Affichage de 15 sur 656 résultats
Order Numbers | Type | Collection | Adjudicators | Date Published | |
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MO-4572 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Jennifer Olijnyk | En savoir plusExpand | |
An individual asked a school board for correspondence to or from a specified group of individuals relating to him found in emails and Microsoft Teams chat logs. The school board granted full access to the emails it found but stated that it could not search Microsoft Teams messages. The school board later found a way to search Microsoft Teams and provided the individual with access to the messages that it located from this search. The individual believes more records should exist. In this order, the adjudicator finds that the school board’s search for records was reasonable, and she dismisses the appeal. |
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PO-4556 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Diane Smith | En savoir plusExpand | |
The requester sought access to financial information under the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act contained in contracts for caretaking and security services provided to the university. The university denied access to some of this information, relying on the mandatory third party exemption in section 17(1). Both the requester and one of the service providers appealed the university’s decision to the IPC. In this order, the adjudicator finds that the financial information in the contracts does not qualify as information subject to the exemption for third party information in section 17(1). She orders the university to disclose it to the requester. |
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PO-4554 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Jessica Kowalski | En savoir plusExpand | |
The ministry denied a request for access to probation records of an individual who, while on probation, was charged with homicide and is awaiting trial. The adjudicator finds that the records relate to an ongoing prosecution and are excluded from the Act due to the time limited exclusion in section 65(5.2) for records connected to ongoing prosecutions. The adjudicator dismisses the appeal, noting that the appellant may seek access once all proceedings in respect of the prosecution have been completed. |
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MO-4569 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Jennifer Olijnyk | En savoir plusExpand | |
An individual requested statistical records relating to an animal control services provider that the city had contracted with. This included a request for the number of animals euthanized, and the reasons for the euthanization, for a five-year period. The city provided a fee estimate of $33,333.00 based on the quote provided by the animal services provider. The adjudicator finds that the fee estimate is unreasonable and reduces the fee to $11,111.00. |
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PO-4553 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Justine Wai | En savoir plusExpand | |
An individual, a member of the media, seeks access to records relating to the government’s consideration of changes to the Greenbelt. Cabinet Office located responsive records but denied the appellant access to them, claiming the records should not be disclosed due to the cabinet records exemption in section 12(1) of the Act. In this decision, the adjudicator upholds Cabinet Office’s decision not to disclose the records and dismisses the appeal. |
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MO-4570 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Alec Fadel | En savoir plusExpand | |
An individual asked the municipality for records concerning a zoning issue. The municipality provided records but denied access to some information. It said that its decision was based on three reasons (exemptions) set out in the Act: that disclosure would reveal the substance of deliberations in a closed council meeting (section 6(1)(b)), that disclosure would reveal information that would harm an ongoing law enforcement matter (section 8(1)(a) and 8(1)(b)) and that disclosure would reveal solicitor-client privileged information (section 12). The requester appealed the decision and also stated that the municipality’s search was not reasonable as more information should be available. In this order, the adjudicator upholds the municipality’s decision that section 6(1)(b) and 8(1)(a) apply to exempt the information from disclosure. He does not agree with the municipality that record 49 is exempt under section 12. Finally, he finds that the municipality’s search was reasonable. |
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PO-4552 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Chris Anzenberger | En savoir plusExpand | |
An individual asked the ministry for records about real estate property value assessments for the GTA West Corridor highway. The ministry gave the individual some records, but denied access to some information about specific costs for two reasons (exemptions) set out in the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, sections 12(1) (Cabinet records) and 18(1)(c) and (d) (economic and other interests). |
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PO-4551 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Anna Kalinichenko | En savoir plusExpand | |
A person asked the ministry for specific information contained in inspection reports of animal research and related supply facilities. The ministry denied access to some information. The ministry said, in part, that the disclosure of the withheld information might endanger the life or physical safety of an individual or the security of a building [sections 14(1)(e) and (i)]. The appeal was narrowed to specific information in one record. |
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MO-4567 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Diane Smith | En savoir plusExpand | |
The requester asked the municipality for the winning bid submission for sponsorship rights. The municipality disclosed parts of the submission but denied access to some financial information stating that it is third party information subject to the mandatory exemption in section 10(1). In this order, the adjudicator finds the financial information is not subject to the exemption for third party information and orders the municipality to disclose it to the requester. |
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MO-4565 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Colin Bhattacharjee | En savoir plusExpand | |
An individual asked the Toronto Police Services Board to provide her with all records in which she is named. The police decided to disclose a significant number of records to her but refused to provide her with some records and parts of records. The individual wanted access to the information not provided to her and also believed that the police had not located all records in their search. In this order, the adjudicator upholds the police’s decision to withhold some records because they are excluded from the Act under the exclusion for labour relations or employment records (section 52(3)3). He also upholds the police’s decision to withhold information that they received from a law enforcement agency in the United States (section 38(a), read with section 9(1)(d)), and the names and other personal information of individuals other than the appellant, because disclosure would be an unjustified invasion of those individuals’ personal privacy (section 38(b)). He orders the police to provide the appellant with the names of two individuals identified in a professional capacity in the records. Finally, he finds that the police conducted a reasonable search for records responsive to the appellant’s request. |
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MO-4566 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Catherine Corban | En savoir plusExpand | |
An individual who was involved in an incident with the Toronto Police asked for the video footage recorded by the body-worn cameras of the three officers who attended the incident. The police did not provide the video footage claiming it relates to labour relations or employment matters (section 52(3)) which are excluded from the scope of the Municipal Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (the Act). The police also claimed that if the video footage was not found to be excluded from the Act, it should not be disclosed, even though it contains information about the individual requesting the information, because disclosure would deprive another individual of the right to a fair trial or an impartial hearing under sections 38(a) and 8(1)(f) of the Act. The adjudicator finds that the video footage is an operational record not related to labour relations or employment matters and is therefore subject to the Act. She also finds that the police have not shown that disclosure of the video footage would deprive another individual of the right to a fair trial or an impartial hearing. She orders the police to disclose the video footage to the appellant, with the personal information of other identifiable individuals withheld. |
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MO-4564 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Lan An | En savoir plusExpand | |
An individual asked the city for records related to a complaint made against his property. The city provided him with full access to photographs and emails but only provided him with partial access to a city staff note explaining that disclosure of some of the information would be an unjustified invasion of another individual’s personal privacy (section 38(b)). The individual seeks access to the information that was not provided to him on the basis that the public interest override (section 16) applies to allow the city to disclose it to him. The individual also questions whether the search conducted by the city was reasonable. |
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PO-4550 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Asma Mayat | En savoir plusExpand | |
On November 8, 2022, the requester asked for records related to a long-term care facility. The requester filed an appeal because the ministry failed to provide a decision within the prescribed time. This order finds the ministry to be in a deemed refusal situation and orders the ministry to issue a final decision by September 27, 2024 and October 15, 2024 where third party notification is required. |
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PO-4549 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Stella Ball | En savoir plusExpand | |
The appellant asked the ministry for access to specific records about the recommendation and decision to delist travel medicine services from the Ontario Health Insurance Plan in 1998. |
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MO-4563 | Order | Access to Information Orders | Lan An | En savoir plusExpand | |
An individual requested access to general occurrence reports and officers’ notes for incidents that occurred in 2018 on a specified street. The police provided her with some information but refused to provide certain information stating that its disclosure would be an unjustified invasion of another individual’s personal privacy (38(b)). In this order the adjudicator upholds the police’s decision not to disclose the information they withheld. She dismisses the appeal. |