One of the great things about having orders in council readily available is that people can find information.
That’s exactly why the current administration has kept them as secret as possible since 2003 and continue to censor them, even though orders in council are entirely public documents.
But at least in the wake of the Bill 29 Freedom From Information measures, the Conservatives seem to have been shamed into opening the vault on their secrets a bit even if they still censor public documents.
One of the things we can now readily see, though, is the number of appointments made by cabinet in the first quarter of 2013 to deputy minister and assistant deputy minister jobs.
Less than 12 hours after meeting with the same officials justice minister Darin King consulted before cabinet approved the cuts, King and attorney general Tom Marshall (right, not exactly as illustrated) told reporters that whatever those officials had said would now be the policy.