Docket: T-5-15
Citation:
2016 FC 339
Ottawa, Ontario, March 21, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Phelan
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BETWEEN:
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BREWSTER INC.
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
THE ENVIRONMENT, AS THE MINISTER RESPONSIBLE FOR PARKS CANADA AND THE ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA AND THE INFORMATION COMMISSIONER OF CANADA
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Respondents
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Introduction
[1]
This is an application by Brewster Inc.
[Brewster] for a review of the decision by Parks Canada to disclose certain
records [Records] related to the approval of Brewster’s Glacier Discovery Walk
[GDW] in Jasper National Park. The review is conducted pursuant to s 44 of the Access
to Information Act, RSC 1985, c A-1 [Act]:
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44 (1) Any third party to whom the
head of a government institution is required under paragraph 28(1)(b) or
subsection 29(1) to give a notice of a decision to disclose a record or a
part thereof under this Act may, within twenty days after the notice is
given, apply to the Court for a review of the matter.
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44 (1)
Le tiers que le responsable d’une institution fédérale est tenu, en vertu de
l’alinéa 28(1)b) ou du paragraphe 29(1), d’aviser de la communication totale
ou partielle d’un document peut, dans les vingt jours suivant la transmission
de l’avis, exercer un recours en révision devant la Cour.
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(2) The head of a government
institution who has given notice under paragraph 28(1)(b) or subsection 29(1)
that a record requested under this Act or a part thereof will be disclosed
shall forthwith on being given notice of an application made under subsection
(1) in respect of the disclosure give written notice of the application to
the person who requested access to the record.
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(2) Le
responsable d’une institution fédérale qui a donné avis de communication
totale ou partielle d’un document en vertu de l’alinéa 28(1)b) ou du
paragraphe 29(1) est tenu, sur réception d’un avis de recours en révision de
cette décision, d’en aviser par écrit la personne qui avait demandé
communication du document.
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(3) Any person who has been given
notice of an application for a review under subsection (2) may appear as a
party to the review.
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(3) La
personne qui est avisée conformément au paragraphe (2) peut comparaître comme
partie à l’instance.
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[2]
Although the parties have narrowed the documents
in dispute, the conclusion of this Court is that only those documents with some
personal information are exempt from disclosure.
Should
there be any dispute as to what information is now to be disclosed or which
Records are to be redacted, the parties may seek the Court’s Direction.
II.
Background
[3]
Brewster was founded in 1892 and has been
operating in Banff and Jasper National Parks for 120 years. It has operated as
a guide company in the Icefields Parkway in Jasper National Park since the
1930s and has, since 1996, operated the Glacier Discovery Centre near the
Icefields Parkway.
[4]
In late 2010 Brewster applied for the rights to
build and operate GDW, located approximately 6.5 kilometres north of the
Glacier Discovery Centre.
This
approval was granted after a significant process of consultation with Parks
Canada.
[5]
On January 17, 2011, the public was notified
that an environmental assessment would occur in relation to the GDW pursuant to
the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act, SC 1992 c 37 (since repealed).
That assessment process consisted of a three-week review and comment period
commencing in November 2011.
[6]
By February 2012, the GDW project was approved
and a program was implemented to verify the accuracy of the assessment and to
determine the effectiveness of measures taken to mitigate adverse effects.
Further, an annual wildlife impact study was developed and implemented, to
continue yearly for three years.
[7]
Parks Canada reviewed an access to information
request for a variety of communications surrounding the GDW proposal and
approval process.
[8]
Parks Canada sent Brewster a Third Party Notice
letter pursuant to s 28 of the Act, inviting Brewster to make submissions as to
non-disclosure of the records requested. The notice letter contained 1,600
pages of documents.
Brewster
requested an extension of time to file submissions. That request was denied.
[9]
Parks Canada decided to release the Records
about which Brewster filed this review application claiming exemption from
disclosure under s 20(1)(b), (c) and (d) of the Act. The Information
Commissioner was added as a party.
III.
Analysis
[10]
The relevant provisions of the Act are:
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19 (1) Subject to subsection (2), the
head of a government institution shall refuse to disclose any record
requested under this Act that contains personal information as defined in
section 3 of the Privacy Act.
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19 (1)
Sous réserve du paragraphe (2), le responsable d’une institution fédérale est
tenu de refuser la communication de documents contenant les renseignements
personnels visés à l’article 3 de la Loi sur la protection des
renseignements personnels.
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(2) The head of a government
institution may disclose any record requested under this Act that contains
personal information if
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(2) Le
responsable d’une institution fédérale peut donner communication de documents
contenant des renseignements personnels dans les cas où :
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(a) the individual to whom it relates
consents to the disclosure;
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a) l’individu qu’ils concernent y consent;
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(b) the information is publicly available; or
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b) le public y a accès;
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(c) the disclosure is in accordance with section 8 of the Privacy
Act.
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c) la communication est conforme à l’article
8 de la Loi sur la protection des renseignements personnels.
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20 (1) Subject to this section, the
head of a government institution shall refuse to disclose any record
requested under this Act that contains
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20 (1)
Le responsable d’une institution fédérale est tenu, sous réserve des autres
dispositions du présent article, de refuser la communication de documents
contenant :
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…
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…
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(b) financial, commercial, scientific or technical information that
is confidential information supplied to a government institution by a third
party and is treated consistently in a confidential manner by the third
party;
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b) des renseignements financiers,
commerciaux, scientifiques ou techniques fournis à une institution fédérale
par un tiers, qui sont de nature confidentielle et qui sont traités comme
tels de façon constante par ce tiers;
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…
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…
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(c) information the disclosure of which could reasonably be expected
to result in material financial loss or gain to, or could reasonably be
expected to prejudice the competitive position of, a third party; or
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c) des renseignements dont la divulgation
risquerait vraisemblablement de causer des pertes ou profits financiers
appréciables à un tiers ou de nuire à sa compétitivité;
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(d) information the disclosure of which could reasonably be expected
to interfere with contractual or other negotiations of a third party.
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d) des renseignements dont la divulgation
risquerait vraisemblablement d’entraver des négociations menées par un tiers
en vue de contrats ou à d’autres fins.
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The Privacy Act,
RSC 1985, c P-21, defines “personal information”
as follows:
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3 … personal information
means information about an identifiable individual that is recorded in any
form including, without restricting the generality of the foregoing,
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3 … renseignements
personnels Les renseignements, quels que soient leur forme et leur
support, concernant un individu identifiable, notamment :
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(a) information relating to the race, national or ethnic origin,
colour, religion, age or marital status of the individual,
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a) les renseignements relatifs à sa race, à
son origine nationale ou ethnique, à sa couleur, à sa religion, à son âge ou
à sa situation de famille;
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(b) information relating to the education or the medical, criminal or
employment history of the individual or information relating to financial
transactions in which the individual has been involved,
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b) les renseignements relatifs à son
éducation, à son dossier médical, à son casier judiciaire, à ses antécédents
professionnels ou à des opérations financières auxquelles il a participé;
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…
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…
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(d) the address, fingerprints or blood type of the individual,
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d) son adresse, ses empreintes digitales ou
son groupe sanguin;
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(e) the personal opinions or views of the individual except where
they are about another individual or about a proposal for a grant, an award
or a prize to be made to another individual by a government institution or a
part of a government institution specified in the regulations,
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e) ses opinions ou ses idées personnelles, à
l’exclusion de celles qui portent sur un autre individu ou sur une
proposition de subvention, de récompense ou de prix à octroyer à un autre
individu par une institution fédérale, ou subdivision de celle-ci visée par
règlement;
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…
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…
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[11]
There are four issues in this review:
1.
The applicability of s 20(1)(b) (financial,
commercial, scientific information);
2.
The applicability of s 20(1)(c) (disclosure
causing financial injury);
3.
The applicability of s 20(1)(d) (interference
with contractual or other negotiations); and
4.
The applicability of s 19 to some of the Records
(personal information).
[12]
The standard of review for s 44 reviews is
correctness (Merck Frosst Canada Ltd v Canada (Health), 2012 SCC 3 at
para 53, [2012] 1 S.C.R. 23):
[53] There are no discretionary
decisions by the institutional head at issue in this case. Under s. 51 of the
Act, the judge on review is to determine whether “the head of a government
institution is required to refuse to disclose a record” and, if so, the judge
must order the head not to disclose it. It follows that when a third party,
such as Merck in this case, requests a “review” under s. 44 of the Act by the
Federal Court of a decision by a head of a government institution to disclose all
or part of a record, the Federal Court judge is to determine whether the
institutional head has correctly applied the exemptions to the records in
issue: Canada (Information Commissioner) v. Canada (Commissioner of the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police), 2003 SCC 8, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 66, at para.
19; Canada (Information Commissioner) v. Canada (Minister of National
Defence), 2011 SCC 25, [2011] 2 S.C.R. 306, at para. 22. This review has
sometimes been referred to as de novo assessment of whether the record is exempt
from disclosure: see, e.g., Air Atonabee Ltd. v. Canada (Minister of
Transport) (1989), 37 Admin. L.R. 245 (F.C.T.D.), at pp. 265-66; Merck
Frosst Canada & Co. v. Canada (Minister of Health), 2003 FC 1422
(CanLII), at para. 3; Dagg, at para. 107. The term “de novo” may
not, strictly speaking, be apt; there is, however, no disagreement in the cases
that the role of the judge on review in these types of cases is to determine
whether the exemptions have been applied correctly to the contested records.
Sections 44, 46 and 51 are the most relevant statutory provisions governing
this review.
[13]
As confirmed by the Supreme Court, the burden
under s 20 is on the party resisting disclosure.
[14]
With respect to the matter of “personal information”, the Court must engage in a
two-step process. Firstly, the Court determines, on a correctness standard,
whether the information meets the definition; secondly, the Court examines the
reasonableness of any discretionary decision to disclose such personal
information.
In
the present case, Parks Canada has not engaged in this exercise of discretion.
A.
Section 20(1)(b)
[15]
Brewster has failed to establish this exemption.
In order to fall within s 20(1)(b), the information at issue “must actually contain ‘commercial information’” as noted
in Brainhunter (Ottawa) Inc v Canada (Attorney General), 2009 FC 1172,
356 FTR 166 [Brainhunter].
[16]
It is too broad an argument that because
Brewster is in business and engaged with Parks Canada on a proposed commercial
enterprise, all records (in this case primarily correspondence) should be
characterized as commercial.
[17]
Section 20(1)(b) creates a class-based (as
opposed to a harm-based) exemption. Inclusion in this class does not depend on
the context surrounding the request. Brewster must objectively satisfy all
three criteria of the provision – the type of information; its quality and
treatment; and its provenance.
[18]
The type of information covered by the provision
typically includes costs, profits, pricing strategies, manufacturing processes,
business or operations methods.
[19]
As noted by the Minister and expanded upon by
the Information Commissioner, administrative details such as page numbering, dates,
location of information and e-mails scheduling meetings or phone calls are not
the type of information contemplated by s 20(1)(b).
[20]
Moreover, Brewster has failed to establish the
confidential nature of the information at issue. It failed to provide concrete
evidence of that characteristic.
As
noted in Brainhunter at para 25, the party resisting disclosure must
provide:
… actual direct evidence of the confidential
nature of the remaining information which must disclose a reasonable
explanation for exempting each record. Evidence which is vague or speculative
in nature cannot be relied upon to justify an exemption under subsection 20(1).
…
[21]
Examples of the type of documents Brewster
claims are within the “class” include
information in one document which has been made public in another; Parks
Canada’s own information; publicly available Facebook pages; and summaries of
public comments related to an environmental assessment.
[22]
Further, Brewster has not demonstrated a
reasonable expectation of confidentiality from Parks Canada nor has it shown
that the company itself treated or even attempted to treat the information as
confidential. The typical bottom of e-mail “confidentiality” note is not
sufficient – such notes are largely format and platitudes.
[23]
Lastly, Brewster failed to address, much less
demonstrate, how the treatment of the information in issue would “foster its relationship with government for the public’s
benefit”. There is no evidence of harm to open dialogue or the exchange
of information which must be protected.
[24]
The claim for exemption from disclosure on this
ground has not been made out.
B.
Section 20(1)(c)
[25]
Brewster’s difficulties under s 20(1)(b) were
repeated in its claim under s 20(1)(c). Here the exemption is “harm-based”. The test is a “reasonable
expectation of probable harm”.
[26]
A review of the information at issue does not
support a claim for harm. The allegation that the Records disclosed highly
strategic considerations is not made out. The bulk of the information deals
with meeting scheduling, logistics about the environmental assessment and the
development of a goat tracking system in the Park.
[27]
There is no evidence to establish how any of the
Records would disclose Brewster’s well-regarded expertise in tourism
operations. There was none of the usual type of information frequently seen in
these cases showing a link between the information at issue, its importance and
how that information could be used to harm Brewster or prejudice it in some
way.
[28]
It is insufficient to merely assert that harm
will follow disclosure without a cogent supportable basis in fact.
C.
Section 20(1)(d)
[29]
There is no evidence that the disclosure of the
Records would interfere with actual contractual negotiations or other business
negotiations.
[30]
Brewster has provided no evidence of actual
contract negotiations that could be harmed by disclosure. Mere assertions of
fears are insufficient.
D.
Section 19
[31]
Section 19 is a mandatory class-based exemption
subject to several exceptions.
The
Commissioner has identified a number of instances (names, e-mail addresses,
etc.) where personal information would be disclosed.
[32]
I agree with the Commissioner and would order
that the Records be reviewed and the information identified by the Information
Commissioner be redacted before the Records are released.
IV.
Conclusion
[33]
The Court concludes that, subject to the
redactions mentioned above, the Applicant’s application for judicial review and
prevention of disclosure of the Records will be denied. Both the Respondent and
the Information Commissioner of Canada will have their costs.