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Roughly every four years, voters elect a government and grant it significant powers and responsibilities. But winning an election does not mean one has been given carte blanche to act as they see fit until the next election. Governments must exercise public power in accordance with the constitution, and voters have the right to know how elected officials are using this power. Ontario’s rushed amendments to freedom of information and privacy laws enacted a few days ago through the government’s Bill 97, Plan to Protect Ontario Act (Budget Measures), 2026 directly attack both of these fundamental democratic principles.

The amendments exclude documents, emails, call logs and any other records of the Premier, ministers, parliamentary assistants and their offices from the Freedom of   Information and Protection of Privacy Act (“FIPPA”) – thereby ending Ontarians’ statutory right to access these records. The exclusion goes so far as to discard the Supreme Court of Canada’s “control test”, which was specifically calibrated to limit the risk that ministers will use exclusions like these to “black hole” documents otherwise subject to disclosure obligations.

Records requests have in the public debates that have shaped Ontario’s political landscape over the years, including a number of recent public governance scandals. Let’s not forget that it is thanks to freedom of information requests made by journalists that we know about the Greenbelt $8.28 billion land swap debacle and the public spending scandal regarding the government’s Ring of Fire infrastructure project.

It is particularly troubling that the legislative changes come in the wake of these scandals, as the government is giving itself a powerful tool to shield these types of documents from public scrutiny in the future. What is more, the amendments have retroactive effect, meaning that they threaten some outstanding requests and disclosure orders that the government has yet to respond to – including hotly contested orders the eve of a threatened general strike and records about the ongoing

The government’s declared intent is to protect confidential Cabinet documents and constituents’ private information. Yet, the existing law has been adequately addressing these very considerations for decades. Instead the Ontario government is attacking Ontarians’ constitutionally protected right to obtain information on issues of public importance. These changes allow this and future governments to dodge public accountability for poor governance or flawed decision-making – the very reason why freedom of information benefits from a level of constitutional protection under s. 2 (b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

There is more. Through the recent changes, the government has also undermined a number of critical tools used to scrutinize its privacy and cybersecurity practices. It has exempted public sector cybersecurity evaluations from public disclosure requirements and is now also preventing disclosure of which companies have been given students’ personal information through education procurement. Another transparency tool, which obligates the government to disclose which types of private information it is handling and why, is being completely removed.

As a result, Ontarians will now have a harder time knowing how the government has addressed previous cybersecurity threats, the extent to which students’ private information is being exploited by commercial companies, and, more generally, what the government is doing with their personal data. These measures will make it harder for the public to understand how decisions are made, how personal information is used, and whether the government is meeting its obligations to protect the people of Ontario.

Finally, the changes allow the government to write itself a blank check when creating mass centralized databases of sensitive data within government. Up until last week, the government could grant itself wide-ranging internal access to Ontarians’ sensitive health, education, tax, social services and other data – as long as effective privacy and cybersecurity standards approved by the independent Information and Privacy Commissioner were in place. Now, the government will be allowed to create its own privacy and cybersecurity rules.

Making matters worse, the government decided to bypass legislative committee scrutiny and other forms of public consultation, meaning that the concerns of journalists, civil society organizations and independent regulators were silenced. What emerges from the non-existent study of Bill 97 and the enactment of the new freedom of information and privacy provisions is a picture of a government that does not care about transparency, let alone accountability.

The egregiousness of this law and behaviour cannot be understated. Access to government documents and information about how it conducts itself are crucial for democratic public discourse. Without meaningful access to government records, investigative journalists cannot expose poor governance or wrongdoing. Community members and civil liberties watchdogs – such as the CCLA – cannot hold the government to account. And voters cannot cast a truly informed ballot.

At a time when governments around the globe and in Canada are scaling back fundamental rights and oversight mechanisms, Ontario has unfortunately found a new way to contribute to this trend. The government’s approach is so troubling, and its timing is so peculiar, that one cannot help but wonder: What are they hiding?

This Op-Ed was published today in Law360 and is authored by Anaïs Bussières-McNicoll, Director of CCLA’s Fundamental Freedoms Program and Tamir Israel, Director of CCLA’s Privacy, Surveillance and Technology Program, with help from Henrique Oliveira, CCLA’s Public Interest Articling Fellow.

About the Canadian Civil Liberties Association

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