Dockets: T-291-14
T-1481-14
Citation:
2015 FC 1392
Ottawa, Ontario, December 18, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Brown
BETWEEN:
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CALIAN LTD.
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Applicant
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And
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ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA and INFORMATION COMMISSIONER OF CANADA
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Respondents
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PUBLIC REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
SAME AS PREVIOUSLY RELEASED CONFIDENTIAL VERSION
[1]
This is an application by Calian Ltd. [the
Applicant or Calian] under section 44 of the Access to Information Act,
RSC 1985, c A-1 [Act] for judicial review of two materially identical
decisions of the Minister of Public Works and Government Services Canada
[PWGSC] refusing to redact portions of the Applicant’s confidential business
records under the Act. Except for the redactions requested, the
Applicant agrees to the release of the records.
[2]
In my opinion, this application should be
granted for two reasons. First, the Applicant’s Personnel Rates, which the head
of the institution refused to redact, warrant exemptions under both paragraphs
20(1)(c) and (d) of the Act. Secondly, the head of the institution
erred by failing to consider the discretion granted under subsection 20(5) of
the Act, thus failing to carry out his or her statutory duty as
required. Therefore, the two decisions at issue are set aside and remitted for
re-determination.
I.
Facts
[3]
The Applicant is an Ottawa-based firm whose
Business and Technology Services division provides flexible short-term and
long-term placements for highly specialized and other research personnel professionals
such as engineers, information technology specialists and healthcare consultants.
The Applicant’s Business and Technology Services division augments the
workforces of its customers throughout Canada and around the world, by
providing short- and long-term placements for various professionals such as
engineers, information technology specialists and healthcare professionals. A
significant proportion of the Applicant’s business relates to the provision of
personnel services to the Government of Canada.
[4]
On September 4, 2009, PWGSC launched a request
for standing offer [RFSO] to provide research assistants to the Royal Military
College [RMC] in Kingston, Ontario. RMC is Canada’s national military university
based in Kingston, Ontario. RMC’s mandate includes the provision of research
for the Department of National Defence [DND] and other government departments. The
RFSO required the bidding parties to include personnel rates or unit prices
[Personnel Rates] for each labour category or type of specialist provided by
the bidder. The Personnel Rates in each of the many service categories were to
be adjusted annually over the five-year life of the contract resulting from the
RFSO. The RFSO also required the bidder to adhere to various clauses.
[5]
The Applicant submitted an offer in response to
the RFSO. On November 30, 2009, the Applicant won the bid and was awarded
Standing Offer W0046-08001/001/TOR [the 2010-14 Standing Offer] for the “Provision of Research Assistants”. The Applicant
thereby became the exclusive supplier of specialized research personnel to RMC
for the period of January 1, 2010 to December 31, 2014.
[6]
This was the third competitive procurement the
Applicant bid on and won to provide research assistants to RMC, having
previously won standing offers tendered in both 1997 and again in 2002 [2003-09
Standing Offer].
[7]
The Applicant’s successful bid for the 2010-14
Standing Offer contained Personnel Rates for a wide range of specialized and
technical fields, including specialists in counter-terrorism, environmental
science and engineering, nuclear science and engineering, communications,
undersea acoustics, advanced engineering materials, operations research,
mathematical modelling and simulation.
[8]
The sophistication of the research services
required by RMC is established by the expected education and experience of
personnel to be supplied by Calian. DND estimated that almost one-third of such
personnel would require either a Master’s degree or a Doctorate, and one in ten
would require a Doctorate and more than 20 relevant publications to their name.
Calian is required to maintain an inventory of qualified candidates, and upon
request undertake national and international searches for suitably qualified
candidates. The Statement of Work for the 2010-14 Standing Offer emphasized it
was “essential that well qualified researchers of high
calibre be attracted to carry out the work and that a stable attractive
environment be maintained to ensure continuity”.
[9]
The RFSO contained approximately 100 different
categories of research assistants and professionals including those within the
same labour category. There are many different skill levels within the same
labour categories. The rates for each labour category change each year over the
RFSO’s five-year term. Thus, the unit rates [also called Personnel Rates] set
approximately 500 different prices over the life of the contract (100
categories times five years).
II.
The Disclosure Clause
[10]
The RFSO and resulting contract contained the
following Disclosure Clause:
Disclosure of Information
The Offeror agrees to the disclosure of its
standing offer unit prices or rates by Canada, and further agrees that it will
have no right to claim against Canada, the Identified User, their employees,
agents or servants, or any of them, in relation to such disclosure.
III.
No Disclosure of Personnel Rates in the Past
[11]
The Applicant’s evidence concerning the meaning
of this clause is contained in the affidavit of Mr. Jerry Johnston, the
Applicant’s Vice President of Operations. His evidence was almost entirely
based on his direct experience with the Applicant going back to the Applicant’s
first RFSO in 1997, and before that, to when he started with the Applicant in
1992. He was not cross-examined. Mr. Johnston’s evidence was that:
- in all his
years with Calian, Mr. Johnston could not recall a single occasion on
which detailed billing rates in contracts were disclosed by the government
over the objections of the Applicant;
- further,
such information had always been protected by the government pursuant to
the provisions of section 20 of the Act, despite being the subject
of a number of requests for access under it;
- in light of
that practice, it was not reasonable to expect the Applicant to have
understood that the government’s intention in respect of the disclosure
clause was that it applied to the detailed billing rates [Personnel Rates,
ed.] from the 2010-14 RFSO;
- while
considering the Applicant’s response to the current access to information
request, Mr. Johnston consulted with colleagues at Calian as to their
understanding of the reason for including such disclosure clauses in
standing offers;
- their
collective best understanding, based on experience and discussions over
the years with government contracting authorities, was that the disclosure
provision had to be included in standing offers because it would allow the
rates to be shared among the various government departments with access to
a standing offer, and not that it would allow the rates to be disclosed to
the public, particularly competitors; and
- over the
years, a number of access requests had been made seeking the release of
information similar to the Personnel Rates now in issue. In each case
however, while the contracts themselves were released, the heads of
institution redacted what are now called Personnel Rates, i.e., unit
prices for the research services supplied under the RFSOs.
IV.
The 2009 Access Request – Unit Prices were
Redacted Under Paragraph 20(1)(c)
[12]
In addition to the above, the Applicant provided
detailed uncontradicted evidence concerning an access request made in 2009 that
asked for essentially the same information requested now. It concerned the
Applicant’s previous standing offer for RMC, namely the 2003-09 Standing Offer.
The 2009 access to information request was worded as follows:
Copy of an existing contract between PWGSC
and Calian, a defence contractor company, to provide research assistant
personnel to RMC. Contract expires 31 Mar 09.
[13]
While the head of the institution released the
2009 contract, he or she redacted all of the Applicant’s information equivalent
to the Personnel Rates at issue in today’s application. In making these
redactions, the head of the institution applied paragraph 20(1)(c) of
the Act. This provision requires the exemption of “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.”
[14]
It is very important to note that the 2003-09
Standing Offer also contained a Disclosure Clause, worded almost identically to
the Disclosure Clause in issue today. It read:
The Offeror agrees to the disclosure of its
Standing Offer unit prices or rates by Canada, and further agrees that it shall
have no right to claim against Canada, the Minister, the Identified User, their
employees, agents or servants, or any of them, in relation to such disclosure.
[15]
For comparative purposes, the Disclosure Clause
at issue in the case at bar (see para 10) states:
The Offeror agrees to the disclosure of its
standing offer unit prices or rates by Canada, and further agrees that it will
have no right to claim against Canada, the Identified User, their employees,
agents or servants, or any of them, in relation to such disclosure.
[16]
In my respectful view, there is no difference
between the Disclosure Clause at issue in this case and the one at issue in
2009, where, as here, the initial position of the head of the institution was
to release the unit prices/Personnel Rates.
[17]
The decision-maker at the time of the 2009
redactions was the DND. In the current request, the decision-maker is PWGSC. It
seems that the portions of DND’s contracting administration moved from DND to
PWGSC; however, no material differences were identified between the two
departments for the purposes of these consolidated proceedings.
V.
The Current Access Request and its Processing
[18]
The access request at issue now is dated October
29, 2013; it asks for the following records:
Please provide a copy of all contracts,
contract amendments, correspondence, and emails related to contract number
W0046-08001/001/TOR (Military R&D) for the period of 2009/11/30 to
2013/03/01.
[19]
PWGSC engaged the following process for handling
this request. There is no objection to the process followed, only the resulting
refusal to redact. First, PWGSC compiled a set of records containing the
Applicant’s potentially confidential third-party information. Then it sent
these to the Applicant by letter dated November 21, 2013, and asked for the
Applicant’s representations as to what might be released, thereby initiating
the consultation process with respect to third party information set out at
section 27 of the Act:
27. (1) If the head of a government institution intends to
disclose a record requested under this Act that contains or that the head has
reason to believe might contain trade secrets of a third party, information
described in paragraph 20(1)(b) or (b.1) that was supplied by a
third party, or information the disclosure of which the head can reasonably
foresee might effect a result described in paragraph 20(1)(c) or (d)
in respect of a third party, the head shall make every reasonable effort to
give the third party written notice of the request and of the head’s
intention to disclose within 30 days after the request is received.
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27. (1) Le responsable d’une institution fédérale qui a
l’intention de communiquer un document fait tous les efforts raisonnables
pour donner au tiers intéressé, dans les trente jours suivant la réception de
la demande, avis écrit de celle-ci ainsi que de son intention, si le document
contient ou s’il est, selon lui, susceptible de contenir des secrets
industriels du tiers, des renseignements visés aux alinéas 20(1)b) ou b.1)
qui ont été fournis par le tiers ou des renseignements dont la communication
risquerait vraisemblablement, selon lui, d’entraîner pour le tiers les
conséquences visées aux alinéas 20(1)c) ou d).
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[20]
In a letter dated December 18, 2013, the
Applicant opposed the disclosure by PWGSC, requesting redaction of its
Personnel Rates including the redactions similar to those requested and granted
in 2009.
VI.
PWGSC’s January 3, 2014 Decision Refusing to Redact
– The First Decision Now Under Review
[21]
On January 3, 2014, PWGSC issued a decision
under section 28 of the Act. It found certain portions of the requested
records were partially exempt from disclosure. However, in a break from past
practice going back to 1997, the head of the institution declined to redact the
Applicant’s Personnel Rates, stating simply: “as the
disclosure of information clause has already been incorporated in the
[2010-2014] Standing Offer, the unit prices and rates cannot be considered to
be confidential third party information that would prejudice your competitive
position and we must therefore release them.”
[22]
This decision led the Applicant to file an application
for judicial review under section 44 of the Act, being Court File
T-291-14, which led to the production of a Certified Tribunal Record.
VII.
PWGSC’s June 5, 2014 Decision Refusing to Redact
– The Second Decision Under Review
[23]
When the Applicant received and reviewed the
Certified Tribunal Record, it became apparent that additional documents should
have been but were not included in the original consultation process.
[24]
Therefore, on May 2, 2014, PWGSC engaged a
second round of consultations and sought the Applicant’s position on the
additional documents. In response, the Applicant requested redaction of
Personnel Rates by letter dated May 21, 2014.
[25]
On June 5, 2014, PWGSC issued a second decision
under section 28 of the Act. Once again, while PWGSC decided certain
portions of these additional records were partially exempt from disclosure,
PWGSC declined to redact the Personnel Rates. As it had previously, PWGSC
stated simply: “… the disclosure of information clause
has already been incorporated in the [2010-2014] Standing Offer, the unit
prices and rates cannot be considered to be confidential third party
information that would prejudice your competitive position and we must
therefore release them.”
[26]
Therefore, the Applicant filed the second
application for judicial review, being Court File T-1481-14.
VIII.
The Two Current Requests Are Materially the
Same: Applications Consolidated
[27]
The two applications raise the same issues and
by Order of this Court have been consolidated. PWGSC’s justifications for not
redacting are the same in both decisions under review. There are no material
differences in the subject matter of the two applications for judicial review,
which consist of the Applicant’s Personnel Rates in addition to Travel and
Living, and Overtime Rates as set out in its response to the 2010-14 RFSO. For
ease of reference, I have and will continue to refer to all the confidential
material in dispute as “Personnel Rates”. The two applications were heard
together. Therefore, these reasons apply to both applications without
distinction, and a copy of these reasons will be placed in each of the two
Court files.
IX.
Decision under Review
[28]
The matters under review are the January 3, 2014
and June 5, 2014 decisions by PWGSC not to redact the Applicant’s Personnel
Rates. Otherwise, the Applicant did not oppose release of the records.
X.
Issues
[29]
While the Applicant also requested redaction
under paragraph 20(1)(b) and section 18 of the Act, in my view,
the determinative issues are:
A.
Are the Applicant’s Personnel Rates entitled to
redaction pursuant to paragraph 20(1)(c) of the Act, and is it
affected by the Disclosure Clause?
B.
Are the Applicant’s Personnel Rates entitled to
redaction pursuant to paragraph 20(1)(d) of the Act, and is it
affected by the Disclosure Clause?
C.
Was the head of the institution required to and,
if so, did he or she consider the discretion to redact the Personnel Rates by
subsection 20(5) of the Act?
XI.
Relevant Legislation
[30]
The relevant legislative provisions are sections
18 and section 20 of the Act:
18. The head
of a government institution may refuse to disclose any record requested under
this Act that contains
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18. Le
responsable d’une institution fédérale peut refuser la communication de
documents contenant :
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(a) trade secrets or financial, commercial, scientific or
technical information that belongs to the Government of Canada or a
government institution and has substantial value or is reasonably likely to
have substantial value;
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a) des
secrets industriels ou des renseignements financiers, commerciaux,
scientifiques ou techniques appartenant au gouvernement du Canada ou à une
institution fédérale et ayant une valeur importante ou pouvant
vraisemblablement en avoir une;
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(b) information the disclosure of which could reasonably be
expected to prejudice the competitive position of a government institution or
to interfere with contractual or other negotiations of a government
institution;
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b) des
renseignements dont la communication risquerait vraisemblablement de nuire à
la compétitivité d’une institution fédérale ou d’entraver des négociations —
contractuelles ou autres — menées par une institution fédérale;
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(c) scientific or technical information obtained through
research by an officer or employee of a government institution, the
disclosure of which could reasonably be expected to deprive the officer or
employee of priority of publication; or
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c) des
renseignements techniques ou scientifiques obtenus grâce à des recherches par
un cadre ou employé d’une institution fédérale et dont la divulgation
risquerait vraisemblablement de priver cette personne de sa priorité de
publication;
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(d) information the disclosure of which could reasonably be
expected to be materially injurious to the financial interests of a
government institution or to the ability of the Government of Canada to
manage the economy of Canada or could reasonably be expected to result in an
undue benefit to any person, including such information that relates to
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d) des
renseignements dont la communication risquerait vraisemblablement de porter
un préjudice appréciable aux intérêts financiers d’une institution fédérale
ou à la capacité du gouvernement du Canada de gérer l’économie du pays ou
encore de causer des avantages injustifiés à une personne. Ces renseignements
peuvent notamment porter sur :
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(i) the currency, coinage or legal tender of Canada,
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(i) la monnaie canadienne, son monnayage ou son pouvoir
libératoire,
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(ii) a contemplated change in the rate of bank interest or in
government borrowing,
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(ii) les projets de changement du taux d’intérêt bancaire ou du
taux d’emprunt du gouvernement,
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(iii) a contemplated change in tariff rates, taxes, duties or any
other revenue source,
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(iii) les projets de changement des taux tarifaires, des taxes,
impôts ou droits ou des autres sources de revenu,
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(iv) a contemplated change in the conditions of operation of
financial institutions,
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(iv) les projets de changement dans le mode de fonctionnement des
institutions financières,
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(v) a contemplated sale or purchase of securities or of foreign or
Canadian currency, or
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(v) les projets de vente ou d’achat de valeurs mobilières ou de
devises canadiennes ou étrangères,
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(vi) a contemplated sale or acquisition of land or property.
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(vi) les projets de vente ou d’acquisition de terrains ou autres
biens.
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…
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…
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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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…
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…
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(5) The head of a government institution may disclose any record
that contains information described in subsection (1) with the consent of the
third party to whom the information relates.
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(5) Le responsable d’une institution fédérale peut communiquer
tout document contenant les renseignements visés au paragraphe (1) si le
tiers que les renseignements concernent y consent.
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XII.
Standard of Review
[31]
In Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9
at paras 57 and 62, the Supreme Court of Canada held that a standard of review
analysis is unnecessary where “the jurisprudence has
already determined in a satisfactory manner the degree of deference to be
accorded with regard to a particular category of question.” The Supreme
Court of Canada’s decision in Merck Frosst Canada Ltd v Canada (Health),
2012 SCC 3 [Merck] did just that by determining the standard of review
and degree of deference to be given to a decision-maker’s application of
paragraph 20(1)(c). I consider the same test applies to paragraphs
20(1)(b) and 20(1)(d). Merck holds there are no
discretionary decisions under subsection 20(1) of the Act. The decision
to disclose or not to disclose is judicially reviewed on the standard of
correctness. This Court must determine whether the exemptions have been applied
correctly to the requested records.
[32]
Furthermore, there are no discretionary
decisions in this case. No deference is owed to the decision-maker. This flows
from the mandatory nature of the opening words of subsection 20(1) of the Act,
which state: “Subject to this section, the head of a
government institution shall refuse to disclose any record. …” In Merck,
the Supreme Court of Canada said (at para 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
… . This review has sometimes been referred to as de novo assessment of
whether the record is exempt from disclosure ... . 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.
[emphasis added; citations omitted]
[33]
This law is well summarized by Justice Rennie
(as he then was) in Porter Airlines Inc v Canada (Attorney General),
2014 FC 392, where Justice Rennie stated that the standard of review is
correctness (see paras 15–16): “The appropriate
standard of review in this case is correctness. … [A]t issue is whether the
Department correctly characterized the documents in question when it determined
that they were not subject to the exemptions against disclosure under the Act.”
[34]
Merck is also
important because it emphasizes the need for evidence-based analysis of the
exemption claimed on a case by case basis. The Supreme Court of Canada in Merck
repeatedly highlighted the evidence-dependent nature of this inquiry, the need
to take care not to overgeneralize the holdings of particular cases, stating:
[149] […] However, much will depend on
the evidence in a particular case.
[150] I underline this last point. Once
the relevant legal principles are established, whether or not a record is
confidential is primarily a question of fact. Care must be taken, therefore,
not to over-generalize the holdings of particular cases, by failing to give
due regard to the evidence which was before the court in those cases. … The key
point is that these principles are not self-applying and must be considered
in light of the evidence in each case.
[151] It seems to me that the dispute
between the parties on this point turns more on a question of fact rather
than on a question of legal principle.
[…]
[211] I now turn to address the parties’
submissions about the type of harm on which a third party may rely in claiming
the s. 20(1)(c) exemption. It is for the reviewing judge to decide whether the
evidence shows that disclosure could reasonably be expected to result in harm
of the nature specified in s. 20(1)(c). I mention this to underline the point
that while the case law can set out general principles governing the
provision’s application, at the end of the day, there is a significant
factual component to the inquiry which will turn on the particular
circumstances and evidence in each case.
[emphasis added]
XIII.
Submissions of the Parties and Analysis
[35]
The Applicant submits its Personnel Rates are
covered by several mandatory statutory exemptions and therefore its Personnel
Rates must be redacted by PWGSC. It further says the discretion under
subsection 20(5) should have been but was not considered. In opposition, the
Respondents say that none of the subsections apply essentially due to the
existence of the Disclosure Clause. Its opposition to subsection 20(5) was
necessarily muted given its reliance on consent under subsection 20(1) and the
fairly obvious fact the decisions below are silent on the discretion under
subsection 20(1).
[36]
In my view, the determinative provisions for
this application are paragraphs 20(1)(c) and (d), together with
subsection 20(5) to which I will now turn. I will discuss paragraph 20(1)(b)
and section 18 towards the end of these reasons.
A.
Are the Applicant’s Personnel Rates entitled to
redaction pursuant to paragraph 20(1)(c) of the Act, and is it affected by the
Disclosure Clause?
[37]
Paragraph 20(1)(c) requires the redaction
of third party documents containing, “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”.
[38]
Merck sets out
the following legal principles governing the consideration and application of
paragraph 20(1)(c):
- the onus is
on the Applicant to establish its entitlement to the exemption, which
depends on the nature of the material and the particular context of the
case: “a third party must establish that the
statutory exemption applies on the balance of probabilities. However, what
evidence will be required to reach that standard will be affected by the
nature of the proposition the third party seeks to establish and the particular
context of the case.” (Merck at para 94);
- “[…] A third party claiming an exemption under s. 20(1)(c) of
the Act must show that the risk of harm is considerably above a mere
possibility, although not having to establish on the balance of probabilities
that the harm will in fact occur.”: Merck
at para 199. The Court concluded at paragraph 206: “To conclude, the accepted formulation of “reasonable
expectation of probable harm” captures the need to demonstrate that
disclosure will result in a risk of harm that is well beyond the merely
possible or speculative, but also that it need not be proved on the
balance of probabilities that disclosure will in fact result in such harm.”;
and
- the types of
harm covered by paragraph 20(1)(c) are disjunctive: “It is sufficient for a third party to show that
disclosure could reasonably be expected to result in any one of a
financial loss or gain or in prejudice to the third party’s competitive
position. In other words, it is not necessary for the third party to show that
the “prejudice” to his or her competitive position also results in “harm””:
Merck at para 212.
XIV.
Nature of the Personnel Rates
[39]
The Applicant’s Personnel Rates are the
micro-level prices the Applicant will receive for each individual specialist
within the very great number of different labour categories, plus relevant
overtime and travel rates. As already noted, there are approximately 500
different labour categories over the five-year life of the RFSO. These
micro-level prices are not the total price paid under the contract; the total
price paid will depend on the type and frequency of specialists performing
work. The Applicant does not object to disclosure of the total price paid under
the RFSO, nor to that of the balance of the contract itself. The Applicant is
only concerned with the Personnel Rates, and travel and overtime rates.
[40]
The Applicant asks that Personnel Rates be
redacted now, as was done in the past. I agree for the following reasons.
[41]
In my assessment, the Personnel Rates
individually and in the aggregate are the most significant factor in the
success of the Applicant’s bid; they were crucial to the Applicant’s
competitive position, and to its ability to win the contract in the highly
competitive RFSO bidding process. I base this finding on, among other
considerations, the fact that the decision to award the RFSO was weighted 60%
on price and 40% on technical merit, and on the highly competitive nature of
the RFSO process.
[42]
In previous RFSOs, there was a “base price” for
each labour category. The “base price” was set by the Crown. However, bidders
were required to quote what was called a “fully-burdened price” for each labour
category. The “fully burdened price” was all inclusive; it included not only
the government-set “base price”, but in addition, it had to include the
bidder’s markup to cover overhead, all related bidder costs and the bidder’s
profit for each category. By deducting the published “base price” from the
fully burdened price, competitors and others could ascertain the company’s aggregate
markup for overhead, other costs, and profit.
[43]
The difference in the RFSO for the 2010-14
Standing Offer is important for several reasons. The government did not provide
a “base price” for each labour category; instead, each bidder had to quote a
complete all-inclusive price for each labour category. This change meant the
Applicant had to develop Personnel Rates from the ground up. The Applicant and
all bidders had to determine the complete price to be charged based on scores
of individual compensation levels, the Applicant’s confidential overhead, other
related costs, and an element of profit.
[44]
Importantly, the Applicant was able to and did
rely on its own internal business analyses to develop each of the many
Personnel Rates in its bid.
[45]
The uncontested evidence which I accept is that
the resulting ground-up development of Personnel Rates was the product of
confidential and proprietary salary and other information that the Applicant
itself obtained from, or negotiated with, the many individual potential providers
of required specialist labour services. Mr. Johnston’s affidavit makes it clear,
and there is no dispute, that this information was not publicly released in the
past. To each of those amounts, the Applicant added its acquired business
analyses in addition to what it needed as overhead, other costs, and profit.
[46]
Mr. Johnston gave credible uncontradicted
evidence of harm resulting from disclosure, which is reliable and which I
accept:
44. The competitive harm which would
arise from disclosure of the bill rates that Calian bid in the 2009 RFSO
competitive procurement is significantly increased because of the way that
PWGSC changed the competitive procurement in 2009. In each of the 1997 and 2002
RFSO procurements for RMC research assistance, RMC provided all bidders with
“base rates” for each category of research assistant, which were the minimum
rate of pay that a contractor could pay personnel in each category of
expertise. As noted above, bidders were only required to provide the “fully
burdened rate”, which was the actual salary and all applicable mark-ups to be
charged back to RMC.
45. However in the 2009 RFSO, I
understand that PWGSC refused to allow RMC to specify base rates for personnel.
Accordingly, in the 2009 RFSO, there was no guidance to bidders as to an
acceptable level of remuneration for personnel, and each bidder had to develop
a competitive strategy for billing rates that also addressed concerns about
recruitment and retention. In this regard, Calian relied on its extensive and
proprietary skills in managing personnel services to develop a competitive bill
rate matrix, and its proposal was considered to be the best value proposal
received by PWGSC. Allowing disclosure of the rates that Calian bid in the
competitive procurement would allow competitors to “free-ride” on the extensive
work undertaken by Calian, and Calian would be at a significant disadvantage
because it would not have access to the confidential information of any other
bidder.
[47]
In my respectful view, the Personnel Rates at issue
in the 2010-14 Standing Offer do indeed contain a great deal more confidential
information than previous Standing Offers; they contain the additional and very
significant additional information namely the Applicant’s own assessment of
“base price”. Previously, the base price was publicly available and set by the
Crown. In my view, this change makes the current Personnel Rates very much more
business-sensitive than the old fully burdened rates in previous standing
offers. Effectively, the old “base rate” that had been set for all bidders by
the Crown became an important new variable in this highly-competitive bidding
process. The resulting Personnel Rates are significantly more confidential than
the fully burdened unit prices in issue in the 2003-09 Standing Offer.
[48]
It is certainly not consistent for the head of
the institution to refuse to redact information from the 2010-14 Standing Offer
that is significantly more confidential and business-sensitive than information
it consistently redacted before, and it specifically redacted in the 2003-09
Standing Offer. In my view, the disclosure of Personnel Rates would create a
high degree of potential harm to the Applicant, and a risk of harm that is even
higher than previously would have been the case. I consider this to be a factor
in the reasonable expectations of harm analysis required under paragraph 20(1)(c)
as discussed later.
XV.
History of Dealings: Both Parties Consider and
Treat Personnel Rates as Exempt
[49]
In my view, the general history of dealings
between the parties is another relevant factor in considering the nature of the
Personnel Rates and the issue of reasonable expectations of harm outlined in
paragraph 20(1)(c) of the Act. Such dealings put the 2010-14
Standing Offer and the access request in their proper evidentiary and factual
contexts.
[50]
It is well-established on the facts of this
case, on credible evidence, that both parties treated the Personnel Rates, and
the previous analogous “fully burdened” unit rates, as exempt from disclosure
under the Act going back at least to 1997. Specifically, we know the
Applicant went through an almost identical process five years earlier
concerning the 2003-09 Standing Offer that it won in 2003. The 2003-09 and
2010-14 Standing Offers are essentially the same: both involved the same
government contracting party, namely, the Crown (represented by DND in 2003 and
PWGSC in 2010), both were to supply specialized consultant services to RMC, and
both contained materially identical Disclosure Clauses. The same access-related
events followed each Standing Offer signing: there were access requests (in
2009 and 2014), the Applicant objected on the grounds of confidentiality. The
same core issue arose, namely, whether to redact the micro-level labour
category fully burdened unit rates in 2009 and Personnel Rates in 2014. A
materially identical Disclosure Clause was common to both Standing Offers. In
both cases I should add, the parties were and are sophisticated entities
represented by good counsel.
[51]
While the Respondents disagree, in my view, the
inference arising from the parties’ past dealings and course of conduct is
compelling in terms of what is asked for under paragraph 20(1)(c) of the
Act. In 2009, the Crown recognized that disclosure of the fully burdened
unit prices could reasonably be expected to result in material financial loss
to the Applicant, could reasonably be expected to result in material financial
gain to a competitor, or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the
Applicant’s competitive position. While we know that paragraph 20(1)(c)
was relied upon in 2009, we do not know which part(s) of it the head of the
institution actually based his or her decision on. But we do know the head of
the institution, as required by paragraph 20(1)(c), redacted the fully
burdened unit price information from the disclosure and did so notwithstanding
his or her consideration of the same Disclosure Clause now raised by the
Respondents.
[52]
Given the heightened confidential nature of the
information presently being requested, in my respectful view, the head of the
institution should have redacted the Personnel Rates; their disclosure could
even more reasonably be expected to result in material financial loss or be
expected to prejudice the Applicant’s competitive position than in 2009.
[53]
The Respondents say that the 2009 decision
involved a different decision-maker and a different subject matter, and
therefore the 2009 decision should be ignored or discounted. The Respondents
submit that the 2009 access request involved material covered by the Defence
Production Act, RSC 1985, c D-1. It further says that stare decisis
does not apply to administrative agencies, implying that institution heads may
arrive at different results on materially the same facts.
[54]
These are not persuasive grounds to deny the
Applicant the statute’s protection from public disclosure of the Personnel
Rates. The institutions implementing and managing the RFSO processes and the
processes under the Act in this case are materially the same, whether
DND which redacted in 2009 or PWGSC which refused to redact in 2014. The
executive authority in both cases is the Crown, acting through the relevant
head of the institution. To accept otherwise would see form triumph over
substance. There is no evidence the change of delegated contracting
administration or management from DND to PWGSC made any difference to the
outcome of this case, given the nature of the information is the same. And, as
noted already, the Disclosure Clauses are materially the same.
[55]
The Respondents properly conceded, and I agree,
that PWGSC is not permitted to act in an arbitrary or capricious manner.
[56]
In my respectful view, the present case does not
involve stare decisis; rather, the issue is the correctness of the
decisions in these two cases based on the evidence. In any event, this is not a
case of stare decisis on these facts: the current Personnel Rates are
more commercially sensitive than the previously-considered unit prices as
discussed above.
XVI.
Prejudice or Harm to the Applicant’s
“Competitive Position” Under Paragraph 20(1)(c)
[57]
In terms of harm and prejudice to its
competitive position, the Applicant relies on uncontradicted evidence which I
accept. The evidence is that if the Applicant’s Personnel Rates are not
redacted, both the Applicant’s confidential pricing and bid strategies will be
revealed to its competitors. The bidding for this work is highly competitive.
The release of the Personnel Rates would allow the Applicant’s competitors to
gain access to the totality of the Applicant’s pricing and bid strategies.
[58]
On these bases, I have no difficultly concluding
that releasing the Applicant’s detailed Personnel Rates will give its
competitors a “free ride” on the complete range of Personnel Rates generated as
by the Applicant through the use of the Applicant’s business skills and
experience. Such disclosure would thereby tilt the level playing field against
the Applicant, and harm its ability to submit a winning bid.
[59]
I make this finding based on credible evidence
that disclosure of such proprietary information will provide competitors with
invaluable insight into the Applicant’s bid strategies, result in harm to its
competitive position and/or material loss to it. In addition, once the current
contract (including all option periods) expires, the Applicant has every reason
to expect that this same sort of bidding opportunity will again go out to
tender. Therefore, disclosure of this level of information about the Applicant’s
pricing in the 2010-14 Standing Offer would almost certainly result in an
increase in competitive harm to the Applicant’s bid for procurement. Disclosure
would grant the Applicant’s competitors complete access to its confidential
pricing information, disrupting the level competitive playing field that the RFSO
process is meant to ensure. Disclosure would increase the likelihood that the
Applicant would not succeed in submitting the winning bid by providing greater
tools to other bidders to win the bid at no cost to them for business practice
development. There was no serious challenge to this evidence of harm and
financial loss, tendered again by Mr. Johnston, a very senior officer whose
reliability and credibility is accepted.
[60]
The record established that such harm is not
hypothetical; the parties expected another RFSO would go to tender upon expiry
of the 2010-14 Standing Offer (the Court has no information whether this has
happened or not). I accept that if the Applicant’s competitors have access to
the Applicant’s successful Personnel Rates, they will use this information to
their own competitive advantage, and to the Applicant’s disadvantage. Moreover,
if the Personnel Rates are not redacted, the Applicant’s competitors would
compete using the Applicant’s pricing information but without having to incur
any of the costs of the Applicant’s extensive research and business experience;
i.e., at no cost to them. This evidence was placed on the record and not
contradicted.
[61]
The Applicant also contends, and I agree subject
to a general caution concerning the application of other cases to the facts of
a different case, that by disclosing the contract price, there is a real,
objective risk that this information will give competitors a head start or
“spring board” in developing competitive bids against the Applicant for future
contracts for data protection services. This risk is greater than a mere
possibility: see for another example Equifax Canada Co v Canada (Human
Resources and Skills Development), 2014 FC 487 at para 30 [Equifax].
[62]
The following passage from CORADIX Technology
Consulting Ltd v Canada (Minister of Public Works and Government Services),
2006 FC 1030 at para 31 [Coradix] applies to the case at bar:
On a section 44 review, the Court must
engage in a detailed scrutiny of the information to determine whether all or
parts of the information should be withheld from disclosure. In the present
case, there are a number of instances where when read in isolation it is not
readily apparent how disclosure of a specific item could compromise the
Applicant’s competitive position. However, when read in its entirety, it
becomes apparent that it is the composite of these various business and
management strategies that constitute the Applicant’s methodology and approach
to its core business, successful human resource management and quality
control. Viewed in this light, it becomes evident that should the
Information be disclosed, a competitor could implement or replicate the
Applicant’s methodology in subsequent bids to its competitive advantage and to
the detriment of the Applicant’s competitive position.
[emphasis added]
[63]
I note that in Coradix, as was the case
in the Applicant’s previous dealings, the relevant heads of the institution
agreed to redact the equivalent to Personnel Rates. That should have been done
in this case as well, as explained above and amplified below.
[64]
The Applicant’s evidence also outlined a risk of
potential harm from what it called “bid shopping”. The Applicant’s unchallenged
evidence from its credible and experienced Vice President was that allowing
disclosure of the Personnel Rates would effectively allow an undesirable form
of “bid shopping”, which is the practice of divulging a contractor’s bid to
other prospective contractors before the award of a contract in order to secure
a lower bid. Such bid shopping is in my respectful view, yet another
undesirable consequence of disclosure that would tilt the playing field against
and create a risk of harm to the Applicant in the next procurement round.
XVII.
Impact of the Disclosure Clause
[65]
The Respondents, who filed no evidence on the
foregoing issues, made a number of arguments to the effect that the Disclosure
Clause defeats the Applicant’s claim under paragraph 20(1)(c). It says
that if the Applicant did not want to accept the potential for competitive
harm, it should not have submitted a bid to a federal government agency, which
is covered by the Act. The Respondents allege the Disclosure Clause
consent breaks the required link between public access and loss or harm, and
distinguishes Equifax because it had no Disclosure Clause. The
Respondents argue the evidence of harm is speculative. With respect, I
disagree.
[66]
I accept the evidence of potential harm and
commercial disadvantage referred to above, and consider the Respondents’
arguments seem to be in part an effort to impose a higher burden under paragraph
20(1)(c) than allowed by the Supreme Court of Canada in Merck.
[67]
Of course, I agree that the Applicant did not
have to submit a bid. But this argument has no merit because, if accepted, it
would defeat any claim for exemption. It is also flawed in that it is premised
on the Respondents’ view of the case being correct. More centrally, it misses
the point, which is the right of the Applicant to redaction on the evidence of
this case.
[68]
I agree the Equifax decision did not deal
with a disclosure clause; I rely on Equifax because it accepts that
disclosure of unit pricing may give a competitor a head start, or free ride on
the Applicant’s unit pricing thereby giving rise to more than a mere
possibility of harm to the competitive position of a third party such as the
Applicant. Disclosure of unit prices had that potential effect in Equifax,
and it has that effect here as well.
[69]
I am respectfully unable to accept the
Respondents’ assertion that the Disclosure Clause prevents this Court from
finding that the Personnel Rates warrant an exemption under paragraph 20(1)(c).
[70]
I must come back to Parliament’s legislation before
us now. The exemption now under discussion (paragraph 20(1)(c)) and the
case law cited above require the Court to review the evidence and facts to see
if in this case there is “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”. In my view, a determination of what “could reasonably be expected”, requires an analysis
of all the circumstances. This Court must consider all relevant facts,
considerations and circumstances that “could reasonably
be expected” to establish the listed consequences referred to in the
legislation.
[71]
The thrust of the Respondents’ argument is that
the required analysis begins and ends with the Disclosure Clause in the 2010-14
Standing Offer, which the Respondents say has the effect of preventing the
Applicant from claiming protection provided by the Act against the risks
of harm identified in paragraph 20(1)(c). For completeness, the
Respondents urged the Court to find the Disclosure Clause a complete bar to the
exemptions in section 20(1) of the Act.
[72]
In my view, however, the Respondents’ argument
does not lead to the dismissal of this application. In my view, and logically
taken from the above, if the Court may take the existence of the Disclosure
Clause into consideration when assessing what “could
reasonably be expected” per paragraph 20(1)(c) (which it must),
the Court should also take into account other relevant facts and
considerations. In other words, the Act, in asking what “could reasonably be expected” requires the Court to
engage in a comprehensive analysis of relevant circumstances, not the
one-dimensional truncated review advanced by the Respondents. Specifically,
while I agree the Court must consider the Disclosure Clause, it must also
assess the history of dealings between the parties, their past experiences dating
back to 1997 including the 2009 access request, the 2009 decision to redact
notwithstanding a materially identical Disclosure Clause. The Court for the
same reasons must also assess and consider the Applicant’s understanding of how
and why that clause would be applied. These are components of the required
analysis of the statutory test.
[73]
The history of past dealings between these two
parties is outlined above; all previous access requests going back to 1997
resulted in the Applicant’s confidential pricing information being withheld. As
a recent and specific example, the same sort of pricing information (except
then the information was less potentially harmful and prejudicial) was redacted
under paragraph 20(1)(c) of the Act in 2009.
[74]
I accept Mr. Johnston’s uncontradicted and
broadly-sourced evidence (he consulted others in his company) that when bidding
on the 2010-14 Standing Offer, the Applicant had no reason to believe that the
Disclosure Clause gave consent to the release of the Applicant’s confidential
Personnel Rate information to its competitors or the public. Given the evidence,
that belief is credible and I accept it as reasonable. I accept his evidence
that the Applicant’s understanding of the Disclosure Clause was shaped by its
years of experience and discussions with various government procurement
officers. And I accept his evidence that the Applicant understood that
provisions like the 2003-09 and 2010-14 Disclosure Clauses were only included
to allow rates to be shared between various government entities. In my view,
these are reasonable understandings for the Applicant’s Vice President and
other officers to have.
[75]
In my view, the Disclosure Clause should
therefore be interpreted in accordance with what I consider the reasonable
understanding of the Applicant. The Respondents did not file any evidence as to
what their understanding was as to the meaning of the Disclosure Clause; the
facts are consistent with the parties sharing the view of the Applicant in that
it was the Crown which in all previous instances had agreed to redact prior to
the occasion leading to this litigation. In all the circumstances, it was
reasonable for both the Applicant and Respondents to believe and understand
that while the Disclosure Clause allowed PWGSC to share the Applicant’s Personnel
Rates with other government departments, it did not allow disclosure to the
Applicant’s competitors or the public.
[76]
Assessing the matter generally, and assessing it
at the time of signing the 2010-14 Standing Offer, which I believe is
appropriate, the Applicant was reasonably expecting that any access request
related to the Personnel Rates would have similar outcomes to the 2009 and
other access requests, where the Crown redacted similar information under
paragraph 20(1)(c). Indeed, it is likely this was the reasonable
expectation of both parties given the 2010-14 Standing Offer was essentially
contemporaneous with the 2009 decision to release with redactions. These facts,
together with the Applicant’s credible and reasonable understanding of the limited
nature of the Disclosure Clause, and the fact that such rates were not
disclosed over the Applicant’s objections, in my respectful view, have the
effect of depriving the Disclosure Clause of the determinative effect urged by
the Respondents; the Disclosure Clause is not fatal to this application.
[77]
Having regard to the above, taken as a whole,
and on a standard considerably above a mere possibility, I am satisfied
disclosure of the Personnel Rates creates a reasonable expectation of probable
harm to the Applicant because such disclosure will result in a risk of harm
that is considerably above and well beyond the merely possible or speculative.
In my view, disclosure could reasonably be expected to result in financial loss
to the Applicant and could reasonably be expected to result in prejudice to the
Applicant’s competitive position.
[78]
Given these conclusions, an exemption for the
Applicant’s Personnel Rates is warranted under paragraph 20(1)(c) of the
Act.
B.
Are the Applicant’s Personnel Rates entitled to
redaction pursuant to paragraph 20(1)(d) of the Act, and is it affected by the
Disclosure Clause?
[79]
The Applicant also claims a right to redaction
under paragraph 20(1)(d) of the Act; this paragraph requires the
redaction of third party documents containing “information
the disclosure of which could reasonably be expected to interfere with
contractual or other negotiations of a third party.”
[80]
The law in this regard establishes that the
obstruction or interference with contractual or other negotiations of the third
party, must be probable and not merely speculative, and may not merely consist
of the heightening of competition: see Burnbrae Farms Limited v Canada
(Canadian Food Inspection Agency), 2014 FC 957.
[81]
Here again, the issue is resolved on the
evidence in this case as required by Merck. The Applicant’s evidence,
again uncontradicted, is that if the Personnel Rates, specifically the precise
micro-level unit rates, are disclosed, the Applicant’s other customers
currently paying more will seek to pay less. The evidence is also that in such
circumstances, customers might seek to improve their negotiating position, and
to do so would be at the Applicant’s expense or detriment. I am satisfied that
it is probable and not merely speculative that such harm could reasonably be
expected to interfere with contractual or other negotiations between the Applicant
and such third parties.
[82]
In addition, if the Applicant’s specialized
consultants discover or find out the rates at which they are charged out, which
include salary plus all associated overhead, other costs and profit margin,
they too will probably put pressure on the Applicant to be paid at higher
rates. This result is again not merely speculative but evidence-based.
[83]
It is also probable that these pressures, both
working against the Applicant (one driving revenues down, the other driving the
Applicant’s expenses up), will negatively impact the Applicant’s negotiations
with both its employees and potential suppliers, separately and in combination.
The Applicant’s evidence is that this risk is more acute given the upcoming
tender. I accept the Applicant’s evidence in this regard. None of this evidence
relates to a feat by the Applicant of a heightening of competition.
[84]
The Respondents rely on the Disclosure Clause,
and allege that the evidentiary basis for this claim under paragraph 20(1)(d)
is inadequate and speculative. I disagree.
[85]
In terms of the evidence, the record establishes
a reasonable expectation of probable harm. I do not agree that the Applicant’s
evidence is speculative. To the contrary, I find the evidence is credible and
based on Mr. Johnston’s many years of experience. In the matter of what the
Disclosure Clause meant, he spoke both from his experience and for others in
his company with whom he had consulted. Far from offering a speculative guess,
Mr. Johnston is the Applicant’s Vice President of Operations. His evidence is
derived from personal knowledge and business consultations and experience going
back with the Applicant more than two decades, i.e., since 1992 - and
specifically since the first RFSO in 1997. This is evidence I expect he would
know. Counsel for the Attorney General had every opportunity to cross-examine
Mr. Johnston and to file contrary evidence, but did neither. Nor did counsel challenge
either Mr. Johnston’s experience or credibility. While counsel for the Attorney
General filed an affidavit, it is silent on these points. In the circumstances,
I am unable to accept this challenge to Mr. Johnston’s evidence.
[86]
For essentially the same reasons as set out
above regarding paragraph 20(1)(c) including the overall assessment of
the reasonableness of the expectation of contractual interference under
paragraph 20(1)(d), I reject the Respondents’ assertion that the
Disclosure Clause is fatal to the claim for redaction. Considering the
Disclosure Clause along with the history of past dealings, and the
understanding of the limited nature of the clause itself, it cannot be said
that the Disclosure Clause bars the Applicant from obtaining the benefit of this
statutory exemption.
[87]
In these circumstances, I am satisfied the
record establishes beyond mere speculation that disclosure of Personnel Rates
could reasonably be expected to interfere with contractual or other
negotiations of a third party. The obstruction or interference with such
contractual negotiations is probable and not merely speculative, and does not
merely consist in the heightening of competition.
[88]
Therefore, an exemption is warranted under
paragraph 20(1)(d).
C.
Was the head of the institution required to and
if so, did he or she consider and apply the discretion to redact the Personnel
Rates granted by subsection 20(5) of the Act?
[89]
Independent of the above, there is a further
ground on which these two decisions must be set aside. In this connection and
because of the Disclosure Clause, a further necessary step in the Court’s
analysis is to review and determine whether the head of the institution
properly considered his or her discretion under subsection 20(5) of the Act;
this subsection provides:
20. (5) The
head of a government institution may disclose any record that contains
information described in subsection (1) with the consent of the third party
to whom the information relates.
|
20. (5) Le
responsable d’une institution fédérale peut communiquer tout document
contenant les renseignements visés au paragraphe (1) si le tiers que les
renseignements concernent y consent.
|
[emphasis added]
[90]
Given my finding that the Disclosure Clause did
not constitute a consent to disclosure of the confidential Personnel Rates
except to other government departments, strictly speaking, it may not be
necessary to consider subsection 20(5). That analysis took place in the context
of assessing what “could reasonably be expected”.
[91]
For completeness, in my respectful view, the
head of the institution also failed to discharge his or her legal duty to
consider the discretion he or she had to refuse to disclose created by use of
the word “may” in subsection 20(5).
[92]
The two reasons given by or on behalf of the
head of the institution for each decision under review are short:
Consequently, as the disclosure of
information clause has already been incorporated in the [2010-2014] Standing
Offer, the unit prices and rates cannot be considered to be confidential third
party information that would prejudice your competitive position and we must
therefore release them.
[93]
In my view, these two decisions are flawed
because the decision-maker failed to consider the discretion as required. The
Federal Court of Appeal, concerning a different but identically-worded
discretion in subsection 15(1) of the same Act, held that: “the Act requires the respondent to consider the exercise of
discretion”: see Attaran v Canada (Minister of Foreign Affairs),
2011 FCA 182 [Attaran]. In that case, the discretion was not considered
and judicial review was therefore granted.
[94]
In the case at bar, nothing on the record
indicates PWGSC considered the exercise of discretion under subsection 20(5).
Therefore, PWGSC failed in its legal duty as set out by the Federal Court of
Appeal. In this connection, Attaran sets out the two-step process
concerning the exercise of the Act’s discretion:
[17] As stated by the Supreme Court in Criminal
Lawyers’ Association at paragraph 46, a discretion conferred by statute
must be exercised consistently with the purposes underlying its grant. This is
consistent with Telezone where this Court stated, at paragraph 47, “when
the Act confers on the head of a government institution a discretion to refuse
to disclose an exempted record, the lawfulness of its exercise is reviewed on
the grounds normally available in administrative law for the review of
administrative discretion, including unreasonableness.” One ground of
administrative review is that a discretion conferred by statute must be
exercised within the boundaries imposed by the statute. See: Baker v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 817 at paragraph
56. Thus, the parties do not dispute that this Court may intervene if the
respondent did not consider the exercise of discretion.
[18] If the Court is satisfied that the
discretion was exercised, the second question is whether the discretion was
exercised reasonably.
[emphasis added]
[95]
I appreciate Attaran considered the
discretion provided under subsection 15(1) of the Act. However, I see no
reason why Attaran’s rationale does not apply to the discretion under
subsection 20(5) of the same Act. The two subsections, 15(1) and 20(5),
are worded very similarly. Subsection 15(1) creates a discretion to refuse to
disclose, while subsection 20(1) creates a discretion to disclose. While the
starting points differ and the factors to be considered will vary, in my view,
the discretion is the same, namely to disclose or not:
15. (1) The
head of a government institution may refuse to disclose any record
requested under this Act that contains information the disclosure of which
could reasonably be expected to be injurious to the conduct of international
affairs, the defence of Canada or any state allied or associated with Canada
or the detection, prevention or suppression of subversive or hostile
activities, including, without restricting the generality of the foregoing,
any such information
|
15. (1) Le
responsable d’une institution fédérale peut refuser la communication
de documents contenant des renseignements dont la divulgation risquerait
vraisemblablement de porter préjudice à la conduite des affaires
internationales, à la défense du Canada ou d’États alliés ou associés avec le
Canada ou à la détection, à la prévention ou à la répression d’activités
hostiles ou subversives, notamment :
|
…
|
…
|
20.(5) The head of a government institution may disclose
any record that contains information described in subsection (1) with the
consent of the third party to whom the information relates.
|
20.(5) Le responsable d’une institution fédérale peut
communiquer tout document contenant les renseignements visés au
paragraphe (1) si le tiers que les renseignements concernent y consent.
|
[96]
The Respondents relied on Newfoundland and
Labrador Nurses’ Union v Newfoundland & Labrador (Treasury Board), 2011
SCC 62 [Newfoundland Nurses] to ask this Court to find the
decision-maker’s decision on subsection 20(5) reasonable having regard to para
15 which says: “[t]his means that courts should not
substitute their own reasons, but they may, if they find it necessary, look to
the record for the purpose of assessing the reasonableness of the outcome.”
While not a word is said about subsection 20(5) in either of the decisions, I
am asked to assume it was properly considered and the discretion duly exercised
in favour of disclosure. With respect, I am unable to accede to this request. This
is not a case where I may read into this decision words considering and
rejecting the exercise of the discretion. All I have is the statute and two
short one sentence decisions.
[97]
In Komolafe v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2013 FC 431 at para 11, Justice Rennie (as he then was)
explained why Newfoundland Nurses does not save a decision like this:
Newfoundland Nurses is not an open invitation to the Court to provide reasons that were
not given, nor is it licence to guess what findings might have been made or to
speculate as to what the tribunal might have been thinking. This is
particularly so where the reasons are silent on a critical issue. It is ironic
that Newfoundland Nurses, a case which at its core is about deference
and standard of review, is urged as authority for the supervisory court to do
the task that the decision maker did not do, to supply the reasons that might
have been given and make findings of fact that were not made. This is to turn
the jurisprudence on its head. Newfoundland Nurses allows reviewing
courts to connect the dots on the page where the lines, and the direction they
are headed, may be readily drawn. Here, there were not dots on the page.
[98]
In this situation, I would have to write reasons
for the head of the institution where in my respectful view, he or she did not
even make a decision. It is for the head of the institution - and not the Court
- to consider and exercise the discretion conferred by subsection 20(5).
[99]
Close examination of the wording of the two
decisions confirms that the exercise of this important discretion was not
considered. The words used by the decision-maker are simply these: “the unit prices and rates cannot be considered to be
confidential third party information that would prejudice your competitive
position and we must therefore release them.”
[100] The use of the word “therefore” in these decisions compels me to
conclude that the refusal to release was caused by and resulted solely from the
absence of an exemption. Put another way, the decision-maker decided not to
redact because of the absence of an exemption, full stop. It is apparent
he or she did so without considering the exercise of discretion. In doing so,
he or she missed a critical step, namely, the legal requirement to consider the
exercise of discretion under subsection 20(5).
[101] Therefore, the decisions must be set aside for failure to consider
the exemption in subsection 20(5).
D.
Are the Applicant’s Personnel Rates entitled to
redaction pursuant to paragraph 20(1)(b) of the Act, and is it affected by the
Disclosure Clause?
[102]
I said at the outset that I would return to the
Applicant’s claim for an exemption under paragraph 20(1)(b), and do so
now. Paragraph 20(1)(b) requires the head of the institution to withhold
or redact requested information in the following terms:
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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[103] I accept the argument of the Respondents that paragraph 20(1)(b)
does not apply in this case. In short, having agreed to disclosure as set out
in its understanding of the Disclosure Clause, the Applicant is unable to meet
the requirement that the information be communicated with a reasonable
expectation of confidentiality. The Applicant admits it agreed to allow the disclosure
of Personnel Rates to other departments of government.
[104] To claim the exemption under paragraph 20(1)(b), the
Applicant must meet the four-part test outlined in Air Atonabee Ltd v Canada
(Minister of Transport), [1989] FCJ No 453 at para 34 [Air Atonabee],
which is summarized in Canada Post Corporation v National Capital Commission,
2002 FCT 700 at para 10. The four parts require that the requested information
is:
1. financial, commercial, scientific or
technical information as those terms are commonly understood;
2. confidential in its nature, according to
an objective standard which takes into account the content of the information,
its purposes and the conditions under which it was prepared and communicated;
3. supplied to a government institution by a
third party; and
4. treated consistently in a confidential
manner by the third party.
[105] While the first and third parts are met, I agree with the Respondents
that neither the second nor the fourth are met in the present case because the
Applicant agreed to disclosure as set out in its understanding of it, discussed
above under paragraphs 20(1)(c) and (d).
[106] While the Personnel Rates are certainly confidential in nature, they
were both prepared and communicated under an understanding of the Disclosure
Clause which allowed disclosure to other government departments. In my view,
this disclosure, limited as it was, had the effect of putting these Personnel
Rates outside the second part of the test.
[107] For the same reasons, it cannot be said that information was “treated consistently in a confidential manner” as the
fourth part of the Air Atonabee test requires.
[108] Therefore, the claim for protection under paragraph 20(1)(b)
must fail. There is no need to consider the Disclosure Clause.
E.
Are the Applicant’s Personnel Rates entitled to
redaction pursuant to section 18 of the Act?
[109] I said I would return to the claim for redaction under section 18 made
by the Applicant. Section 18 provides:
18. The head
of a government institution may refuse to disclose any record requested under
this Act that contains
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18. Le
responsable d’une institution fédérale peut refuser la communication de
documents contenant :
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(a) trade secrets or financial, commercial, scientific or
technical information that belongs to the Government of Canada or a
government institution and has substantial value or is reasonably likely to
have substantial value;
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a) des
secrets industriels ou des renseignements financiers, commerciaux,
scientifiques ou techniques appartenant au gouvernement du Canada ou à une
institution fédérale et ayant une valeur importante ou pouvant
vraisemblablement en avoir une;
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(b) information the disclosure of which could reasonably be
expected to prejudice the competitive position of a government institution or
to interfere with contractual or other negotiations of a government
institution;
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b) des
renseignements dont la communication risquerait vraisemblablement de nuire à
la compétitivité d’une institution fédérale ou d’entraver des négociations —
contractuelles ou autres — menées par une institution fédérale;
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(c) scientific or technical information obtained through
research by an officer or employee of a government institution, the
disclosure of which could reasonably be expected to deprive the officer or
employee of priority of publication; or
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c) des
renseignements techniques ou scientifiques obtenus grâce à des recherches par
un cadre ou employé d’une institution fédérale et dont la divulgation
risquerait vraisemblablement de priver cette personne de sa priorité de
publication;
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(d) information the disclosure of which could reasonably be
expected to be materially injurious to the financial interests of a
government institution or to the ability of the Government of Canada to
manage the economy of Canada or could reasonably be expected to result in an
undue benefit to any person, including such information that relates to
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d) des
renseignements dont la communication risquerait vraisemblablement de porter
un préjudice appréciable aux intérêts financiers d’une institution fédérale
ou à la capacité du gouvernement du Canada de gérer l’économie du pays ou
encore de causer des avantages injustifiés à une personne. Ces renseignements
peuvent notamment porter sur :
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(i) the currency, coinage or legal tender of Canada,
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(i) la monnaie canadienne, son monnayage ou son pouvoir
libératoire,
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(ii) a contemplated change in the rate of bank interest or in
government borrowing,
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(ii) les projets de changement du taux d’intérêt bancaire ou du
taux d’emprunt du gouvernement,
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(iii) a contemplated change in tariff rates, taxes, duties or any
other revenue source,
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(iii) les projets de changement des taux tarifaires, des taxes,
impôts ou droits ou des autres sources de revenu,
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(iv) a contemplated change in the conditions of operation of
financial institutions,
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(iv) les projets de changement dans le mode de fonctionnement des
institutions financières,
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(v) a contemplated sale or purchase of securities or of foreign or
Canadian currency, or
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(v) les projets de vente ou d’achat de valeurs mobilières ou de
devises canadiennes ou étrangères,
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(vi) a contemplated sale or acquisition of land or property.
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(vi) les projets de vente ou d’acquisition de terrains ou autres
biens.
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[110] In my respectful view, only subsections 18(b) or (d)
could even remotely support the Applicant’s claim. However, in my view, neither
subsections 18(b) nor (d) may be relied on for redaction.
[111] To begin with, section 18 is headed by the words “Economic interests of Canada” which is, in my view,
aptly descriptive of the purposes and context in which section 18 is intended
to be applied. From that perspective, I have difficulty seeing how section 18
applies to the case at bar, because the Applicant’s claim does not appear to
relate to the “economic interests of the nation”. If it did, no doubt a great
many other government contracts would be subject to section 18 which I do not
accept to be reflective of the legislative intent.
[112] Further, there is no evidence on which to conclude that the
requested disclosure could reasonably be expected to either a) prejudice the
competitive position of a government institution; or b) interfere with
contractual or other negotiations of a government institution.
[113] Therefore, the claim under subsection 18(b) must fail.
[114] Insofar as subsection 18(d) is concerned, I agree that taken
alone and in the abstract, this subsection might offer some support for the
Applicant’s position. However, in my view, subsection 18(d) may not be
assessed outside the context and purposes for which it was enacted. Section 18 outlines
a regime designed to authorize redactions or exemptions required by the
economic interests of Canada as its heading suggests. Subsection 18(d)
must be read in harmony with the rest of section 18. I apply the associated
words interpretive doctrine noscitur a sociis; the meaning of a word may
be known from its accompanying words. There was no evidence to substantiate the
Applicant’s claim to redaction under subsection 18(d).
[115] Therefore, the claim under subsection 18(d) must also fail.
[116] There is no need to consider the Disclosure Clause in this
connection given this result.
XVIII.
Remedy
[117] While in some circumstances it might be open for the Court to
substitute its decision for that of the head of the institution, which the
Applicant asked me to do, in my view, this decision should be remitted for
re-determination as proposed by the Respondents by way of alternative relief: Canadian
Council of Christian Charities v Canada (Minister of Finance), [1999] 4 FC
245 at para 19.
XIX.
Information Commissioner
[118] Before concluding, I wish to note that the Information Commissioner
did not file any additional evidence. The Information Commissioner supported
the Respondent, the Attorney General of Canada’s legal submissions, and made
submissions directed to the legal and policy issues; counsel for the Attorney
General having covered the evidence.
XX.
Costs
[119] Counsel for the Applicant and for the Attorney General of Canada
agreed to an all-inclusive award of costs in the amount of $5,000 which is
reasonable and will be so ordered. Counsel also agreed no costs should be payable
to or by the Information Commissioner. I agree and will so order also.
XXI. Conclusion
[120] The application for judicial review should be granted with costs in
the case.