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Document
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P-787
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/ifq?>
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File #
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P-9400153
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Institution/HIC
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Halton District Health Council
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Summary
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NATURE OF THE APPEAL: This is an appeal under the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (the Act ). The requester sought access to information held by the Halton District Health Council (the Council) relating to her removal from her position with the Council. The Council provided access to some of the information but withheld some notes and portions of the minutes of two Council meetings, relying upon the following exemption: invasion of privacy - section 21(1) The requester appealed the Council's decision and claimed that further responsive records exist. A Notice of Inquiry was provided to the Council, the appellant and 16 affected parties, including 15 Council members and a consultant who had provided some professional services for the Council. Since the appellant was seeking information about herself, the Council was asked to provide representations on the discretionary exemption provided by section 49(b) of the Act . Representations were received from the Council, the appellant and eight affected parties. Two of the affected parties consented to the disclosure of the information contained in the records which relates to them. The records remaining at issue are: Record 2-1: handwritten notes of a telephone conversation between a Council member and the consultant; Record 3-2: portions of minutes of a special Council meeting held on October 12, 1993, consisting of the location of the meeting, the names of those members who attended, those who were not present, those who moved and seconded several motions, the individual who counted the ballots and the signatory of the minutes; and Record 3-5: portions of minutes of a Council meeting held on November 10, 1993, consisting of the names of those members who moved and seconded several motions, those who made certain comments at the meeting and those who sent correspondence to the Council (the contents of this correspondence is not described). DISCUSSION: INVASION OF PRIVACY Under section 2(1) of the Act , "personal information" is defined to mean recorded information about an identifiable individual and includes the views or opinions of another person about the individual. Previous orders have found that information relating to an individual's business activities or employment is not personal information, nor are views and opinions expressed in an individual's business capacity (Orders M-364 and P-427). With respect to the handwritten notes (Record 2-1), I find that this record contains the personal information of the appellant only. The information relating to other named individuals concerns their business or employment capacity and, therefore, is not personal information. Thus neither section 21(1) nor 49(b) of the Act can apply. Record 2-1 should be disclosed to the appellant in its entirety. The next matter which I must determine is if the information that has been withheld from Records 3-2 and 3-5 constitutes the personal information of the individuals named therein, namely the Council members. As far as Record 3-2 is concerned, I find that the address of the location at which the meeting was held is not information which relates to any individual. The Council submits that its members are volunteers who serve without remuneration for community benefit. Council asserts that, because Council membership is neither its members' profession nor business, any views expressed by its members are personal in nature. Those affected parties who addressed this issue reiterated the voluntary nature of Council membership and their desire to speak freely at in camera Council meetings. District Health Councils are classified by the Government of Ontario as operational agencies, that is agencies whose main function is to deliver goods and/or services necessary to implement approved government policies and programs. In the case of District Health Councils, their particular function is to advise on the planning and coordination of health services, to identify health needs in the district and to consider ways of meeting those needs according to provincial guidelines. Members of the Council are appointed by the Lieutenant-Governor-in Council. While some Ontario Government agency members receive remuneration, District Health Council members are compensated for their expenses only. The names of all members of Ontario government agencies, their tenure, position, remuneration and where they reside is published annually in a publication entitled "A Guide to Agencies, Boards & Commissions", a publication of the Ontario Government. I do not accept the submissions of the Council and the affected parties who support the position that the voluntary nature of Council participation means that the information contained in the records is the personal information of the Council members. In my view, the payment or non-payment of a fee to Council members is not determinative of whether information related to these individuals can be considered to be "personal" or "employment" related. Rather one must consider the nature of the information at issue in the particular circumstances of each case, starting from the position that the Council is carrying out some of the business of Government. Among other things, the Council conducts its business through Council and Executive meetings. It was two such meetings which resulted in the generation of the minutes contained in Records 3-2 and 3-5. In my view, the information recorded therein does not relate to the Council members in their personal capacities. Rather, it notes their presence at the meetings as Council members and reflects the direction in which the meetings proceeded to conduct Council business. I am also of the view that the in camera nature of one of the meetings and a portion of the other does not alter the characterization of the information related to the Council members. Accordingly, I conclude that Records 3-2 and 3-5 do not contain the personal information of any of the affected persons. Therefore, disclosure of these records could not result in an unjustified invasion of the personal privacy of these individuals. As the Council did not claim that any other exemptions apply to the information which it has withheld, Records 3-2 and 3-5 should be disclosed to the appellant in their entirety. REASONABLENESS OF SEARCH During mediation of this appeal, the appellant identified
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Legislation
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Subject Index
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Signed by
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Anita Fineberg
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Published
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Oct 25, 1994
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Type
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Order
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Information and Privacy Commissioner of Ontario. All Rights Reserved.
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