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Ontario Privacy Commissioner Rules in Favour of Accessibility Advocacy Group

by | Aug 2, 2017 | Accessible Documents, All, Human Rights Cases, Media Coverage

man holding a white cane, just see his waist and handTORONTO — Ontario’s privacy commission says the provincial government significantly overcharged an advocacy group fighting for information on accessibility law compliance in the province and must now hand over the material.

Michelle McQuigge, The Canadian Press

The commission’s decision says the government tried to charge the Access for Ontarians with Disabilities Alliance $4,200 for a sweeping access to information request seeking details on many issues, including plans to make sure private businesses are complying with accessibility laws.

The alliance says it tried to get the fee waived and says the government enlisted five lawyers in its fight to uphold the pricey charge.

The government’s argument included the assertion that the issues the alliance was seeking information on did not have to do with public health or safety and were therefore not subject to a fee waiver.

The commission disagreed, stating compliance with provincial accessibility legislation did have significant health and safety impacts for residents.

It ordered the government to provide much of the information in the request free of charge and knocked the fee for the rest down to $750.

A spokesman for Ontario’s minister responsible for accessibility said the commission had confirmed that it was appropriate to charge for some of the information requested by the alliance.

Alliance chair David Lepofsky welcomed the commission’s ruling, saying the case had raised questions about the government’s commitment both to transparency and to accessibility as a whole.

“They’re trying to take as suffocating and narrow and impoverished an approach to openness and freedom of information as possible,” he said. “What have they got to hide?’

The government did not immediately respond to request for comment.

Release would ‘contribute meaningfully’ to understanding

Lepofsky has previously filed requests under Ontario’s Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act in a bid to keep tabs on the province’s efforts to comply with the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act.

At the time the law — known as AODA — came into effect in 2005, the government stated it aimed to have the entire province completely accessible by 2025.

In June 2015, Ontario announced a renewed focus on accessibility as the law marked its 10th anniversary. Brad Duguid, the minister responsible for the act at the time, conceded the effort had lost momentum and announced a number of ventures aimed at kickstarting it again.

The measures included a $9 million project to help businesses become more inclusive, a promise to introduce a third-party certification program to recognize accessible businesses, and a partnership with an undetermined private sector company to at least triple accessibility compliance audits.

Read more at CTVNews.ca

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