Openness advocates unimpressed by early proposals for Access to Information reform
OTTAWA — Advocates of more federal transparency are concerned a federal review of the Access to Information regime will not fix long-standing problems, and that it could even make things worse.
The Treasury Board Secretariat announced the government review, which takes place every five years, in a news release last June.
For a $5 fee, people can use the access law to ask for federal documents — anything from internal emails to policy memos — but the law is widely seen as antiquated and unevenly administered.
Federal agencies are supposed to respond to a request within 30 days or provide valid reasons why more time is needed.


