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Investigation finds Alberta government broke its own freedom of information rules

Investigation finds Alberta government broke its own freedom of information rules

CBC09-05-2025

Alberta's access to information watchdog has found the provincial government to be non-compliant with its own freedom of information rules.
A new report from information and privacy commissioner Diane McLeod says Alberta's government has implemented internal procedures and policy that allow government employees to wrongfully deny freedom of information requests.
It says the government has put unnecessary restrictions and limitations on requests in an attempt to make fulfilling them easier.
But McLeod says the restrictions make the process unfair for those seeking information and violate the rules set out in legislation.
McLeod's report follows a two-year investigation and says all 27 government departments were found to be at fault.
The report recommends the government make a number of changes to its internal policies to stop refusing requests unnecessarily.

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‘We love you, come on down,': Business owner's message to Canadians boycotting U.S. travel
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CTV News

time31 minutes ago

  • CTV News

‘We love you, come on down,': Business owner's message to Canadians boycotting U.S. travel

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In Alberta, separatism is on the ballot in a rural byelection on Monday
In Alberta, separatism is on the ballot in a rural byelection on Monday

Vancouver Sun

timean hour ago

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In Alberta, separatism is on the ballot in a rural byelection on Monday

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National Post Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here .

In Alberta, separatism is on the ballot in a rural byelection on Monday
In Alberta, separatism is on the ballot in a rural byelection on Monday

National Post

timean hour ago

  • National Post

In Alberta, separatism is on the ballot in a rural byelection on Monday

OTTAWA — Cameron Davies, the leader of the separatist Republican Party of Alberta and the party's candidate for Monday's Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills byelection, admits that his party's name and MAGA red branding are causing some confusion at the doors. Article content 'It certainly has come up in conversation,' Davies told the National Post on Thursday. Article content 'People want to know more about it, what it means and that's just an opportunity to explain why the word 'republican' and why a constitutional republic is something we want to look at.' Article content Davies' Republican party isn't formally aligned with the more well-known one south of the border — notably swapping out the latter's elephant for a more local buffalo as its logo — but it does aspire to make Alberta an independent republic governed similarly in principle to the U.S. Article content 'The form of government Canada has doesn't work for Alberta, and the form of government we have here in Alberta doesn't work for Alberta,' said Davies. Article content Davies, an ex-UCP organizer, is one of two separatist candidates who'll be on the ballot in Monday's byelection in the south-central Alberta riding, where the governing United Conservative Party won more votes than anywhere else in the province in 2023's provincial election. Article content The other is employee benefits specialist Bill Tufts, running under the banner of the Wildrose Loyalty Coalition. Article content Under normal circumstances, the byelection would be a tap-in for first-time UCP candidate Tara Sawyer. But these are anything but normal circumstances, with support for Alberta separatism spiking on the heels of the federal Liberals fourth straight election win. Article content Article content What's more, Davies and Tufts have a fortuitous piece of Alberta election lore to point to. Article content Western Concept candidate Gordon Kesler notched a surprise 1982 byelection win in predecessor riding Olds-Didsbury, briefly becoming the first and only separatist to hold a seat in Alberta's legislature. Article content Kesler is still active in the area's politics and is backing Davis in the byelection. Article content Ex-Alberta MLA Derek Fildebrandt, whose now-defunct riding of Strathmore-Brooks crossed into the riding's east end, says he expects the Republicans to place a strong second, possibly even pushing the UCP below a majority vote share. Article content 'Based on my gut, nothing hard,' said Fildebrandt.

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