
Audit Report 25-03 University of British Columbia's duty to assist
Subscribe to access British Columbia decisions.
The comprehensive archive of Canadian privacy decisions from federal, provincial, and territorial commissioners — with AI-summarized plain-language summaries for every decision.

Subscribe to access British Columbia decisions.

Subscribe to access British Columbia decisions.

Subscribe to access British Columbia decisions.

Subscribe to access British Columbia decisions.

Subscribe to access British Columbia decisions.

Subscribe to access British Columbia decisions.

Subscribe to access British Columbia decisions.

Subscribe to access British Columbia decisions.

Subscribe to access British Columbia decisions.
The complainant filed a complaint with the Information Commissioner's office regarding an access to information request. The institution provided its response in October 2021, including a notice that the complainant had sixty days to file a complaint. The complainant submitted their complaint in January 2022, which was outside the mandated timeframe. The Information Commissioner rejected the complaint because it was filed after the statutory deadline.
An institution applied to the Information Commissioner for approval to decline processing part of an access request, arguing it was duplicative of information previously released informally. The Commissioner found the institution failed to demonstrate the request was vexatious, made in bad faith, or an abuse of the right to access. The Commissioner also noted the institution did not provide sufficient evidence or explanation to support its claim of duplication. Therefore, the institution was ordered to process the access request.
The Information Commissioner of Canada gave notice that she ceased investigating seventeen complaints. The complainant alleged that an institution's time extensions on seventeen access requests were unreasonable. However, the Commissioner found the requests were vexatious and substantively duplicative of a previous request where the institution's time extension was deemed reasonable. The Commissioner also noted the institution was providing interim responses as committed, and the complainant's actions suggested an attempt to circumvent previous findings.
The complainant alleged that a federal institution had failed to respond to an access request within the prescribed time limit, resulting in a deemed refusal. The Information Commissioner found the complaint inadmissible because it was not submitted within the 60-day time limit required by section 31 of the Access to Information Act. The Commissioner determined that the complainant's awareness of the deemed refusal began when the institution first failed to meet the statutory deadline, not on the date the complaint was filed.