Document

PO-1734

File #  PA-990416-1
Institution/HIC  Ministry of Health and Long Term Care
Summary  NATURE OF THE APPEAL: The appellant sent a request under the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (the Act ), by regular mail to the Ministry of Health and Long Term Care (the Ministry). The request was dated October 1, 1999, and sought access to certain records regarding applications to the Ontario Health Insurance Plan (OHIP) in relation to genetic testing. According to the requester: We telephoned [a named employee] at the Ministry on October 28, 1999, to inquire about the status of [the] request. [The named employee] confirmed that [the requester's] letter had arrived during the week ending October 8, 1999, but that she had not opened the envelope due to an unfortunate backlog in her office. The requester subsequently received a letter from the Ministry, dated November 2, 1999, which stated, in part: Your request under the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (the Act ), was opened by our office on November 2, 1999. ... Allowing 30 days for processing, we anticipate a ministry decision by December 2, 1999, on the granting of access to any records responsive to your request. The requester (now the appellant) appealed the Ministry's decision to this office, taking the position that the Ministry had failed to respond to the request within the time period contemplated by the Act . I sent a Confirmation of Appeal/Notice of Inquiry to the Ministry and the appellant requesting representations on the issues in the appeal. Only the appellant submitted representations. DISCUSSION: The Act contains several provisions which address the timing of an institution's response to a request. Sections 26, 27(1) and 29(4) of the Act read, in part: 26. Where a person requests access to a record, the head of the institution to which the request is made ... shall, subject to sections 27, 28 and 57, within thirty days after the request is received, (a) give written notice to the person who made the request as to whether or not access to the record or a part thereof will be given; and (b) if access is to be given, give the person who made the request access to the record or part thereof, and where necessary for the purpose cause the record to be produced. 27 (1) A head may extend the time limit set out in section 26 for a period of time that is reasonable in the circumstances, where, (a) the request is for a large number of records or necessitates a search through a large number of records and meeting the time limit would unreasonably interfere with the operations of the institution; or (b) consultations with a person outside the institution are necessary to comply with the request and cannot reasonably be completed within the time limit. 29(4) A head who fails to give notice required under section 26 . . . concerning a record shall be deemed to have given notice of refusal to give access to the record on the last day of the period during which notice should have been given. The appellant submits that the Ministry's apparent policy of starting the 30-day statutory response period from the date on which an envelope is opened violates the Act . The appellant further submits: ... The facts are not in dispute: the Ministry failed to open mail that sat in the office for several weeks. ... Allowing a ministry to start the 30-day notice period when mail is opened is tantamount to a unilateral amendment of the Act . No requester would ever know when the 30-day period had expired or when subsection 29(4) of the Act would apply. A ministry could extend the 30-day notice period indefinitely by adopting a strategy of understaffing their FOI office and creating a backlog. If the Ministry of Health is allowed to extend the decision deadline in this case, then for how long can the Ministry extend it in the next case? I accept the appellant's position. The facts of this appeal are clear. The Ministry received the request at some point during the week ending on October 8, 1999 and did not acknowledge receipt until it had opened the envelope containing the request on November 2, 1999. Assuming the request was not received until Friday, October 8, the 30-day response period ended on Monday, November 8, 1999, not December 2, 1999 as outlined in the Ministry's November 2 letter to the appellant. The Ministry did not request a time extension to process the request under section 27(1). Therefore, the Ministry did not issue a decision letter to the appellant within 30 days of receiving the request as required by sections 26 and 29 of the Act . The actions taken by the Ministry are indefensible and cannot be adopted as a strategy for dealing with workload pressures. A policy decision cannot supersede a legislated requirement. The 30-day period under section 26 begins upon receipt of an access request, not at some date in the future when the Ministry feels that workload capacity can accommodate the demands associated with responding to the request. In Order P-751, Adjudicator Laurel Cropley stated: ... the Act requires that an institution apprise a requester of the reason for the delay in responding to the access request and the time at which the decision will be made. In my view, the key to these sections [26, 27 and 28(7)] is adequate and timely communication by an institution to a requester. At a minimum, the Ministry should advise the appellant of its position within a reasonable period of time. In this case, the appellant received no response from the Ministry within the statutory time frames and thus did not know what, if anything, the Ministry was doing to respond to his request. The principles articulated by Adjudicator Cropley in Order P-751 are applicable here. The Ministry's actions in dealing with the appellant's request were clearly in con
Legislation
  • FIPPA
  • 29(4)
  • Section 26
  • 27(1)
Subject Index
Signed by  Tom Mitchinson
Published  Nov 30, 1999
Type  Order
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