Showing 15 of 546 results
Order Numbers | Type | Collection | Adjudicators | Date Published | |
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PO-4515-R | Order | Access to Information Orders | Justine Wai | Read moreExpand | |
The appellant requested a reconsideration of Order PO-4494. In that order, the adjudicator upheld the ministry’s decision to withhold a determination of needs tool (the tool) from disclosure under section 18(1)(d) (economic and other interests) of the Act. In this decision, the adjudicator finds the appellant has not established any of the grounds for reconsideration in section 18.01 of the IPC’s Code of Procedure. The appellant’s reconsideration request is denied. |
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MO-4519 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Chris Anzenberger | Read moreExpand | |
The Municipality of Middlesex Centre (the municipality) received a request under the Act for information related to the maintenance of a specified municipal property. The municipality denied the request on the basis that it was frivolous or vexatious, stating that the appellant had already been informed through previous letters from the municipality, disclosures under the Act, and court disclosures that the requested information does not exist. In this order, the adjudicator finds that the request was made for a purpose other than to obtain access and that it is frivolous or vexatious within the meaning of the Act. He dismisses the appeal. |
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MO-4518 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Jennifer James | Read moreExpand | |
The Toronto Police Services Board received a request under the Act for records, including photographs or videos, relating to the marine unit’s assistance to another police service’s investigation into the disappearance of six teenagers in 1995. The police responded to the request claiming that no records exist. In this appeal, the adjudicator finds that the police conducted a reasonable search and dismisses the appeal. |
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PO-4514 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Diane Smith | Read moreExpand | |
The appellant made a request under the Act for the email records of seven Liquor Control Board of Ontario (LCBO) employees. The LCBO issued a fee estimate of $15,557.50. The appellant requested a waiver of this fee based on financial hardship. The LCBO denied the appellant’s fee waiver request. In this order, the adjudicator upholds the LCBO’s denial of a fee waiver, as she finds that a fee waiver is not fair and equitable in the circumstances of this appeal. |
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CYFSA Decision 18 | Decision | Child, Youth, and Family Information and Privacy | Stella Ball | Read moreExpand | |
The complainant requested seven corrections be made to certain records in his Children’s Services Record under Part X of the Child, Youth and Family Services Act, 2017. The Durham Children’s Aid Society refused the correction request, and the complainant filed a complaint with the IPC for a review of the refusal. The complainant also challenged the reasonableness of DCAS’s search for records responsive to his request and alleged that certain DCAS staff who were addressing his correction request were in a conflict of interest. |
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MO-4517 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Anda Wang | Read moreExpand | |
The appellant sought access under the Act to a police report about an incident he was involved in. The police granted partial access to the report, citing section 38(b) (personal privacy) of the Act to deny access to the remaining information. In this order, the adjudicator finds that disclosure of the withheld information would constitute an unjustified invasion of personal privacy and therefore, this information is exempt under section 38(b). She dismisses the appeal. |
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MO-4516 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Alec Fadel | Read moreExpand | |
The appellant requested a copy of a police report concerning a specified occurrence that involved an affected party and herself. The police granted partial access to the report and withheld some information pursuant to sections 14(1) and 38(b) (personal privacy). The appellant appealed the decision taking the position that the personal information in the withheld information is her own and should be disclosed to her. In this order, the adjudicator upholds the police’s claim that section 38(b) applies to the withheld personal information and dismisses the appeal. |
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PHIPA DECISION 241 | Decision | Health Information and Privacy | Chris Anzenberger | Read moreExpand | |
Two sons of a deceased patient requested under the Act that the hospital make several corrections to the death note of their mother. The hospital granted two corrections related to the date and circumstances of their mother’s death but denied a third related to the cause of death. |
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PO-4513 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Cathy Hamilton | Read moreExpand | |
This order involves a request for records relating to the appellant in the context of their employment with the University of Ottawa (the university). The university denied access to records including videos, claiming that they are excluded from the scope of the Act under the labour relations and employment exclusion in section 65(6)3. The appellant claims that the records are not excluded from the Act due to the doctrine of promissory estoppel, the exception in section 65(7) and that the videos were not made for an employment purpose. In this order, the adjudicator finds that promissory estoppel does not apply, section 65(6)3 applies to all of the records except the videos, and the exception in section 65(7) do not apply. She orders the university to issue a decision letter to the appellant regarding the videos without recourse to section 65(6)3. |
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MO-4514 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Steven Faughnan | Read moreExpand | |
At issue in this appeal are line items containing unit pricing information in the appellant’s successful bid submission. The Region of Peel (the region) took the position that the information should be disclosed to the requester. The appellant argued that it qualified for exemption under section 10(1) (third party information) of the Act. In this order, the adjudicator finds that the unit pricing information does not qualify for exemption under section 10(1) of the Act. The adjudicator orders that the region disclose it to the requester. |
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MO-4515-F | Order - Final | Access to Information Orders | Lan An | Read moreExpand | |
This final order resolves the outstanding issue of the reasonableness of the City of Hamilton’s (the city’s) search following Interim Order MO-4443-I. In compliance with the interim order, the city conducted a further search for responsive records to the appellant’s requests and provided an affidavit describing its search. In this final order, the adjudicator finds that the city has provided sufficient evidence to demonstrate that it has conducted a reasonable search for responsive records. The appeal is dismissed. |
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CYFSA Decision 17 | Decision - PHIPA | Child, Youth, and Family Information and Privacy | Jennifer James | Read moreExpand | |
The complainant sought access under Part X of the Act for his “entire family file” with the Children’s Aid Society of Toronto (the service provider). The complainant was granted access, in part, to the responsive records but was denied access to information the service provider says relates to other individuals. In this decision, the adjudicator orders the service provider to grant the complainant full access to three records she finds are dedicated primarily to the provision of a service to the complainant. The adjudicator also orders the service provider to grant the complainant greater access to the complainant’s personal information which can reasonably be severed from other information in records not dedicated primarily to the provision of service to him. The adjudicator upholds the service provider’s decision to deny the complainant access under the Act to the remaining withheld information. |
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MO-4513 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Justine Wai | Read moreExpand | |
The appellant submitted a request to the city for information relating to the city’s winter road maintenance program. The city denied the request on the basis that it was frivolous or vexatious. In this order, the adjudicator finds the city did not sufficiently establish its claim within the meaning of section 4(1)(b) of the Act and orders it to issue an access decision to the appellant. |
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PO-4512-I | Order - Interim | Access to Information Orders | Anna Kalinichenko | Read moreExpand | |
The appellant sought access to all notes and correspondence from two Associate Deans of the college pertaining to him. The college granted the appellant full access to correspondence it located from one Associate Dean and said that it did not identify other responsive records. The appellant challenged the reasonableness of the college’s search for responsive records. |
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MO-4512 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Lan An | Read moreExpand | |
The Town of Aurora (the town) received a request under the Act for access to records for building permit applications relating to two specified addresses. Following notification of two affected parties who might have an interest in the disclosure of the records, the town decided to disclose the records, in part. One of the affected parties appealed the town’s decision with respect to the records related to one of the addresses. In this order, the adjudicator finds that the information that is at issue is not personal information and, therefore, cannot be exempt from disclosure under section 14(1) (personal privacy) of the Act. The adjudicator upholds the town’s decision to disclose the records, in part, and orders it to provide them to the requester in accordance with its original decision. |