You have to get very seriously concerned when a cabinet minister can't or won't answer a simple question that has only one, simple, direct answer.
Next week, the provincial government, the province's access to information commissioner, and some agencies will appear in court to deal with an application from the teacher's union and the nurses' union to roll back the clock on the public's right to know.
Bill 29 did not go far enough for them.
The law says what it has always said: the public can find out the name of the person in a public service position, the position the person occupies, and the remuneration the person gets for doing the job. It's a f
undamental point and the words are written plainly, in black letters, in the current access to information law, just as they have been in every access law since the first one in 1981.
Asked about the challenge to public access to information from some public sector unions, Siobhan Coady told the
Telegram's James McLeod "I will talk to Justice on what their position is, and I’ll
have to get back to you on Monday."
How exactly can the minister responsible for the public's right to know not know what the government position will be?
Seriously.