Alberta’s access to information watch dog has found the provincial government to be non-compliant with its own freedom of information rules.
A new report from information and privacy commissioner Diane McLeod says Alberta’s government has implemented internal procedures and policy that allow government employees to wrongfully deny freedom of information requests.
It says the government has put unnecessary restrictions and limitations on requests in an attempt to make fulfilling them easier.
But McLeod says the restrictions make the process unfair for those seeking information and violate the rules set out in legislation.
McLeod’s report follows a two-year investigation and says all 27 government departments were found to be at fault.
- Bow Glacier Falls Trail, site of two deaths in 2025 rock slide, reopens to hikers
- Jeffrey Rath fought for First Nations. Now former clients are fighting him
- Judge freezes $8.5M of Alberta separatist lawyer’s assets amid First Nation trust fight
- Young child dead after drowning in southeast Calgary stormwater pond
The full report is available online by clicking here.
Get daily National news
The government did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Comments
Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.