36.1, binding)
Dec 20, 20225821-01476· Indexed Apr 21, 2026

Privy Council Office, 5821-01476

The OIC ordered Privy Council Office to provide a complete response to the access request no later than 10 days after the order comes into effect..

Quick View

Access to Information ActOIC Order (ATIA s.36.1, binding)

Privy Council Office, 5821-01476

Dec 20, 20225821-01476

The OIC ordered Privy Council Office to provide a complete response to the access request no later than 10 days after the order comes into effect..

Quick View

Access to Information ActOIC Order (ATIA s.36.1, binding)

Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada, 5821-00873

Dec 20, 20225821-00873

The OIC ordered Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada to provide a complete response to the access request forthwith..

Federal (Canada)Access to Information ActOIC Order (ATIA s.36.1, binding)
Dec 20, 20225821-06820· Indexed Apr 21, 2026

Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada, 5821-06820

The OIC ordered Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada to send an interim response of all records not subject to a Cabinet confidence review by January 31, 2023. Send a complete response to the access request by no later than February 24, 2023..

Quick View

Access to Information ActOIC Order (ATIA s.36.1, binding)

Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada, 5821-06820

Dec 20, 20225821-06820

The OIC ordered Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada to send an interim response of all records not subject to a Cabinet confidence review by January 31, 2023. Send a complete response to the access request by no later than February 24, 2023..

Federal (Canada)Access to Information ActOIC Order (ATIA s.36.1, binding)
Dec 19, 20225821-00109· Indexed Apr 21, 2026

Transport Canada, 5821-00109

The OIC ordered Transport Canada to provide a complete response to the access request no later than 5 days after the order takes effect..

Quick View

Access to Information ActOIC Order (ATIA s.36.1, binding)

Transport Canada, 5821-00109

Dec 19, 20225821-00109

The OIC ordered Transport Canada to provide a complete response to the access request no later than 5 days after the order takes effect..

Federal (Canada)Access to Information ActDiscontinued
Dec 16, 20222022 OIC 53· Indexed Apr 21, 2026

Decision under section 31, 2022 OIC 53

A federal institution

The Office of the Information Commissioner (OIC) received a complaint alleging that a federal institution did not respond to an access request within an extended timeframe and raised concerns about the institution's communication conduct. The OIC accepted the complaint regarding the delay but found the complaint about inappropriate conduct inadmissible as it was filed outside the 60-day time limit. The OIC determined the time limit for the conduct complaint began on May 2, 2022, when the institution first communicated its proposed response, not when the extended response deadline passed.

Quick View

Access to Information ActDiscontinued

Decision under section 31, 2022 OIC 53

Dec 16, 20222022 OIC 53
Adjudicator: Caroline Maynard
Plain-Language Summary

The Office of the Information Commissioner (OIC) received a complaint alleging that a federal institution did not respond to an access request within an extended timeframe and raised concerns about the institution's communication conduct. The OIC accepted the complaint regarding the delay but found the complaint about inappropriate conduct inadmissible as it was filed outside the 60-day time limit. The OIC determined the time limit for the conduct complaint began on May 2, 2022, when the institution first communicated its proposed response, not when the extended response deadline passed.

Key Issues
  • Timeliness of filing a complaint regarding alleged inappropriate communication
  • Determination of when the 60-day time limit to file a complaint begins
  • The impact of an institution's communication conduct on the complainant's awareness of grounds for complaint
Federal (Canada)Access to Information ActWell-founded
Dec 15, 20225821-00890· Indexed Apr 21, 2026

Library and Archives Canada (Re), 2022 OIC 51

Library and Archives Canada

The complainant alleged that Library and Archives Canada (LAC) improperly withheld information under section 23 (Solicitor-client privilege) of the Access to Information Act. While the information met the requirements for solicitor-client privilege, LAC did not demonstrate it had reasonably exercised its discretion to decide whether to disclose the information. The Information Commissioner ordered LAC to re-exercise its discretion, considering all relevant factors. LAC agreed to implement the order.

Quick View

Access to Information ActWell-founded

Library and Archives Canada (Re), 2022 OIC 51

Dec 15, 20225821-00890
Adjudicator: Caroline Maynard
Plain-Language Summary

The complainant alleged that Library and Archives Canada (LAC) improperly withheld information under section 23 (Solicitor-client privilege) of the Access to Information Act. While the information met the requirements for solicitor-client privilege, LAC did not demonstrate it had reasonably exercised its discretion to decide whether to disclose the information. The Information Commissioner ordered LAC to re-exercise its discretion, considering all relevant factors. LAC agreed to implement the order.

Key Issues
  • Whether the withheld information met the requirements for solicitor-client privilege.
  • Whether LAC reasonably exercised its discretion to disclose the information.
  • Consideration of the historical significance of the records and the mandate of Library and Archives Canada in exercising discretion.
Federal (Canada)Access to Information ActNot well-founded
Dec 15, 20225821-05041· Indexed Apr 21, 2026

Health Canada (Re), 2022 OIC 52

Health Canada

The complainant alleged that Health Canada improperly withheld information from a non-clinical overview of the Novavax COVID-19 vaccine, citing exemptions for confidential third-party financial, commercial, scientific or technical information (paragraph 20(1)(b)). The Information Commissioner of Canada (OIC) found that the information met the criteria for exemption under paragraph 20(1)(b) at the time the request was processed. The OIC also concluded that the conditions under which Health Canada would be required to exercise discretion to release the information (subsections 20(5) and 20(6)) were not met. Therefore, the complaint was found not to be well founded.

Quick View

Access to Information ActNot well-founded

Health Canada (Re), 2022 OIC 52

Dec 15, 20225821-05041
Adjudicator: Caroline Maynard
Plain-Language Summary

The complainant alleged that Health Canada improperly withheld information from a non-clinical overview of the Novavax COVID-19 vaccine, citing exemptions for confidential third-party financial, commercial, scientific or technical information (paragraph 20(1)(b)). The Information Commissioner of Canada (OIC) found that the information met the criteria for exemption under paragraph 20(1)(b) at the time the request was processed. The OIC also concluded that the conditions under which Health Canada would be required to exercise discretion to release the information (subsections 20(5) and 20(6)) were not met. Therefore, the complaint was found not to be well founded.

Key Issues
  • Whether the withheld information qualifies as confidential third-party financial, commercial, scientific or technical information under paragraph 20(1)(b) of the Access to Information Act.
  • Whether the conditions for exercising discretion to release information under subsections 20(5) and 20(6) of the Access to Information Act were met.
Federal (Canada)Access to Information ActNot well-founded
Dec 12, 20225820-01102· Indexed Apr 21, 2026

5820-01102 — Environment and Climate Change Canada

Environment and Climate Change Canada

The complainant alleged that Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) improperly excluded weather radar data, claiming it was available for purchase. ECCC demonstrated that both real-time and archived weather data are offered through a cost-recovery system. As the information was available for purchase, it was excluded from the application of the Access to Information Act.

Quick View

Access to Information ActNot well-founded

5820-01102 — Environment and Climate Change Canada

Dec 12, 20225820-01102
Adjudicator: Caroline Maynard
Plain-Language Summary

The complainant alleged that Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) improperly excluded weather radar data, claiming it was available for purchase. ECCC demonstrated that both real-time and archived weather data are offered through a cost-recovery system. As the information was available for purchase, it was excluded from the application of the Access to Information Act.

Key Issues
  • Whether the exclusion of material available for purchase under paragraph 68(a) of the ATIA was properly applied.
  • Whether real-time data, which must be created after the request is made, falls under the scope of the ATIA.
  • Whether the cost-recovery system for accessing weather data renders the information 'available for purchase' under section 68(a).