N.S. information czar wants law to put onus on province to comply with rulings
HALIFAX — Nova Scotia’s government should obey an oversight body’s recommendations to release documents or have to convince a judge why they’re justified in refusing, the province’s information and privacy commissioner recommended Tuesday.
Catherine Tully made the proposal for changes to the province’s freedom-of-information laws in an annual report that includes 33 other recommendations she said are needed to bring the province’s information and privacy laws into the 21st century.
The Liberal government can currently sit on records and force citizens to go through expensive court battles even after Tully produces a decision ordering their release.
“It currently puts all the costs and the pressure on the applicant … and it means the oversight we provide isn’t that meaningful,” she said in an interview on Tuesday.


