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Document
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MO-1534
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/ifq?>
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Institution/HIC
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Hamilton Police Services Board
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Summary
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NATURE OF THE APPEAL: The Hamilton Police Services Board (the Police) received a request under the Municipal Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (the Act ) for access to a copy of an occurrence report involving complaints of harassment made by the requester. The Police located a copy of the report and granted access to it, in part, on February 15, 2001, along with a supplementary report prepared later. The requester has appealed the denial of access to those portions of the occurrence report which have been withheld. This appeal has been assigned Appeal Number MA-010142-1 by this office. The requester indicated to the Police that he wished to file a statement of disagreement dated December 13, 2000 along with a covering letter dated March 30, 2001. On May 7, 2001, the Police advised the appellant that they were denying his request that the December 13, 2000 letter be attached to the subject occurrence report under section 36(2)(b) of the Act . The Police denied the request on the basis that the December 13, 2000 letter predated the requester's receipt of the requested records on February 15, 2001. As a result, the Police take the position that the statement of disagreement does not relate to the information contained in the occurrence report and is not a "factual disagreement" with the contents of the record, as is required by section 36(2)(b). The requester, now the appellant, appealed the decision of the Police to deny his request to file a statement of disagreement under section 36(2)(b). I provided the appellant with a Notice of Inquiry seeking his representations and received submissions from him in response. Because of the manner in which I will address the issues in this appeal, it was not necessary for me to solicit the representations of the Police. The sole issue for determination in this appeal is whether the appellant is entitled to file his letter of December 13, 2000 as a statement of disagreement to be attached to the subject occurrence report in accordance with section 36(2)(b) of the Act . DISCUSSION: STATEMENT OF DISAGREEMENT The appellant is requesting that his letter of December 13, 2000 be attached to an occurrence report maintained in the record-holdings of the Police as his statement of disagreement under section 36(2)(b). This section states: Every individual who is given access under subsection (1) to personal information is entitled to, require that a statement of disagreement be attached to the information reflecting any correction that was requested and not made In Order P-1478, former Adjudicator Marianne Miller succinctly described the nature of the right to require the attachment of a statement of disagreement granted by section 47(2)(b) [the equivalent provision in the provincial Act to section 36(2)(b)], as opposed to the right of correction in section 47(2)(a) [the equivalent provision in the provincial Act to section 36(2)(a)] as follows: Section 47(2)(a) indicates that individuals may request correction of their personal information, while section 47(2)(b) indicates that individuals may require a statement of disagreement to be attached to a record reflecting any correction which was requested but not made. [my emphasis] In particular, because section 47(2)(a) only provides a right to request a correction, it is my view that it gives the Ministry a discretionary power to accept or reject the correction request. I am reinforced in the view that section 47(2)(a) confers a discretionary power on the Ministry by the wording of section 47(2)(b), which compensates for the Ministry's discretion to refuse a correction request under section 47(2)(a) by allowing individuals who do not receive favourable responses to correction requests to require that a statement of disagreement be attached instead (Order M-777). [my emphasis] The Appellant's Submissions The appellant concedes that he "did not make an explicit request that police correct the inaccurate record" though he argues that "a request to attach a statement of disagreement contains such a request to correct the record implicitly". The appellant has expressed his concerns that in relying on a "technicality", the Police continue to suppress what he describes as the "accurate description of my harassment complaint". The appellant indicates that his request to attach a statement of disagreement "may be regarded as having implied a request to correct the record" and that "[B]y declining my request . . . police may be assumed to have declined also the stronger request, to correct the record. Therefore I am entitled to require police to attach the statement of disagreement, as set out in Section 36(2)(b)." The appellant goes on to add that
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Legislation
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Subject Index
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Published
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Apr 30, 2002
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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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