Far from home, free from fear
Journalism
Exposing wrongdoing in Ecuador put Andersson Boscán at risk of reprisal from gangs and police. Seeking asylum in Canada gave his family a safer home, and a reason to celebrate on May 3, World Press Freedom Day
Danny Wiser
Ecuador
The Globe and Mail
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Globe and Mail
06-06-2025
- Globe and Mail
The man behind the wrong number
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Montreal Gazette
29-05-2025
- Montreal Gazette
Legault wants Ottawa to pay for power line from Churchill Falls
Quebec Politics By QUEBEC — Premier François Legault wants Ottawa to pay for a new power line carrying energy from Newfoundland and Labrador to Quebec. Answering a question Thursday in the National Assembly, Legault revealed each Canadian premier plans to respond to Prime Minister Mark Carney's request for infrastructure projects at a meeting in Saskatoon Monday. 'I can tell you right now that my project is that the federal government finance a line transporting electricity between Newfoundland and Quebec,' Legault said responding to a question from Québec solidaire co-spokesperson Ruba Ghazal. The Globe and Mail reported Thursday that Carney plans to brief the premiers on his nation-building plans when they meet. Carney intends to present legislation to fast-track significant infrastructure projects through upfront regulatory approvals and remove all federal barriers to interprovincial trade. The proposed 'One Canadian Economy,' legislation has been shared with Indigenous communities. The goal is to get approval for all projects within a two-year time frame. During the election campaign, Carney pledged to run deeper deficits to grow spending on infrastructure to reduce Canada's dependence on the U.S. economy, a statement Legault and other Canadian premiers made note of. In a separate interview with the CBC Tuesday, Carney said he will ask first ministers to provide lists of infrastructure projects that could get up and running quickly. In their first conversation after Carney was elected in April, Legault revealed infrastructure money was among the subjects they discussed. And Legault believes he has an ideal candidate for federal money. In December 2024 he and then Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Andrew Furey reached a new deal for energy from the Churchill Falls power plant in Labrador. The deal included construction of a new power plant near the existing Churchill Falls plant and a run-of-the-river generating station at Gull Island in Labrador. The new deal also included new costs of a $2-billion to $3-billion transmission line in Quebec and Labrador. Legault, who has said he and Carney are on the same wavelength because they both are interested in the economy, heads Sunday to Saskatoon. Officials in Legault's office said later that 'Quebec will make representations for different projects,' including the power line. 'We will let the discussions take place in Saskatoon,' an aide to Legault said. The Quebec government Friday will also move to deflect criticism it is not doing enough to reduce trade barriers with the other provinces, another priority item for Carney in order to shore up the economy. Economy Minister Christopher Skeete, who has been working behind the scenes for months on the question, has given notice on the legislature's order paper of plans to present fresh legislation doing away with some costly barriers. To be tabled first thing Friday morning, the new bill will be called: 'An act to facilitate the trade of goods and the mobility of labour from the other provinces and the territories of Canada.' In an interview in March, Skeete revealed some of the scope of the plan, saying the measures will reduce red tape for funeral directors, real estate brokers and racehorse owners. The government is also looking to harmonize regulations on consumer goods with other provinces as part of a countrywide effort to boost internal trade. On Thursday, the Montreal Economic Institute (MEI), a think tank, published a study saying removing barriers between Quebec and the rest of Canada could grow the Canadian economy by $69.9 billion.


Toronto Star
09-05-2025
- Toronto Star
Investigation finds Alberta government not complying with freedom of information laws
EDMONTON - 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 policies that allow government employees to wrongfully deny freedom of information requests. The report, released Friday, follows a two-year investigation sparked by complaints made about the handling of more than 30 individual information requests, many of which were made by The Globe and Mail as part of its investigation into freedom of information systems across Canada. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW McLeod's report says the information requests she reviewed were denied for not providing enough detail, which she determined is not a valid reason under provincial freedom of information laws. Under Alberta's freedom of information rules, government employees have a duty to assist an applicant. If a request doesn't have enough detail to identify records, McLeod said it's up to government staff to seek further information on what is being sought. McLeod wrote that didn't happen for the requests she reviewed for her investigation, which determined all 27 Alberta government departments to be at fault. The report said applicants were asked to narrow down the scope of their request, such as time frame and topic, or submit multiple requests so the government could meet its legislated response window of 30 days. But in many cases, files were actually closed the same day those asks were sent out, the report states. McLeod said this process, which she says violates the 'scheme' of Alberta's freedom of information law, is laid out in an internal government manual called the 'Access Request Playbook.' ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW The manual and the government's attempts to have information requests be reduced in scope are meant to make it easier to fulfill requests, McLeod wrote, but it has made the process unfair since it's 'not the duty of the applicant to make the search easy for the public body.' 'Further, the degree of specificity identified ... as necessary to meet the 'enough detail' threshold ... is simply unattainable by an applicant and, in my view, it is unreasonable for a public body to require such specificity from an applicant when making an access request,' McLeod wrote. 'A member of the general public does not know what records are in the custody or control of a public body. They are not privy to the inner workings of government and, therefore, could not be expected to know specifics about any records held by government.' Osagie Ogunbor, a spokesperson for Service Alberta Minister Dale Nally, said in an email that the ministry is considering McLeod's findings and plans to work with her to address concerns. 'We're committed to openness and transparency, and we are proud of our record,' Ogunbor said, adding that about 97 per cent of freedom of information requests in 2023-24 were handled without complaints to the commissioner's office. McLeod's investigation also found the government unnecessarily refused requests by citing a section of the legislation that allows requests to be denied if creating requested records would unreasonably impede government operations. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Her report says that as part of her investigation, the government submitted its interpretation of the section as meaning that it only 'requires public bodies to provide access to records that already exist' rather than create new records that contain government data. McLeod is recommending the government make a number of changes to its internal policies to ensure requests aren't denied for not providing enough detail, and to ensure government bodies meet their duty to assist applicants. 'I acknowledge that managing the volume of access requests received by government public bodies can be challenging and that resources to do this work are not infinite,' she wrote. 'However, in administering the access to information provisions of the (law), there is only one choice that these public bodies have and that is to administer these provisions ... in such a manner that ensures Albertans are able to effectively exercise these rights.' A news release from the commissioner's office notes that Alberta will soon replace its freedom of information legislation with a new act after a government overhaul took place last year. It says the relevant sections at play are unchanged in the new framework. 'For that reason, I expect government public bodies to apply my findings and recommendations to their practices under both the existing and the new legislation,' McLeod said Ogunbor said that 'many' of the recommendations will be addressed through the new legislation and its regulations. This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 9, 2025.