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The Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act

The Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act. Presentation for Elected Officials September 2007. Who is covered?. Government departments, agencies, boards and commissions – Oct 1995 School boards & charter schools – Sept 1998 Regional Health Authorities - Oct 1998

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The Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act

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  1. The Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act Presentation for Elected Officials September 2007

  2. Who is covered? • Government departments, agencies, boards and commissions – Oct 1995 • School boards & charter schools – Sept 1998 • Regional Health Authorities - Oct 1998 • Universities, colleges, technical institutions – Jan 1999

  3. Who is covered? • Local governments – Oct 1999 • municipalities • municipal boards, committees, and commissions • police services and commissions • public libraries • Metis settlements • drainage & irrigation districts • housing management bodies

  4. 5 key principles • Rights of access to records • Protect individual privacy • Access to own personal information • Correction of personal information • Independent review by Information and Privacy Commissioner

  5. Council obligations • Bylaw to designate a “head” under FOIP Act – normally CAO – and adopt a fee schedule • Protect privacy of personal information • Protect confidential information of business

  6. Our municipality • The ______________ is the Head • Our fee schedule is (we have adopted the fee schedule in the FOIP regulation) • Our FOIP Coordinator/Contact is _______ • We have trained... • We have (not) received __ FOIP requests

  7. Access to records • Release unless an “exception” in the Act allows or requires information to be withheld • Plan to make records available to the public on a regular basis (e.g., agenda, minutes, reports), use publications and web sites to distribute information • Access under the FOIP Act should be the last resort

  8. Personal and constituency records • Section 4(1)(m) excludes “a personal record or constituency record of an elected member of a local public body” • These are records that are unrelated to the council member’s role with the municipality, such as private correspondence, records relating to the election campaign of a council member, private business records

  9. Creating records • Write notes as if they could be published in tomorrow’s newspaper • Manage records • E-mails are records • Plan for routine disclosure • Assume expense claims will be released

  10. Privacy Survey Results • 98% of Albertans surveyed expressed strong agreement with the importance of protecting individual privacy • 82% expressed concerns about their own privacy • 83% agreed that their privacy concerns are greater than they were 5 years ago. OIPC Stakeholder Survey, 2003

  11. Privacy pitfalls • Personal information in council documents • In-camera meeting procedures • Dealing with the media • Casual disclosures • Misuse of personal information

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