The Information and Privacy Commissioner/Ontario, office has gone
to lengths to make it hard to know what City and Mayor was being investigated
but as I made the original Compliance Complaint, here is are the facts.
It was against Mayor Hazel McCallion, the
City
of Mississauga and the FOI Co-ordinator who allowed this to happen
in none other then Joan LeFeuvre. It
is a shame that Joan LeFeuvre did not learn her lesson.
INVESTIGATION I95-091M
A City
February 2, 1996
INTRODUCTION
Background of the Complaint
This investigation was initiated as a result of a complaint concerning a named City.
By July 8, 1994, the complainant
had submitted eight requests for information under the Municipal Freedom
of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (the Act) to the
City, all dealing with the same subject. And, prior to making requests
for this information under the Act, the
complainant had requested the information,
on numerous occasions, by approaching various City staff directly. The
complainant had also written a number of letters to the Mayor, and had
attended various meetings of Council and its committees. According to the
City, the front line staff who had provided service to the complainant
had become frustrated dealing with him, as he had become extremely demanding.
During a meeting on July 19, 1994,
the City's Mayor instructed the complainant to make contact with, and to
submit all correspondence including requests for information under the
Act
to her office, instead of to various City staff including the Freedom of
Information and Privacy
Co-ordinator (the Co-ordinator),
and "she would be responsible for the distribution." The Mayor had thus
instructed the complainant because she was concerned about the amount of
time City staff was spending on his visits and voluminous requests, especially
in light of staff reductions and
increased volume of City business.
The requirement to submit his requests
to the Mayor ended in October 1994, when both the complainant and the Mayor
ran for the Mayor's office in the municipal election. Between July 19,
1994 and October 1994, the complainant submitted seven access requests
to the Mayor's office,
although he had attempted, without
success, to submit them to the Co-ordinator.
The complainant claimed that the
City had violated his privacy when it required him to submit his access
requests to the Mayor's office, instead of to the Co-ordinator.
Issues Arising from the Investigation
The following issues were identified as arising from the investigation:
(A)
Was the information in question "personal information" as defined in
section 2(1) of the Act? If yes,
(B)
Did the City comply with section 3(2) of Ontario Regulation 823, made
under the Act?
RESULTS OF THE INVESTIGATION
Issue A: Was the
information in question "personal information" as
defined in section 2(1) of the Act?
Section 2(1) of the Act states, in part:
"personal information" means recorded information about an
identifiable individual, including,
...
(d) the address, telephone number, fingerprints or blood type of
the individual,
...
(h) the individual's name if it appears with other personal
information relating to the individual or where the disclosure of
the name would reveal other personal information about the
individual.
The complainant provided us with the front page of each of the seven access requests that he had filed with the City between July 19, 1994 and October 1994. They contained his name, address, the fact that he was a Canadian citizen, and that he was requesting certain general records.
It is our view that the information in the complainant's access requests met the requirements of paragraphs (d) and (h) of the definition of personal information, in section 2(1) of the Act.
Conclusion:
The information in question was "personal information"
as defined in section 2(1) of the Act.
Issue B:
Did the City comply with section 3(2) of Ontario Regulation 823,
made under the Act?
The Co-ordinator submitted the following on behalf of the City, with regard to the Mayor requiring the complainant to submit his access requests to her office:
It is true that the City Clerk is the head and that I am the Freedom of
Information Coordinator, however, even if the powers or duties are
delegated, it is clearly the intent of the legislation that the head
remains accountable for actions taken and decisions made under
the Act. It is our opinion, therefore, that the Mayor exercised
her
rights under the Act. It is also our opinion that the decision did
not
represent a violation of the named complainant's privacy.
It would appear, therefore, that the City's view was that the powers and duties of the "head", for the purposes of the Act, had been delegated from the Mayor to the City Clerk. The complainant, however, provided us with a copy of By-law 53-91, dated February 11, 1991, which states:
... the Council of The Corporation of the named City ENACTS as follows:
1. That the City Clerk is hereby delegated the powers
and duties of the
Head of The Corporation of the named City prescribed in the
Municipal Freedom and Protection of Personal Privacy Act 1989
[sic].
Therefore, it is evident that the duties and powers of the head had been delegated from the Council to the City Clerk, and that the Mayor was never the head for the purposes of the Act. That the duties and powers of the head had been delegated from the Council is in keeping with sections 3(1) and 3(3)(a) of the Act, which state:
(1) The members of the council of a municipal corporation
may by
by-law designate from among themselves an individual or a
committee of the council to act as head of the municipal
corporation for the purposes of this Act.
...
(3) If no person is designated as head under this section,
the head
shall be,
(a) the council, in the case of a municipal corporation;
Section 3(2) of Ontario Regulation 823 under the Act states:
Every head shall ensure that only those individuals who need a record
for the performance of their duties shall have access to it.
After carefully reviewing this matter, it is our view that since the City already had a process in place for handling requests for information under the Act, which did not involve the Mayor, and since the City had dealt with the complainant's first eight access requests through this process, the Mayor did not need the complainant's requests, which he had made between July 19, 1994 and October 1994, for the performance of her duties. It is, thus, our view that the City did not comply with section 3(2) of Ontario Regulation 823.
Conclusion: Since the Mayor did not need
the records at issue for the
performance of her duties, the City did not comply with
section 3(2) of Ontario Regulation 823.
SUMMARY OF CONCLUSIONS
*
The information in question was "personal information" as defined in
section 2(1) of the Act.
*
Since the Mayor did not need the records at issue for the performance
of her duties, the City did not comply with section 3(2) of Ontario
Regulation 823.
RECOMMENDATION
We recommend that the City take steps to ensure that only those individuals, who need the records of a request for information under the Act for the performance of their duties, have access to them.
Within six months of receiving this
report, the City should provide the Office
of the Information and Privacy Commissioner with proof
of compliance with the above recommendation.
Original signed by: Susan Anthistle,
Compliance Review Officer
February 2, 1996