Docket: T-1359-14
Citation:
2016 FC 168
Ottawa, Ontario, April 5, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice Heneghan
BETWEEN:
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SUNCOR ENERGY
INC.
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Applicant
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and
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CANADA-NEWFOUNDLAND
OFFSHORE PETROLEUM BOARD AND INFORMATION COMMISSIONER OF CANADA
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Respondents
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PUBLIC JUDGMENT AND REASONS
(Confidential Judgment and Reasons
issued on February 9, 2016)
I.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
Suncor Energy Inc. (the “Applicant”) seeks
judicial review, pursuant to section 44 of the Access to Information Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. A-1 (the “Access Act”) of a decision of the Canada-Newfoundland
and Labrador Offshore Petroleum Board (the “Board”), dated May 15, 2014. In
that decision, the Board held that certain information was not protected
against disclosure on the basis of privilege pursuant to subsection 119(2) of
the Canada-Newfoundland Atlantic Accord Implementation Act, S.C. 1987,
c. 3 (the “Accord Act”), was not personal information that was not in the
public domain, and was not otherwise exempt from disclosure.
[2]
By Order dated July 10, 2014, Mme. Prothonotary
Tabib granted leave to add the Information Commissioner of Canada (the
“Commissioner”) as a party to this application.
[3]
By Order dated August 11, 2014, Prothonotary
Morneau issued a Confidentiality Order in respect of any documents submitted
with this application that would render the judicial review moot if made
public, and any other material that the Board would be authorized to refuse
disclosure, if requested under the Access Act.
[4]
The Applicant filed a Notice of Motion dated
August 4, 2015 seeking leave to file a supplemental affidavit of Mr. Glen Burke,
who is the Commercial and Business Development Director, East Coast Canada of
the Applicant. The Applicant also sought leave to cross-examine Mr. Trevor
Bennett, Information Resources Manager and Access to Information Coordinator
for the Board.
[5]
Further to a Direction issued August 7, 2015,
the Motion was heard on August 13, 2015 prior to the hearing of the judicial
review application. That motion was dismissed with costs in the cause, on the
grounds that the tests of admissibility and relevance for the admission of the
supplemental affidavit were not met. As well, there were no special
circumstances to justify the cross-examination of Trevor Bennett at such a late
stage of the proceeding.
II.
BACKGROUND
[6]
The Applicant is a Canadian energy corporation,
with its headquarters in Calgary, Alberta. It is engaged in oil exploration and
drilling activities off the coast of Newfoundland and Labrador, among other
places.
[7]
The Board is a statutory body responsible for
the monitoring of petroleum drilling and extraction off the coasts of
Newfoundland and Labrador. It regulates the activities of operators in the oil
and gas industry, including those of the Applicant.
[8]
The Commissioner, pursuant to section 30 of the
Access Act, is authorized to receive and investigate complaints made under the
Access Act.
[9]
By letter dated February 7, 2014, the Board was
asked, pursuant to the Access Act, to disclose the following information:
1. Please provide the submitted application forms,
correspondence, board response, work credit amounts granted and all associated
items and attachments for each program number on the attached March 13, 2012
CNLOPB letter.
2. Provide all records of any
viewing, disclosure, borrowing and copies being made of these same program
numbers (attached) including but not limited to liability agreements,
correspondence, transmittals, copy disposition forms, emails and invoices.
[10]
By letter dated March 31, 2014, the Board
advised the Applicant about the request, and forwarded the relevant documents
for its review. These documents included a request, dated March 24, 2009, made
by [REDACTED], an employee of the Applicant, for information concerning the
procedures and costs associated with ordering certain geophysical and geological
reports. The documents also included a list of the requested reports, pricing
quotes for printing and binding of same, and an invoice from the Board for the
retrieval and shipping of the reports. The names of [REDACTED], [REDACTED], [REDACTED]
and [REDACTED], employees of the Applicant, appear in the documents.
[11]
The Applicant replied by letter dated April 15,
2014 and took the position that it considered the documents in question to be
information provided to the Board pursuant to Part III of the Accord Act and
accordingly, privileged pursuant to subsection 119(2) of that statute and
exempt from disclosure pursuant to subsection 24(1) of the Access Act.
[12]
The Applicant also advised that if the documents
were not exempt, certain portions should be redacted because they
constitute personal information; financial, commercial, scientific, or
technical information; and information, the disclosure of which could
reasonably be expected to interfere with contractual or other negotiations
pursuant to subsection 19(1) and paragraphs 20(1)(b) and 20(1)(d),
respectively, of the Access Act.
[13]
The Board responded to the Applicant in an email
dated April 28, 2014 and said that certain names would not be redacted,
including the name of [REDACTED], on the basis that her status as an employee
of Suncor is publicly available on her LinkedIn accounts. The Board also
advised that without evidence of specific injury arising from the disclosure of
the program names and numbers, there was no reason not to release the requested
information.
[14]
Finally, the Board said that the estimates of
the shipping charges would not be withheld because they were estimates only,
made in accordance with the standard charges posted on the Board’s website. The
Board also said there was no justification to withhold the number of reports
requested or the reports and pricing as presented on the Board’s website.
[15]
The Applicant responded to the Board by email
dated May 6, 2014. It said that although the affiliation of [REDACTED] with
Suncor was publicly available, the fact that she had corresponded with the
Board was not.
[16]
The Board replied to the Applicant on the same
day, advising that [REDACTED] was not the main contact for the request and was
copied on most of the correspondence. It further advised that following
consultation with legal counsel, it was satisfied that there was no valid
reason for withholding her name, however, phone numbers and email addresses
would be redacted.
[17]
By letter dated May 15, 2014, the Board advised
the Applicant that where names of its employees can be confirmed via the internet,
the names would not be withheld from the requestor. It enclosed the records
that it intended to release and referred to section 44 of the Access Act, which
provides for judicial review of its decision. It concluded by noting that if no
application for judicial review was filed, the records would be disclosed on
June 5, 2014.
[18]
The Applicant commenced this application for
judicial review on June 3, 2014. In support of this application, it
filed the affidavit of Mr. Glen Burke; that affidavit was sworn on September 2,
2014.
[19]
In response, the Board filed the affidavit of Mr.
Trevor Bennett; that affidavit was sworn on September 23, 2014.
[20]
No cross-examinations were conducted upon the affidavits
filed.
III.
ISSUES
[21]
This application for judicial review raises the
following issues:
1)
What is the applicable standard of review?
2)
Did the Board err in determining that the
records should be disclosed?
IV.
RELEVANT LEGISLATION
[22]
The following provisions of the Access Act are
relevant to this proceeding:
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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(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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24. (1) The head of a government institution shall refuse to
disclose any record requested under this Act that contains information the
disclosure of which is restricted by or pursuant to any provision set out in
Schedule II.
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24. (1) Le
responsable d’une institution fédérale est tenu de refuser la communication
de documents contenant des renseignements dont la communication est
restreinte en vertu d’une disposition figurant à l’annexe II.
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[23]
Section 22 and subsection 119(2) of the Accord
Act are relevant and provide as follows:
22. The Board
shall establish, maintain and operate a facility
in the Province
for the storage and curatorship of all geophysical records and geological and
hydrocarbon
samples relating to the offshore area.
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22. L’Office
établit et gère un centre, dans la province, où sont conservés les données
géologiques et géophysiques et les échantillons d’hydrocarbures extracôtiers.
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119. (2) Subject to section 18 and this section, information or
documentation provided for the purposes of this Part or Part III or any
regulation made under either Part, whether or not such information or
documentation is required to be provided under either Part or any regulation
made thereunder, is privileged and shall not knowingly be disclosed without
the consent in writing of the person who provided it except for the purposes
of the administration or enforcement of either Part or for the purposes of
legal proceedings relating to such administration or enforcement.
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(2) Sous réserve
de l’article 18 et des autres dispositions du présent article, les
renseignements fournis pour l’application de la présente partie, de la partie
III ou de leurs règlements, sont, que leur fourniture soit obligatoire ou
non, protégés et ne peuvent, sciemment, être communiqués sans le consentement
écrit de la personne qui les a fournis, si ce n’est pour l’application de ces
lois ou dans le cadre de procédures judiciaires relatives intentées à cet
égard.
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V.
SUBMISSIONS
A.
The Applicant’s Submissions
[24]
The Applicant argues that subsection 119(2) of
the Accord Act grants a privilege against disclosure to information provided to
the Board pursuant to Parts II or III of that legislation. It submits that the
records in question contain information, specifically geological and
geophysical reports, that it needs to conduct its operations.
[25]
Further, pursuant to subsection 119(3) of the
Accord Act, information that is requested in connection with legal proceeding
shall not be disclosed for such purposes. It suggests that the information was
requested in connection with ongoing litigation in which the Applicant is
involved.
[26]
The Applicant notes that pursuant to section 4
of the Accord Act, that statute takes precedence over any other Act of
Parliament, including the Access Act.
[27]
The Applicant alleges several errors on the part
of the Board in its determination that the records should be disclosed. It
challenges the Board’s finding that the personal information is publicly
available and subject to disclosure; that certain information should not be
redacted pursuant to paragraphs 20(1)(b) and 20(1)(d) of the Access Act.
[28]
The Applicant submits that the requested records
contain personal information, including the names, positions and/or contact
information for several of its current or former employees. It says that this
information is not exempt under paragraph 19(2)(b) and must be redacted.
[29]
While [REDACTED], [REDACTED] and [REDACTED] names
and positions are available on LinkedIn, nothing in their public profiles
relates to the email correspondence included in the records. As well, the
request does not ask for information about any individual.
[30]
The fact that the individuals have
profiles on the internet does not mean that they have waived their right to
privacy, particularly when the publicly available information does not relate
to particular jobs or job duties. According to the Applicant, if the names were
redacted, nothing in the redacted material would limit the value of the
disclosure to the requestor.
[31]
As well, the Applicant submits there are
personal safety considerations arising in connection with the request. It
argues that where personal information is at issue, the right to privacy is
paramount over the right to access, relying on the decision in H.J. Heinz
Co. of Canada Ltd. v. Canada (Attorney General), [2006] 1 S.C.R. 441 at
paragraphs 26 and 29. The Applicant is engaged in continuing litigation over
seismic information that may be related to the request. It submits that
disclosure of the employees’ personal information may expose them to
harassment.
[32]
The Applicant next challenges the Board’s
finding that certain information should not be redacted pursuant to paragraph
20(1)(b) of the Access Act. It acknowledges that this provision of the Access
Act sets out four requirements: first, that the information be financial,
commercial, scientific or technical; second, that it be confidential; third,
that it is supplied to the Board by a third party; and fourth, that it is
treated confidentially by that third party. It refers to the decision in Air
Atonabee Ltd. v. Canada (Minister of Transport) (1989), 27 F.T.R. 194.
[33]
Concerning the first requirement, the Applicant
submits that the records include technical information including names and
report numbers of geophysical reports; costs associated with ordering reports;
procedure for ordering reports; program numbers of the requested reports; a
Board disclosure agreement including a schedule of materials outlining the
specific reports requested by the Applicant in 2009; internal email
correspondence and cost estimates exchanged between the Board and its employees;
and an internal email correspondence confirming that the Applicant intended to
request seismic reports.
[34]
The Applicant argues that the second element is
met, that the requested information is confidential because it is not publicly
available and was communicated with an expectation that it would not be
disclosed. It submits that the information must be kept confidential in order
to protect the integrity of its operations and to avoid disclosure to
competitors.
[35]
As for the third requirement, the Applicant submits
that whether the information was supplied to the Board by a third party is a
question of fact, relying on the decision in Merck Frosst Canada Ltd. v.
Canada (Health), [2012] 1 S.C.R. 23. In the present case, the
Applicant, a third party, supplied information to the Board.
[36]
Finally, the Applicant treated the correspondence
as confidential. It notes that all of its employees have a confidentiality
disclosure included in their email correspondence, accordingly the documents
are exempt from disclosure.
[37]
The third issue raised by the Applicant is that
the Board erred in concluding that certain information should not be redacted,
pursuant to paragraph 20(1)(d) of the Access Act. Here, it argues that it is
required to show that there is some interference with contractual negotiations,
not merely an increase in competition, relying on the decision in Oceans
Ltd. v. Canada-Newfoundland & Labrador Offshore Petroleum Board (2009),
356 F.T.R. 106. It submits that the records contain information that would be
advantageous to its competitors and disadvantageous to the Applicant, in future
negotiations, including possible settlement negotiations relative to the
continuing seismic litigation.
[38]
The Applicant, referring to the decision in Timiskaming
Indian Band v. Canada (Minister of Indian and Northern Affairs) (1997), 132
F.T.R. 106, says that it does not know who is requesting the disclosure. It
argues that if the disclosure is made to a party to the seismic litigation, its
ability to litigate and enter into meaningful settlement negotiations would be
seriously obstructed.
B.
The Board’s Submissions
[39]
The Board argues that the Applicant’s reliance
upon subsection 119(2) of the Accord Act and subsection 24(1) of the Access Act
requires it to prove that the information was provided to the Board for the
purposes of Parts II or III of the Accord Act.
[40]
The Board is mandated by section 22 of the
Accord Act to collect and store information relating to offshore areas. The
geological and geophysical reports, which the Applicant requested in 2009, were
gathered pursuant to Part I of the Accord Act. As such, the documents at issue
in this proceeding are not privileged pursuant to subsection 119(2) of the
Accord Act.
[41]
Furthermore, subsection 119(2) of the Accord Act
only privileges information or documents provided to the Board. Although some
correspondence originates from the Applicant, the information contained in the
documents does not. The reports are available on the Board’s website. The quote
from a third party for reproduction costs is not information provided by the
Applicant.
[42]
The Board acknowledges that the requested
documents contain personal information. It offered to redact any contact
information relative to the named employees, as well as the names of employees
whose connection with the Applicant is not in the public domain.
[43]
The Board further submits that it reasonably
exercised its discretion to disclose the names of those employees whose
affiliation with the Applicant was publicly available.
[44]
In response to the Applicant’s argument that the
release of employee names, pursuant to paragraph 19(2)(b) of the Access Act, may
potentially expose those employees to harassment in connection with ongoing
litigation¸ the Board advances two arguments. First, it submits that unrelated
litigation is not an exception to release of information pursuant to the Access
Act. Second, there is no evidentiary basis for the Applicant’s statement that
its employees may be harassed.
[45]
In response to the Applicant’s arguments
concerning paragraph 20(1)(b) of the Access Act, the Board refers to the four
elements discussed in the Air Atonabee, supra. It submits that
the information must have inherent value; administrative information is
not considered financial, commercial, scientific or technical as
discussed in Merck Frosst, supra at paragraphs 139 – 141.
[46]
The Board argues that the Applicant’s evidence,
as provided in the affidavit of Glen Burke, demonstrates that the alleged
technical information is only a summary of the contents of emails. The
affidavit does not show that the documents meet the ordinary meaning of
technical.
[47]
The Board further submits that the records do
not meet the criteria of being objectively confidential, as discussed in the Air
Atonabee, supra.
[48]
As for the third criteria, that the information
be provided to the Board by a third party, the Board argues that neither the
requested reports nor the quotes for retrieval and reproduction were supplied
by the Applicant. Accordingly, the Board contends that the Applicant has failed
to meet this requirement.
[49]
Finally, the Board submits that the Applicant
failed to provide evidence to show that the requested information was
consistently treated as confidential, as discussed in the decision in Toronto
Sun Wah Trading Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General) (2007), 62 C.P.R. (4th)
337 at paragraph 25. It argues that the mere assertion that information is exempt
pursuant to paragraph 20(1)(b) is insufficient to discharge the burden of
showing that an exemption is available, relying on the decision in Oceans
Ltd., supra.
[50]
In response to the Applicant’s submissions about
paragraph 20(1)(d) of the Access Act, the Board argues that the Applicant has
failed to establish a reasonable expectation of probable harm. Relying on the
decision in Saint John Shipbuilding Ltd. v. Canada (Minister of Supply and
Services)(1990), 67 D.L.R. (4th) 315 at paragraphs 5 and 22, the Board
submits that speculation of harm is insufficient to justify an exemption
pursuant to paragraph 20(1)(d). It notes that there is no evidence that the
release of the documents would likely result in interference with any specific
negotiation.
C.
The Commissioner’s Submissions
[51]
The Commissioner adopts the arguments of the
Board concerning subsection 119(2) of the Accord Act. It submits that, contrary
to the position of the Applicant, the Accord Act does not take precedence over
the Access Act. Rather, the Accord Act takes precedence only over an act of
Parliament that applies to the offshore area; see paragraph 4(2)(b) of the
Accord Act.
[52]
As for the personal information in the requested
records, the only information that is personal relates to the names of the Applicant’s
employees, their phone numbers and business titles. The affiliation of [REDACTED],
[REDACTED] and [REDACTED] with the Applicant is publicized on their LinkedIn
profiles. Unlike the facts in Information Commissioner (Canada) v. Canada
(Minister of Natural Resources)(2014), 464 F.T.R. 308, the personal
information at issue here was public when the request was made.
[53]
Since it was public, the Commissioner argues
that the Board reasonably exercised its discretion to disclose it pursuant to
subsection 19(2) of the Access Act.
[54]
The Commissioner submits that the principles
underlying the Access Act required that information, that can be disclosed,
should be disclosed to the greatest extent possible; see the decision in Ontario
(Public Safety and Security) v. Criminal Lawyers' Association, [2010] 1
S.C.R. 815 at paragraphs 66-67. If the Court finds the exercise of discretion
to be unreasonable, then the names, business titles and phone numbers should be
redacted, and the content of the documents and domain name in the email
addresses should be released. Following redaction of the personal information,
the documents will not reveal any information about any identifiable individual
and cannot be withheld under subsection 19(1).
[55]
Finally, although the Applicant argues that the
personal information is not relevant to the request for information, the Commissioner
says that the requestor’s motives or relevance of the information in the record
should not be considered. Relying on the decisions Canada (Information
Commissioner) v. Canada (Commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police),
[2003] 1 S.C.R. 66 at paragraphs 32-33 and Toronto Sun Wah Trading
Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), supra at paragraph 41.
[56]
In response to the Applicant’s submissions
concerning paragraph 20(10)(b) of the Access Act, the Commissioner argues that
the Applicant has not shown, on a balance of probabilities, that disclosure
would reveal technical information. It submits that the Applicant’s arguments
are vague and speculative statements, not grounded in evidence.
[57]
As well, the Commissioner argues that the
inclusion of a confidentiality disclosure at the end of an email is
insufficient to justify the protection of information, relying on the decision
in Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. National Capital Commission (1998),
147 F.T.R. 264 at paragraphs 30-31.
[58]
The Commissioner submits that the Applicant has
not met its onus, on a balance of probabilities, of showing that disclosure
would affect contractual negotiations. Accordingly, the Applicant has failed to
show a reviewable error by the Board in its decision not to redact certain
information, pursuant to paragraph 20(1)(d) of the Access Act.
[59]
The Commissioner argues that there is no
evidence that the information in the documents is relevant to settlement
negotiations. Further, he submits that the Applicant failed to prove that
disclosure could reasonably be expected to interfere with such negotiations,
relying on the decision in Blood Band v. Canada (Minister of Indian Affairs
and Northern Development), [2004] 2 F.C.R. 60 at paragraph 56.
VI.
DISCUSSION AND DISPOSITION
A.
Standard of Review
[60]
The first issue to be addressed is the
appropriate standard of review. Whether information is exempt from disclosure pursuant
to section 19(1) of the Access Act, is reviewable on the standard of
correctness; see the decision in Canada (Information Commissioner) v.
Canada (Commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Commissioner), supra
at paragraph 19.
[61]
Exemption from disclosure pursuant to section 20
of the Access Act is also reviewable on the standard of correctness; see the
decision in Canada Post Corp. v. Canada (Minister of Public Works and
Government Services)(2004) , 247 F.T.R. 110 at paragraphs 24 and 27.
[62]
Decisions which are reviewable on a correctness standard
are not entitled to deference. The Court performs its own analysis and decides
whether it agrees with the decision maker. If the reviewing Court disagrees
with the decision maker’s conclusions, it will substitute its own view and
provide the correct answer; see the decision in Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick,
[2008] 1 S.C.R. 190 at paragraph 50.
[63]
The exercise of discretion pursuant to
subsection 19(2) of the Access Act is reviewable on the standard of
reasonableness; see the decision in Information Commissioner (Canada) v.
Canada (Minister of Natural Resources), supra.
[64]
Upon judicial review, the reasonableness
standard requires that the reasons offered must be justifiable, transparent,
intelligible and fall within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes; see Dunsmuir,
supra at paragraph 47.
B.
Paramountcy of the Access Act
[65]
The next issue for consideration is the
relevance of the Accord Act to this application. As outlined above, the
Applicant asserts that this legislation takes priority over the Access Act and
that it is entitled to resist disclosure of the requested information, on the
basis of the privilege created by subsection 119(2).
[66]
The Applicant’s argument about paramountcy is
novel but, in my opinion, ill founded. I agree with the submissions of the
Respondents that in presenting this proposition, the Applicant is misreading
section 4 of the Accord Act. That section provides as follows:
4. In case of any inconsistency or conflict between
(a) this Act or any regulations made thereunder, and
(b) any other Act
of Parliament that applies to the offshore area or any regulations made under
that Act, except the Labrador Inuit Land Claims Agreement Act, this Act and
the regulations made thereunder take precedence.
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4. Les dispositions de la présente loi et
de ses textes d’application l’emportent sur les dispositions incompatibles de
toute loi fédérale d’application extracôtière — sauf la Loi sur l’Accord
sur les revendications territoriales des Inuit du Labrador — et de ses
textes d’application.
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[67]
Section 4 of the Accord Act is subject to
interpretation on the ordinary rules of statutory interpretation. According to
the decision in Rizzo & Rizzo Shoes Ltd. (Re), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 27,
the modern approach to statutory interpretation is to discern Parliament’s
intent by reading the words of the provisions at issue according to a textual,
contextual and purposive analysis to find a meaning that is harmonious with the
Act as a whole.
[68]
Applying these principles, section 4 of the
Accord Act is to be read as meaning that this legislation takes precedence only
over other legislation that applies to offshore areas of the province of
Newfoundland and Labrador and regulation of those offshore areas,
pertaining to the province of Newfoundland and Labrador.
C.
Section 119(2) of the Accord Act
[69]
Is the Applicant entitled to the benefit of
subsection 119(2) of the Accord Act? That provision creates a privilege against
the disclosure of information, in certain circumstances, specifically when a
person seeks the disclosure of information that was provided to the Board for
the purposes of Parts II and III of the Accord Act.
[70]
According to the Supreme Court of Canada in Dagg
v. Canada (Minister of Finance), [1997] 2 S.C.R. 403 at paragraph 51,
access to information is the general rule under the Access Act. This
presumption in favour of disclosure is, however, subject to specific, necessary
exceptions; see subsection 2(1) of the Access Act.
[71]
The prohibition against disclosure
contained in subsection 24(1) of the Access Act is one such exception. That
provision prohibits disclosure of information that is “restricted
by or pursuant to any provision set out in Schedule II.”
[72]
Schedule II of the Access Act includes section
119 of the Accord Act.
[73]
The privilege created by subsection 119(2) of
the Accord Act is limited. The provision requires a factual determination:
first, was the information or documentation provided for the purposes of Parts
II or III of the Act and second, was disclosure of that information required
for the purposes of administration and enforcement of those Parts.
[74]
According to the decision in Toronto
Sun Wah Trading Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), supra at
paragraph 9, a party seeking the benefit of an exemption against disclosure
carries the burden of showing its entitlement to such exemption.
[75]
The Applicant asserts privilege, pursuant to
subsection 119(2) of the Accord Act, in respect of geological and geophysical
reports that the Board considers responsive to the request.
[76]
It is unclear the degree
to which the reports were based on information supplied by the Applicant pursuant
of the Accord Act. As well, section 22 of the Accord Act imposes an obligation
on the Board to maintain geophysical records and samples; it does not oblige
the Applicant to provide that information.
[77]
The records relate to the Applicant’s 2009
request to the Board for information. According to the affidavit of Trevor
Bennett filed in this application, that request was not made pursuant to pursuant
to Parts II or III of the Accord Act.
[78]
In light of the interpretation of subsection
119(2), following the applicable principles of statutory interpretation,
it follows that the Applicant has not shown that it meets the statutory
criteria for entitlement to the privilege provided by subsection 119(2). It is
not entitled to claim privilege against the disclosure of the requested
information.
D.
Section 19 of the Access Act
[79]
Next, did the Board reasonably exercise its
discretion, pursuant to subsection 19(2) of the Access Act. The parties
correctly acknowledge that the names, contact information and business titles
of the Applicant’s employees, at issue in this proceeding, constitute personal
information within the meaning of the Privacy Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. P-21
(the “Privacy Act”). According to the decision in Canada (Information Commissioner)
v. Canada (Commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police), supra,
the definition of “personal information” is to be read broadly.
[80]
The Board redacted most of the contact
information of the Applicant’s employees, that is [REDACTED], [REDACTED] and [REDACTED]
as well as the name of [REDACTED]. However, in the records that the Board
proposes to disclose, it did not redact the name of [REDACTED] from email
correspondence dated March 27, 2009, April 3, 2009, April 6, 2009 and April 7,
2009; the telephone number of [REDACTED] from an email dated March 24, 2009;
and a fax number for an employee of the Applicant from an email dated March 20,
2009.
[81]
In my opinion, considering the definition of
“personal information” and its protection pursuant to the Privacy Act, this
further information should have been redacted and the Board’s decision not to do
so was an unreasonable exercise of its discretion.
[82]
Subject to my comments in the preceding
paragraph, in my view the Board reasonably exercised its discretion concerning
the disclosure of the other information, pursuant to paragraph 19(2)(b). The
Applicant has failed to show any reviewable error in the manner in which that
discretion was exercised.
[83]
The issue relative to paragraph 19(2)(b) is
whether the Board reasonably exercised its discretion in determining that the
personal information relating to the Applicant’s employees could be disclosed,
because it was in the public domain. In its decision, the Board said:
In instances where Suncor Energy employees
and their association with Suncor Energy can be confirmed via the internet
these names and association with Suncor Energy will not be withheld in the
response to the requestor.
[84]
The Board’s use of the words “via the
internet”, in my opinion, refers to the profiles of [REDACTED], [REDACTED] and [REDACTED]
on LinkedIn.
[85]
LinkedIn is a social media network targeting
professionals and allows individuals to communicate through the internet. In my
opinion, information that is posted on LinkedIn is clearly in the public
domain. It follows that the Board’s determination about the disclosure of this
information was reasonable.
E.
Section 20 of the Access Act
[86]
The remaining issue concerns the manner in which
the Board exercised its discretion pursuant to paragraphs 20(1)(b) and
20(1)(d).
[87]
In respect of paragraph 20(1)(b), the Applicant
carries the burden of showing that the information in question meets the four
criteria identified in that provision. This requirement was identified by the
Court in Air Atonabee, supra. The discharge of this burden
requires evidence.
[88]
The evidence submitted on behalf of the
Applicant is contained in the affidavit, sworn on September 2, 2014, of Mr.
Glen Burke. At paragraphs 25 to 30, inclusive, of his affidavit, he deposes
that he has been advised and does believe that the documents proposed by the
Board to be disclosed fall within the scope of paragraph 20(1)(b) of the Access
Act. At paragraph 25, he identifies the following documents:
a) [REDACTED]
b) [REDACTED]
c) [REDACTED]
d) [REDACTED]
e) [REDACTED]
f) [REDACTED]
g) [REDACTED]
h) [REDACTED]
i) [REDACTED]
[89]
Upon my review of the affidavit of Mr. Burke, I
am not persuaded that he has provided a sufficient evidentiary foundation to
challenge the Board’s finding that the requested documents should not be
exempted pursuant to paragraph 20(1)(b). Although the Applicant only asserts
that the documents contain “technical” information, Mr. Burke does not say how those
documents fall within the ordinary meaning of the word technical.
[90]
The Applicant makes submissions about the nature
of the requested information as “technical” but there is no clear and specific
evidence in support of those submissions.
[91]
Is the Applicant a third party? On the basis of
the evidence I am satisfied that the Applicant is a “third party” within the
meaning of paragraph 20(1)(b).
[92]
On the basis of the evidence submitted, I am not
satisfied that the information is confidential or that the information was
treated consistently in a confidential manner by the Applicant.
[93]
Considering the evidence submitted by the
Applicant and the arguments made by the Respondents, I am not persuaded that
the Applicant has shown an unreasonable exercise of discretion by the Board in
refusing to exempt the requested documents pursuant to paragraph 20(1)(b).
[94]
The remaining issue is whether the Board erred
in concluding that certain information should not be redacted pursuant to
paragraph 20(1)(d) of the Access Act.
[95]
An exemption is available under this provision
when an applicant can show that disclosure of information can reasonably be
expected to interfere with contractual or other negotiations of a third-party.
[96]
I have determined and accepted that the
Applicant is a third party, for the purposes of the Access Act. However, in
respect of paragraph 20(1)(d), I am again not satisfied that the Applicant has
demonstrated an adequate and sufficient evidentiary foundation, for the exercise
of discretion by the Board in its favour.
[97]
As noted above, the Applicant argued that it did
not know the identity of the requesting party and hinted that the requestor may
be involved in litigation with the Applicant and the disclosure of the
requested information may interfere with settlement negotiations.
[98]
There is nothing in the evidence submitted by
the Applicant to support this contention. There is nothing in the evidence
submitted by the Applicant to show that the requested information, if
disclosed, could “reasonably” interfere with contractual or other negotiations.
[99]
In the circumstances, having regard to the
evidence presented by the Applicant, I am satisfied that the Board reasonably
exercised its discretion not to grant the Applicant an exemption pursuant to
paragraph 20(1)(d).
[100] In the result, the application for judicial review is allowed in
part. The Board shall redact the further personal information identified above,
pertaining to the named employees of the Applicant.
[101] The Applicant has partially succeeded. The parties are at liberty to
resolve the issue of costs. If they are unable to agree, brief submissions on costs
may be filed within ten (10) days.
[102] The parties shall advise the Court within fourteen (14) days as to
what redactions, if any, are required before Public Reasons are released.