Sunday, May 18, 2008

Harper, Ontario governments among nominees for CAJ Secrecy Award

Harper, Ontario governments among nominees for CAJ Secrecy Award

    OTTAWA, May 14 /CNW/ - Prime Minister Stephen Harper's office leads the list of nominees for this year's Code of Silence Award, to be handed out by the Canadian Association of Journalists later this month.     According to several journalists, the Prime Minister's Office has muzzled cabinet ministers and civil servants, particularly professional scientists. It has forced Tory MPs to vet their comments to reporters through PMO. It has cherry-picked questions from friendly journalists and blackballed reporters who dared to ask questions out of turn. It has stalled and denied freedom of information requests and, most recently, the PMO suspended a key access to information database.     "Killing the registry was the last straw for many reporters," said CAJ President Mary Agnes Welch. "There's a broad and deliberate attempt on the part of the Harper and his staff to limit the Canadians' right to know by ducking reporters' questions, hoarding documents that ought to be public and choreographing nearly every word uttered by civil servants and cabinet ministers."     The CAJ's Code of Silence Award honours the most secretive government or department in Canada. The award will be handed out at the CAJ's annual conference, May 23-25 in Edmonton. Last year, the winner was the Department of Foreign Affairs for denying the existence of documents related to the treatment of Afghan detainees that were requested under federal Access to Information legislation.     This year, the nominees are many:      <<     -   The BC government's climate change secretariat for refusing to reveal         the credentials of the secretariat's head or the contents of         stakeholder presentations and for holding closed-door meetings and         symposiums. The secretariat has also stymied the release of its         staffing and funding levels and quietly altered the province's         freedom of information legislation to keep everything it discusses         under an official cone of silence.      -   The city of Rossland, BC. for forcing a city councillor to resort to         freedom of information requests to get documents that should be         public and holding closed-door meetings on issues of public         importance.      -   The Ontario government for the secretive tendering process involved         in building nuclear power plants worth $26 billion. The request for         proposals prohibits bidders from speaking to the media, and the site         selection process squeezes out public input.      -   Ontario's Ministry of Children and Youth Services for their two-year         delay in releasing daycare records following a freedom of information         request by the Toronto Star. The records revealed serious problems at         several hundred of the 4,400 licensed daycares in the province. A day         after the findings were published, the ministry vowed to make the         records public and have since published them on a provincial website.      -   Transport Canada for proposed draconian secrecy provisions in         amendments to the Aeronautics Act which, if implemented, will see a         veil of secrecy fall over all information reported by airlines about         performance, safety violations, aviation safety problems and their         resolution. None of this information will be available through the         Access to Information Act even as de-personalized data.      -   The town of Montague, PEI for using loopholes in the provincial         Municipalities Act to hold pre-council meetings in the guise of         committee of the whole sessions. No formal agenda is created, no         minutes are kept, no report is presented to open council and         reporters are not allowed to report on discussions that take place         during the meetings, which are held a week before the monthly public         meeting. When The Eastern Graphic attempted to cover a pre-council         meeting, the town's solicitor threatened to seek a court injunction         to stop the paper from printing details.     >>      The Canadian Association of Journalists is a professional organization with more than 1,500 members across Canada. The CAJ's primary role is to provide public-interest advocacy and quality professional development for its members.     For more information or to register for the conference, visit www.caj.ca.    
For further information: Mary Agnes Welch, CAJ president, (204) 943-6575; John Dickins, CAJ executive director, (613) 526-8061, Cell: (613) 868-5442