37-1
37th Parliament,
1st Session
(January 29, 2001 - September 16, 2002)
Select a different session
Proceedings of the Standing Senate Committee on
Social Affairs, Science and Technology
Issue 25 - Evidence
| OTTAWA, Thursday, September 20, 2001
|
| The Standing Senate Committee on Social Affairs, Science and
Technology, to which was referred Bill S-21, to guarantee the
human right to privacy, met this day at 11:05 a.m. to consider the
subject matter of the bill.
|
| Senator Marjory LeBreton (Deputy Chairman) in the Chair.
|
| [English]
|
| The Deputy Chairman: Honourable senators, on Thursday,
April 26, 2001, this committee received an Order of Reference
from the Senate to study the subject matter of Bill S-21, to
guarantee the human right to privacy. The bill is sponsored by the
Honourable Senator Finestone.
|
| Debate at second reading in the Senate raised a number of
outstanding issues that the committee has been asked to examine
as part of its study on the subject matter of this bill. The first issue
relates to clarification of the definition of privacy, along with an
assessment of whether privacy is a fundamental human right. The
second is an evaluation of the existing federal legislative
infrastructure regarding the protection of privacy, such as sections
7 and 8 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the
Privacy Act, the Personal Information Protection and Electronic
Documents Act, formerly Bill C-6. Third is the issue of the
interaction between the right to privacy, the Criminal Code and
the burden of proof; and, finally, the role of the federal Privacy
Commissioner.
|
| We will begin today with Senator Finestone, followed by
Mr. George Radwanski, the Privacy Commissioner, followed by a
panel of officials from the Department of Justice and Professor
Valerie Steeves, who is a professor of law at Carleton University.
|
| Hon. Sheila Finestone: First, I would like to introduce
Mr. Eugene Oscapella, who is my adviser on this particular
subject, which I have been dealing with since 1997.
|
| Madam Chairman, the tragic events of this past week are still
ringing through our hearts and our minds. They will continue to
do so for many years. Their impact on humanity has already
begun to shape our future. How we respond to those events will
determine whether we remain a society guided by democratic
principles or whether we become driven by fear to abandon many
of the values, including privacy, that are indispensable to our way
of life. If we choose the latter course, I believe, and I am sure you
would agree, honourable senators, that terrorism will have won
out.
|
| Our own government, our American friends and colleagues,
our allies, are now pondering whether to turn toward war. The
question on everyone's mind, of course, is: War with whom? The
danger lies in turning that war against ourselves.
|
| Just a few days ago I read a thoughtful opinion by University
of Southern California law professor Susan Estrich describing
"the thin, thin line between safe and free." There is an
understandable urge to give governments more power to learn
about us. She said that the danger is that we will end up neither
safe nor free.
|
| Madam Chairman, we all know that the extent of our rights
varies with the circumstances of our society. In times of war, our
rights and freedoms may need to be limited. No rights are
absolute. All rights must be assessed within their current social
context, but let us not make too much haste to abandon or
seriously truncate the rights and freedoms that are so emblematic
of a democratic society.
|
| Those limitations must be surgical in their precision, not aimed
haphazardly at every shadow. History shows that rights are not
something you suspend only in the short term. Once gone, they
are often not recoverable.
|
| Constitutional protections are most important in times of
national threat. You will notice that in all the news media of late.
In the midst of a national scare, defence to the government can
itself be a threat. We need only look to the internment of Japanese
civilians during the last war and the vicious McCarthy purges in
the United States less than a decade later.
|
| Speaking in 1989, the U.S. Supreme Court Justice Thurgood
Marshall reminded us that, "History teaches us that grave threats
to liberty often come in times of urgency, when constitutional
rights seem too extravagant to endure."
|
| An editorial in the New York Times just one day after last
Tuesday's attacks cautioned that Americans must rethink how to
safeguard the country. However, they must do so without
bartering away the rights and privileges of the free society that
they are defending. The editorial continued:
|
| "The temptation will be great in the days ahead to write
draconian new laws that give law enforcement agencies -
or even military forces - a right to undermine the civil
liberties that shape the character of the United States.
President Bush and Congress must carefully balance the
need for heightened security with the need to protect the
constitutional rights of Americans."
|
| Madam Chair, my task in moving forward with the Privacy
Rights Charter at this time has been made doubly difficult.
However, it is also doubly important. It would not be surprising at
this time to hear many people suggest that the government should
have unlimited, or at least greatly expanded powers of intrusion in
the name of safety and security.
|
| The notion that we should some how embrace the fundamental
right of privacy at a time like this might seem to them completely
illogical, but it is not. There are many other safeguards for
warrants that are all part of the system that we presently have in
government, and it is not a problem. It is a balancing act. It is in
the law already, and it is in the method of measuring and
weighting the law.
|
| Encapsulating this right within domestic legislation, as I seek to
do with Bill S-21, is a critically important next step after our
accession to international instruments guaranteeing the right to
privacy. Canada is a signatory to the 1966 International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights, for example. That document speaks
of the right to protection against interference with privacy.
However, it is not an unlimited right, as we all know. The
covenant protects against excess. It protects against arbitrary and
unlawful interference with privacy.
|
| The 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights was the
world's first modern response to the violence of the first half of
the 20th century, including two world wars. The drafters of the
Universal Declaration, having witnessed the withering destructiveness of totalitarian regimes throughout the world, recognized
the importance for democracy of several rights.
|
| Among those human rights, privacy figured large - the right
to life, liberty and security of the person, protection against arbitrary arrest or detention, and the protection against arbitrary
interference with privacy. These were rights born of war, born of
authoritarian abuses. They must not be surrendered now. It is vital
that we, as senators, give privacy a secure home in our law.
|
| These privacy rights are not inflexible. They are not absolute. I
have said that many times. They are not absolute. The Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, for example, allows such limitations:
|
| ...as are determined by law solely for the purpose of securing
due recognition and respect for the rights and freedoms of
others and of meeting the just requirements of morality,
public order and the general welfare in a democratic
society."
|
| The narrow privacy rights that have been read into the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms by our courts are also
subject to limits. These rights are subject to such reasonable limits
prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and
democratic society. I am referring there to section 7 and 8 of the
Charter.
|
| Madam Chair, the bill before you is not an impediment to the
legitimate exercise of state authority any more than our
international human rights instruments or our Constitutional law
are impediments to legitimate state authority. This bill is a limit
on excess. It is a reflection of our international commitments,
commitments that have a greatly heightened importance in times
of crisis. It is a reflection of the strength of our current democracy
and our commitment to remaining a democracy.
|
| I remind you that privacy is indeed a human right. Its inclusion
in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights makes this
abundantly clear. In September 1996, the Honourable Allan Rock,
then Minister of Justice, underlined this in a speech to a gathering
of international data protection commissioners in Ottawa when he
referred to privacy as a human right, and quoted, with apparent
approval, its description as a basic human right.
|
| Your task today is not the line-by-line examination of this bill.
However, it is important to understand the general context of the
bill.
|
| The bill seeks to give effect to several principles, among them
that privacy is essential to an individual's dignity, integrity,
autonomy and freedom and to the full and meaningful exercise of
human rights and freedoms. As well, the bill establishes a legal
right to privacy, which we currently do not have.
|
| The bill will apply to all persons and matters coming within the
legislative authority of Parliament. The right of privacy set out in
the bill includes, but is not limited to, physical privacy, freedom
from surveillance, freedom from monitoring and interception of
private communications and freedom from the collection, use and
disclosure of personal information. It encapsulates the oft-heard
concept of the "right to be let alone."
|
| The Privacy Rights Charter, therefore, goes much beyond
regulating the collection, use and disclosure of personal information - which essentially is a business contracting undertaking -
such as contemplated by federal and provincial data protection
laws, including the recently enacted Personal Information
Protection and Electronic Documents Act, Bill C-6.
|
| Some concern has been expressed about how the bill would tie
in with existing legislation. The bill would be paramount over
other ordinary legislation. In simple terms, the Privacy Rights
Charter will necessitate a review of existing federal legislation as
well as new legislation to ensure compliance with the bill.
|
| Had we entrenched a constitutional right to privacy, as many
had wanted us to do in 1982, we would have done that very
exercise at that time. This is precisely the process that we
undertook with section 15 of the Charter, the equality rights
provision, which I personally was involved in doing. It was quite
a fascinating exercise. We reviewed all of the laws of Canada on
time.
|
| There is nothing extraordinary about doing that review now to
assess compliance with quasi-constitutional privacy rights. Nor, if
we truly value privacy, should we be afraid of the deficiencies we
might uncover in existing laws.
|
| There seems little sense in grandfathering existing legislative
provisions. That would amount to giving legislation enacted
before the charter special immunity from a consideration of
whether it violates the privacy principles contained in Bill S-21,
which is a template in essence. The basis of this special immunity
would turn on nothing more than the birthdate of the legislation
- hardly a sensible basis for securing this fundamental human
right.
|
| Madam Chair, there has been some concern as well that the bill
would turn on its head the current notion that a person is free to
act unless the action is prohibited by law. Some fear that the
charter would prevent individuals from acting in a way that might
infringe on an individual's right to privacy unless that act had
been deemed lawful.
|
| Madam Chair, I do not believe that to be an accurate
interpretation of the bill. However, if this continues to give rise to
concern, or other issues, for that matter, we might, in the hearings
amend the test. It could be rewritten to say that among other
things an infringement is justifiable if it has not been made
unlawful.
|
| Some have also claimed that the bill may harm the working of
law enforcement agencies. Honourable senators, this argument is
both fish and fowl. It is a red herring; it is a canard. The argument
goes something like this: The activities of law enforcement
agencies were approved by Parliament or established by the
common law. Those standards may be different than those set out
in the bill. Giving the bill quasi-constitutional status would raise
the bill above these laws, upsetting the balance that Parliament
has already set between enforcement powers and privacy. I have
the sense the courts will know better.
|
| Madam Chair, that is exactly the sort of review and
reconsideration that the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
has brought into play in respect of other rights. Why should the
same process not apply to privacy?
|
| Some have suggested that establishing privacy rights in this bill
will lead to much litigation, and that litigation is only for the
wealthy. In response, statements of rights need remedies attached
to them. The only reason litigation is a remedy under Bill S-21,
lies in the limitations of introducing a bill in the Senate.
|
| I would dearly love to have the Privacy Commissioner of
Canada supervise the application of this bill, but that would
import monetary considerations. As you know, such a bill cannot
be introduced in the Senate. We obtained advice from the prior
privacy commissioner in that regard. If, however, the government
were to pass Bill S-21 in the Senate, the Minister of Justice could
adopt the bill in the House of Commons and introduce a role for
the Privacy Commissioner in resolving disputes.
|
| I am wholly confident that the privacy rights charter is both
necessary and workable. We need more than a broad statement of
principle. We need an enforceable right, and that is what this bill
does. Some changes to the bill's provisions may be needed. That
is clearly the proper domain of our parliamentary committee
system. Several dedicated minds have already applied themselves
to developing this bill. Those of us who have pressed so hard -
since 1997 actually - for a more effective grounding of this right
in Canadian law, will welcome constructive criticism. It is in the
interests of all Canadians that we work together in that
constructive spirit to move forward with this bill. I ask you to give
Bill S-21 the right to proceed to second reading and proceed to
committee.
|
| The Deputy Chairman: In 1982, there was an effort to include
this in the charter. For clarification, can you give us some reasons
why you were unsuccessful then? Was there any reason why that
was left out?
|
| Senator Finestone: I have discussed this with a legal adviser
and a number of people. I know only that it was there in 1981 and
it disappeared in 1982. I see some members of your committee
who were around at that time, and I was not. Perhaps they would
be in a better position to answer your question. You might direct
your question thus.
|
| Senator Kirby: For what it is worth, I do not remember the
privacy issue from that time. I remember the property rights issue,
which was ultimately dropped. Frankly, I do not remember the
privacy issue, perhaps because it came and went so fast. The
property rights issue was on the table until very late in the game.
|
| Senator LeBreton: It would be good to review and check the
records.
|
| Senator Kirby: I do not believe it would be in the public
records, but it would be in the records that are archived under the
30-year rule.
|
| Senator Graham: I have a simple question. I want to begin by
observing that, once again, for the second day in a row, we have a
senator taking a highly commendable initiative. Yesterday, we had
Senator Milne with Bill S-12 relating to the census. There is no
senator who has been more diligent in promoting the right to
privacy as has Senator Finestone. Indeed, in another life, she was
a member of the other place and Chairman of the Standing
Commons Committee on Human Rights and the Status of Persons
with Disabilities. She also has an international position from
which, Senator Finestone, I believe you just retired. Perhaps you
could tell us about that position.
|
| Senator Finestone: I was elected by the 142-member
international organization called the Inter-Parliamentary Union to
the World Executive Committee, which represents all these
countries. It is multinational. I sat on the steering committee for
the western, like-minded nations by election, which is known as
the 12-plus in that structure. I was the founder of the Women's
Rights Movement in that organization, which is the oldest
international organization. France, Britain and Germany founded
it 112 years ago.
|
| I have just arrived back from Africa, and the events that took
place in New York were heavily on the minds of everyone. Again,
this very serious worry about the abridgement of fundamental
human rights, which would include the right to privacy without a
sufficient, warranted need for intrusion, was the subject of
conversation.
|
| In the course of discussions, I made it clear that in Canada, you
required a warrant, but that we had learned some pretty tough
lessons in Canada, when we were under serious war threats. It
became more and more obvious, as I was in these meetings, that
we had to look to the issue of privacy. Many of the arguments that
are used are not well founded in law and can certainly be argued
along the way. However, I thank you for the opportunity to share
this piece of information.
|
| The ten of us who were there worked very hard on many of the
international issues. It is not joy ride, but rather a hard-working
session.
|
| Senator Graham: As you indicated today, we are not
examining the bill line by line. This is more of an information
session. Certainly, I support the principle of the bill.
|
| In June 2000, you introduced Bill S-27. On March 13, 2001,
you introduced Bill S-21. Has there been any change in respect of
a word, or a semicolon, or a punctuation mark of any kind in
Bill S-21 as compared with Bill S-27?
|
| Senator Finestone: That is an important question. No change
was made. Upon advice of the clerks and the staff, it became
apparent that we would be better off to make any needed changes
in committee. The Privacy Commissioner had brought certain
issues to my attention, which he thought needed to be changed. I
was advised that that would change the whole nature of the bill,
and we would have to start the process over.
|
| There were concerns from the Ministry of Justice, which I do
not consider well founded at all. Notwithstanding, I was prepared
to hear them and suggested that that would be done in the course
of examining this template against which actions could be tested.
In the end, no changes were made to the bill. Because we have
honourable senators who studied the issues that are before them,
if they feel upon presentation of fact and reason that these things
need to be changed, I am sure that we are open to making those
changes. The mere fact that there is a question as to whether we
have the right to declare the human right of privacy for Canadians
strikes me as totally ludicrous. That is the issue.
|
| Senator Graham: Just for the record, I recall that Bill S-27
died on the Order Paper as a result of the November 2000
election. You introduced the same bill as Bill S-21 in this session.
|
| Senator Fairbairn: This issue, like the other difficult social
issues we take up, is a hidden issue, which means that you have to
work 10 times as hard to get your voice heard, and you have done
a remarkable job.
|
| I suppose it is fair to say that your dearest wish would be to not
have to bring before us this bill, that it would be brought in by
government, if it had ever been possible. This issue has been
discussed for a long time.
|
| Having said that, I note the comments on page 7 of your brief
by Allan Rock, when he was the Minister of Justice back in 1996,
in which he referred to privacy as a human right and, as you put
it, quoted with apparent approval its description as a basic human
right.
|
| In all the work you have done up to this day, what is the
feedback you are getting from within government, given that
public statement by the former Minister of Justice?
|
| Senator Finestone: It would be undiplomatic for me to say
stall, stall and find a reason not to come forward in a forthright
fashion. That has been my experience, and it has been extremely
frustrating.
|
| In 1997, after the study was done, every one of the subsequent
ministers of justice told me they were doing a study on privacy
rights, that our study was pertinent and important, and that they
would be looking at those issues in the tabling of a new Privacy
Act.
|
| I did not see a new Privacy Act. I do not believe honourable
senators have. There is a sense that the enlarged rights given to
the Privacy Commissioner under Bill C-6 cover some of that.
Those are financial, money bills. They deal with how you do
business. There are many things do not deal with business but do
touch every day human life in this society. I find that a very
narrow focus and a very narrow perception.
|
| There is certainly an acknowledgement that privacy is a human
right. I have had the unfortunate experience of certain people
saying it is not a basic human right. I think they are wrong. It has
been frustrating, Senator Fairbairn. Trying to delay facing the
issue and using other people to speak their words for them out of
the Ministry of Justice has not been constructive in the interests of
protecting Canadians.
|
| We have tried to present a template against which all actions
that are deleterious to individuals in Canada could be measured. It
is a comprehensive framework for analysis that covers both the
federally regulated private sector and the federal government.
|
| I cannot be stronger in my statement of what it is. We have an
overarching statement of Canadian values and principles. That is
what this is. All the values found in the Constitution, and those
under section 7 and section 8, are interpreted eventually in the
courts because rights must have remedies. They are interpreted in
the courts, they are broadened, and eventually they become
accepted process in law.
|
| However, it seems incredible that a Western nation, and we are
the only one, does not say that its citizens have a privacy right.
That is really where we stand.
|
| The interpretation of a "privacy right" changes in as society
evolves. Whoever dreamt that we would be where we are in a
technological world today, and it has changed since.
|
| Mr. Eugene Leon Oscapella, Oscapella & Associates
Consulting Ltd.: This issue is fundamental. Senator Finestone is
trying to put forward a fundamental statement of privacy values
for this country. At no time has this become more important than
right now when we are hearing calls south of the border, and we
are seeing reports in Canada. I point to the Globe and Mail of
yesterday where Kirk Makin, a respected reporter, says, "Accepted notions of privacy have likely vanished forever in the dust
of the terrorist attacks on New York..."
|
| Constitutional rights are most important in times of crisis. We
cannot bring this right up to constitutional status. It is too
problematic right now to put it in the Constitution. In the short
term, a quasi-constitutional right is the best we can do. It is
critically important right now that we try to put in a basic document that sets out this comprehensive statement of
overarching principles.
|
| Senator Fairbairn: Have you felt that your progress has
been slowed because of the connection to the concept of a
constitutional right requiring - ultimately, the notion of a
constitutional exchange or amendment to fully recognize it? That
might be part of the reason for some reluctance to jump into an
issue, which, in terms of constitutional change, is such a lengthy,
difficult and sometimes precarious route. I am wondering, Senator
Finestone, whether that is one of the reasons that it has not been
as heartily endorsed as you would wish.
|
| Senator Finestone: With respect to the issue of inserting
privacy into the Constitution, I was doing the same studies
through the communications and culture committee when the
Constitution was opened for revision. At that time, Senator
Beaudoin brought forward a request for inclusion of privacy in
the Constitution at that time. The reason for its rejection was there
was such a problem with that Constitution and the change under
Meech that it did not look like it was a go. I do not think it has
been a go.
|
| It has been recommended to me that I do not call it a Charter of
Privacy Rights but call it a Declaration of Privacy Principles. If
that would sell, and eventually we would get the enlargement of
Privacy Commissioner's rights in there and we would have the
legal access to privacy that would flow from it, the committee has
to sit, the senators along with me, to see what we can do. In the
light of not being able to have the constitutional change, that
having a quasi-constitutional charter is a good idea. That is my
perspective and the perspective of those who work with me.
Others feel differently. I am not the final arbiter in this matter.
|
| Senator Roche: I would like to preface my comments and my
question with the sensitivity of all of us to the tragic events and
attacks in New York and Washington which have been mentioned.
|
| Senator Finestone's colleague made reference to a column that
appeared recently in a prominent publication in which it was
stated that, as a result of this tragedy, privacy rights have been lost
forever. Surely that is an example of the hyperbole that is coming
forth - understandably, perhaps - but they are excessive
statements that need to be conditioned by the long-range values
we are trying to look at here.
|
| Having said that, I would like to ask Senator Finestone to
elaborate on her awareness of the impact of the New York-
Washington attacks on the development of higher standards for
privacy.
|
| Over the next weeks and months, when a slightly calmer
atmosphere will prevail in the media, how do you think the events
will actually play out? Will we, as a society, be more willing to
have intrusions on our privacy for the sake of our protection? That
is probably a legitimate question that is facing us. If we are
willing to have more intrusion, where are the limits, in your view,
to protect our right to privacy?
|
| Senator Finestone: Senator Roche, I can count on you to ask a
difficult question. I believe that, under our laws, we should have
every right to protect our citizens. I believe we have laws in place
that can do that. I have the greatest respect for the RCMP and the
police forces of this country. I believe that they are concerned
about the well-being of Canadians. If that means that they must
seek out those who wish to harm us in a way that is detrimental to
Canadian life and Canadian values, then they should have the
opportunity to do that.
|
| There is a system of warrants in this country that are vital to the
democratic process. When you have used all avenues to try and
prove the guilt or innocence of particular parties and you need
further intrusive mechanisms, then you must go to the proper
source in a democratic society. You do it through law and order.
|
| I remember the committees where we looked at new
technology that is quite scary, for example, muffs that can be used
to hear from 500 metres away and red lights that can penetrate
through thick walls and reveal who is sitting around a table and
the position at tables. There are numerous types of invasive
technology today that can be used not only as an enabler but also
as an abuser. The question is: At what point does the enabler work
and were do you stop the intruder? That is where you must be left
alone.
|
| The interpretation is not mine to make. I am trying to set the
template against which you would value and test it. The decision
is with the judge who will issue the warrant, who will hear the
case from the RCMP or CSIS, or the police to do the right thing
in the interests of the country. I have great confidence in that. I
believe in the rule of law. I think it can be applied. Do you want
to add to that, Mr. Oscapella?
|
| Mr. Oscapella: I raised the passage from yesterday's Globe
and Mail by Kirk Makin because there will be enormous pressure
to sacrifice or abridge privacy rights over the coming months. If
we look at the history of the abridgement of rights in society, it is
rare that once a right is taken away or abridged, it is reinstated.
That is the real danger right now.
|
| The short-term reaction to the events of last week, as horrific as
they were, will be to swing the pendulum too far. It may be
difficult to get the pendulum back to where it should be, in the
centre. The danger is that we will abridge rights and not have a
vehicle for challenging the excessive abridgement of those rights.
We accept that there are needs for limits. There may be
extraordinary measures needed in some circumstances to deal
with extraordinary threats. Nonetheless, we want to have a
template by which we can measure some of those abridgements.
|
| Senator Roche: Senator Finestone, is it a correct depiction of
your argument to say that, in the light of New York and
Washington, you believe that rather than those events slowing
down your bill, it gives an added impetus toward the advancement of the bill?
|
| Senator Finestone: To those who propound the theory that
privacy is dead, I would say, Get used to it. You better start
thinking that privacy is vital. Apply it. That is my sense of things.
It is more than urgent. I was very concerned, Senator Roche,
about coming forward with my bill at this time. However, I read
many newspapers on my flight home. I read the French media, the
British and American media. It is very obvious that we need
privacy protection more than ever before.
|
| We are an amazing democracy. There are few countries in the
world that are like us. I hope that is a value we never lose. I hope
it is a place in society we will always maintain and, in a sense, be
a role model.
|
| Senator Callbeck: Senator Finestone, I would like to hear
some specific examples of the abuse or infringement of individual
privacy rights that are not addressed by the current legislation, but
will be covered in your legislation.
|
| Senator Finestone: First, it is limited in its application right
now. If you look at what sections 7 and 8 cover in terms of
privacy rights, they are very specific and very limited. Most of it
is applicable to people who have been in the criminal system. It
does not cover the general society, which is very important.
|
| Second, when we toured Canada to hear about the problems
around privacy rights, we heard serious concerns from a health
perspective. For example, who got to know about your health and
who got to know about the potential for a serious disease that was
part of your family history but did not necessarily mean that you
would end up having that disease. It was part of your DNA -
that is, the particulars in your family history. How many people
got to know that? What was the protection of the insurance
company who had that information, who shared it with the bank,
thus possibly affecting a mortgage application you have made? It
might affect your job promotion. It might affect the place that you
would have in your own society and having children.
|
| There were a whole series of health issues. I wish I had
remembered to refresh my memory in that regard. However, the
health issues were serious. The financial implications and the
subsequent impact on your loans, your insurance and your
pensions could be negative. These were some of the areas.
|
| There was also concern about the potential for eavesdropping.
Someone in the United States let the cat out of the bag in terms of
some kind of work that they were doing. If it was legal, then that
was fine. If it was illegal, that was not fine. Some of us have a
keen memory of listening devices and their impact on the
Constitution under Mr. Bourassa. I cannot do better than that
right now.
|
| Valerie Steeves, whom you will hear from shortly, can give you
some specific examples in that regard. I would hope that you
would hold that question again and ask Valerie Steeves, who will
be one of your witnesses.
|
| Senator Callbeck: The health information that you mentioned
and the problems that it can create, is that not covered now under
our current legislation?
|
| Senator Finestone: No, it is not adequately covered. I sat in on
this committee with your chair. We had quite serious discussions
on this matter. We discussed how they gathered and cross-
referenced information when data collection was completed.
|
| There is no protection when you buy your drugs from the
pharmacy, and the pharmacy shares that information. That
information is compiled. They know more about you than you do.
They know more about me than I want them to know, including
my shopping habits and where do I my buying and what kind of
pills I have got and what they are used for.
|
| Is that something we want shared in the general public? Can we
control it or not?
|
| I believe your committee will be addressing those questions
shortly. Does it fall under Bill C-6 or does it fall under a general
privacy right?
|
| Would you add to that, please?
|
| Mr. Oscapella: Senator Callbeck, I might also add that this
privacy charter may come into play with surveillance of
legitimate democratic activities that may, in this time, be
considered threatening. We would use this as a template for
measuring that.
|
| Let us look at the issue of identity cards. It is possible that the
Charter - the constitutional charter - could be interpreted to
protect people from the imposition of the duty to carry identity
cards, but it may not be. This legislation provides the sort of
template to measure those sorts of intrusions.
|
| Look at issues such as e-mail and Internet access by
government agencies. Look at the right or restrictions on the use
of encryption. It may be appropriate to limit encryption in some
circumstances, but we want a template to test those sorts of
intrusions. This bill could do that in terms of the relationship
between the federal government and the citizens of this country.
|
| The bill has another component, which is the federally
regulated private sector. That is probably not the privacy issue of
the moment in the minds of most people. The privacy issue is the
definition of the power that the government would have in order
to deal with the perceived threat of terrorism. Some of these
things that I have mentioned - identity cards, access to e-mail,
Internet communications, rights to control access to encryption, or
to require people to give a back door key to encryption to the
authorities - are all issues that should be assessed.
|
| They are not necessarily in the context of criminal
investigations. It could be in the context of a more surveillance-
intensive society. I do not know if the limited Charter protections
that have been offered under sections 7 and 8 would actually be
broad enough to cover of these issues. That is what we are trying
to do.
|
| We are not saying that in some circumstances it is not
appropriate to conduct surveillance. We are not saying it is not
appropriate to give access to encrypted messages. We are saying
that this is a test that we could use to determine if such access is
justified, instead of using intrusive measures as the foundation for
dealing with events such as happened last week. There are many
other ways of dealing with terrorism than by clamping down on
the civil liberties and the basic human rights of the citizens of a
society.
|
| Senator Morin: I also would like to congratulate Senator
Finestone for her work in promoting such an important principle.
|
| Especially at this time, Canadians will want to be sure that such
a declaration does not compromise their own safety in the light of
recent terrorist attacks. I realize that there are other ways, but if
they have the impression that what we are doing compromises
their safety, it would be harmful.
|
| Health information is a very important issue. I hope that we
will have the opportunity to come back to it.
|
| The efficiency of our health care delivery system is increasing
ly based on access and integration of personal health care
information. If we put major limits on it, our health care system
will suffer. There is no doubt about that.
|
| Senator Finestone: I agree with you, senator. That is why you
need to have something to articulate that procedure that you are
going to take. It proves that it is in the best interest of the citizen.
It proves that it was knowingly undertaken in the interest of that
person who gave permission. The test would show that it is
reasonable and justifiable in a democratic society.
|
| There is a series of restrictions, directions or guidelines and
values and principles that are inherent in the structure of this bill.
They are reasonable in a democratic society. I, as you, do not
want to compromise the safety of myself, of you, of my children
and particularly my grandchildren. There is reason, and I think it
is a justifiable reason.
|
| I had cause to be involved with the RCMP in a minister
portfolio. I value their role, assistance, guidance and their
undertaking. It is vital, in a democracy, that you have the systems
in place that protect that democracy.
|
| There is nothing that people of ill will dislike more than an
open and democratic society where there are rules and that people
live by the rule of law. If you work internationally, you see the
number of wars and the treatment of people around the world. It
is discouraging. Then you see that there is a challenge to this
fundamental way in which we live, of course, I want to protect it.
|
| However, I want it protected in a way that is typical of
Canadians and North Americans, in a decent kind of way. The
openness of that surveillance should be understood. If it needs to
be closed and private, it should be done through the courts,
through a warrant, and an understanding of what is acceptable.
|
| I believe that you will be dealing with the knowledge of a
person's health and the system for their health. I know that you
are certainly involved in considering that. I am sure that when
your committee deals with the business aspect of health you
would be looking at what information is being gathered. You will
look at whether that information is gathered in Canada in a certain
way, but their business is being done in the United States, where it
is covered as well. These are critical issue that touch the lives of
Canadians. I hope that it will be examined through your
committee.
|
| I am not interested in having someone know my family history.
If I want people to know, I will tell them. I did not ask someone
else to come in and decide to unveil who I am. No one has the
right to do that in our kind of a country.
|
| Senator Morin: As I said, I that hope we will have the
opportunity to discuss this at greater length. I agree with the
principle. It is when you start getting into the details that the
arguments arise.
|
| Senator Finestone: I cannot wait for us to get to the detail
part. I hope that the Minister of the Department of Justice and the
Privacy Commissioner will see that it is a good idea to go further
and conduct a study.
|
| Senator Cordy: I, too, would like to thank you very much for
coming before us today. I know that you have certainly been an
advocate in ensuring that Canadians have a right to privacy.
|
| My question follows Senator Roche's comments earlier. In late
February or early March of this year, Canadians were aghast
when they discovered that customs officials were opening and
photocopying mail addressed to immigration lawyers.
|
| Canadians were aghast at that time. I am not sure that this week
they would be aghast if they were to discover that. You said that
we can not be driven by fear to abandon values, particularly
privacy. I think that we would all agree with you.
|
| How do we balance the need to protect Canadians with the
need and the right that individuals have to privacy?
|
| Senator Finestone: Well, I would that the ministers of this
country are in place to protect Canadians. The most difficult times
and the most important tests come under circumstances that are
not always favourable. When you must do something, you must
just do it. That is important.
|
| As I said to you at the outset, I was very nervous about
bringing this forward at this time. The more I read, the more
determined I was that we not be blocked by narrow vision and by
personal interests. It will be because we, as senators, have decided
that we believe that there is cause for us not to move forward with
this. That is how we should proceed in this matter.
|
| The courts often look to the intent of legislation when drafting
laws and when interpreting the extent and the measure of rights of
individuals versus the right of the state to intervene. Bill S-21
provides a guide, and that is its whole purpose. We do not define
privacy in our Constitutional right, but we have signed the
international instruments and then ignore them in language.
|
| Therefore, the bill provides that guideline for the direction that
we are taking in respect of what we stand for in standards, values
and procedures. It is up to the courts to assess on a case-by-case
circumstance if a situation is right or wrong.
|
| At the moment, there are no rules or regulations for the courts
in the defined terms of privacy. It is true, however, that the courts
will probably pass judgments that are different today than they
would have been 15 years ago. There was not the same level of
technology then. There were no cameras watching people come
and go everywhere. There was no visual image of faces, so that
you could pick a face out of the crowd. Maybe that is a good
thing and maybe it is a bad thing.
|
| It would depend on who is using the information. Are there
terrorists using it, or are the RCMP and other police using the
technology? Who owns the information, and who has the right to
rerun it? Those are all serious issues. I do not know the answers,
but I know the questions, in some instances. I believe it is our
responsibility to protect our privacy rights, and then let us see
how far those rights extend. No time is more important than now.
|
| Senator Cordy: I would agree with you, thank you.
|
| Senator Finestone: Thank you, you have given me more time
than I expected. You asked tough questions, and I hope that they
will help us in our deliberation. I urge you to pass Bill S-21 in the
Senate and send it off to committee, where we can study it
clause-by-clause to make the needed changes.
|
| The Deputy Chairman: Our next witness is Mr. George
Radwanski, Privacy Commissioner of Canada.
|
| Senator Michael Kirby (Chairman) in the Chair.
|
| The Chairman: Thank you attending today, Mr. Radwanski. I
notice you have been listening to Senator Finestone's comments.
If you can proceed with your opening statement, we will be
delighted to ask you some questions.
|
| Mr. George Radwanski, Privacy Commissioner of Canada:
I guess I am becoming a bad habit for this committee, having
been here both last night and today.
|
| The Chairman: You should not be too optimistic and think
that this is your last appearance, because I suspect Bill C-6 may
return, in which case, we will see you once again.
|
| Mr. Radwanski: Honourable senators, I am always at your
disposal, and we should do this more often.
|
| This is an important time to have a piece of legislation before
Parliament that affirms or refocuses our attention on the
importance of privacy. Certainly, all of us in this room will agree
that privacy is a fundamental human right that is especially
important to remember at such exceptional times as we are facing
now.
|
| There is no question that the kinds of security threats that we
now face do raise new issues about the balance between the need
for privacy and the need for information. Indeed, that is the entire
purpose and thrust of the privacy laws we have in Canada - the
Privacy Act - and now the new Private Sector Law.
|
| It is a good balance. I believe that the Privacy Act is
particularly pertinent, of course, to the activities of government in
preserving security. It is a flexible instrument and a good one that
makes it possible to maintain that balance, while providing all the
scope needed to protect public safety.
|
| I believe that the challenge is to take all the measures that are
demonstrably necessary to protect public safety against the new,
or at least newly discernible, threats that we face.
|
| However, it must be done on the basis of privacy rights and
principles, which is to say that any infringement on privacy and
any further limitation must be demonstrably necessary. It must
demonstrably be the only appropriate way to achieve the
necessary end - that there is no equally or satisfactorily
effective means of achieving the same end through less invasive
measures, and so forth.
|
| These principles are already well enshrined in our law, and,
speaking as Privacy Commissioner and an officer of Parliament, I
have no intention of being an obstacle to protecting the public.
Equally, I have no intention of being a rubber stamp or a gateway
for privacy-invasive measures that would not be demonstrably
necessary.
|
| In that context, the intent of Senator Finestone's Bill S-21 is an
important one. That intent, as I understand it, is to fill a gap that
exists because there is no framework for testing existing or future
laws of Canada against privacy rights. That is one significant gap
in the Privacy Act. It does not have paramountcy, which means
that if what is being done that is invasive of privacy is done on
the authority of a law of Canada, then the Privacy Commissioner
has no formal recourse in the sense that it cannot be a violation of
the Privacy Act.
|
| That is not to say that the Privacy Commissioner is without
resources in such a circumstance. The mail opening to which you
referred earlier, senator, I found in my original finding was
technically entirely in accordance with all of the relevant
legislation. Nevertheless, I was able, in due course, to persuade
the Minister of National Revenue that, while it was technically in
compliance with the Privacy Act as it was being carried out, it
was a violation of privacy rights. A solution was found that is
much more respectful of those rights. The situation is not totally
bleak.
|
| However, I certainly would support the thrust of Senator
Finestone's bill, which is to enshrine in our laws, a law that is
paramount in stating that existing or future legislation must meet
the test respecting privacy rights.
|
| That would be an important step forward. That is quite a
reasonable one, given that Canada is a signatory to instruments -
including the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human
Rights - that enshrine privacy as a fundamental human right.
|
| Senator Finestone, I will go on to say, is a great friend of
privacy in this country and someone who, as I was starting in my
duties, was a very valued source of counsel to me and a valued
and respected supporter.
|
| All that being said, it pains me greatly to have to tell you that
as Privacy Commissioner and as an officer of Parliament, I must
oppose the current bill as it is before us in the strongest possible
terms.
|
| The difficulty I have is the bill goes beyond providing a kind of
a quasi-constitutional test to ensure that laws are in accordance
with privacy rights. Instead, this legislation comports itself as if
there were no privacy legislation in place, as if we did not have a
Privacy Act - which is a good piece of law - and as if we did
not have the new Bill C-6 - the Private Sector Act, which is also
a good piece of law.
|
| My concern is primarily with clauses 4, 5 and 6, which together
have the effect of saying that an individual who feels that his or
her privacy right is being violated, whether it be by the
government or by a private sector entity under federal jurisdiction,
can litigate that right in court. The difficulty is that we already
have a process for dealing with complaints about individual
violations of privacy rights, and that is a complaint to the Privacy
Commissioner.
|
| I have two laws that give me considerable and effective
powers. I have an excellent staff of investigators. I have the best
privacy experts in the country in my policy and research team
and, without a doubt, the finest privacy lawyers as my legal
advisers. To complain to me, to my office, does not cost a penny
and every complaint is given full and careful consideration.
|
| This law, as proposed, would create a parallel track. An
individual or a corporation or an entity that chose to do so could
go to court rather than complain to the Privacy Commissioner.
That is not simply spreading the opportunities to enforce privacy
rights. That is creating a total mess because where the Privacy Act
and Bill C-6 are detailed and specific, based on extensive
analysis, consultation, debate and so forth, Senator Finestone's
charter or bill, by definition, by its nature, is very broad and
makes general, sweeping statements.
|
| This is fine. However, you can have a circumstance where, to
the extent that individuals or organizations choose to go to court
on that basis, suddenly alongside a clear and explicit set of
privacy laws, duly passed and debated by Parliament, would be a
parallel set of rulings, findings by judges of different courts,
dealing with different complaints. The nature of the decision in
each case may depend largely upon the predilections, judgments
or attitudes of a given judge, to say nothing of the quality of the
lawyers who bring the case or who take opposing sides.
|
| What you would have is a parallel situation that could be a very
dangerous mishmash. First, it would expose the government and
private sector entities to an entirely new array of costs and
complications, because in addition to or apart from complaining
to my office, people could go directly to court. It might enrich the
lawyers, but it would not do much in terms of the burdens the
government or private sector organizations would have to face.
|
| Second, you would end up possibly with competing findings. I
investigate a case on the basis of the laws that I am endowed with
overseeing. I reach a certain finding. What if a court presented
with a similar case reaches the opposite conclusion? What takes
precedence? Where do we go?
|
| In addition to the confusion this situation would cause - and
this is an important point to make - the fact of having such a law
going forward through the legislative process at this time, in this
form, would cause horrific problems for the credibility of the
PIPED Act of Bill C-6. I am already hearing great concern from
private entities that fall under the jurisdiction of Bill C-6. They
say that they are trying to comply with the new law that is just
coming into effect. It has been explained and so forth. Now there
is a possibility that they will simultaneously be subject to an
entirely different regime, perhaps being sued. How are they
supposed to deal with this? Quite frankly, if this problem is
allowed to go forward, I fear for the effectiveness of what we
already have in place.
|
| I know that Senator Finestone has said the bill can always be
amended in committee. The trouble is giving this kind of
two-track system approval, however temporary, would create
grave problems for the credibility of the privacy regime in this
country.
|
| Senator Finestone: I thank you for your presentation, and I am
glad to sense a degree of support in some directions. I found your
observation about the confusion and parallel track interesting, and
perhaps you are right. However, I will not be sure until I hear all
sides of the question. Yours is only one voice, not all of the voices
out there. I would like to know more about the conflicting
jurisdiction principle and the confusion.
|
| You had asked me to consider clauses 4, 5 and 6. I did consider
them and I did find out if we could remove them at that point, and
I pointed out in my observations that the advice was no.
|
| Second, a consideration of rights and the right to redress if
rights are not met is an important call. Do you believe that both
bills for which you have responsibility are enough to cover all
Canadians in all walks of life and under all circumstances?
|
| Mr. Radwanski: I believe that they are enough, to the best of
my knowledge so far, to cover Canadians in circumstances that
are under federal jurisdiction, which is all that is possible for your
legislation to cover as well.
|
| I believe with the tools at my disposal, and with the new ones
coming on stream, your concerns, for example, about health
privacy will be addressed as of January 1 under the PIPED Act. I
believe we have laws that are effective, and I feel we should be
careful not to undermine them by doing something that is not
sufficiently well considered, however well intentioned.
|
| This is not to say that I oppose the intent of your law, but what
is appropriate to have instead is a law which you might have put
forward - and which I had hoped you would after our
conversation - which focussed on requiring that the laws of
Canada, passed or new, are in conformity with privacy rights.
That would have nicely complemented the work that I do under
the two pieces of legislation that we have.
|
| I am somewhat troubled. You have not done this directly, but
there is an implication in much of what you say. Certain
self-appointed privacy advocates - one of whom the committee
will be hearing from - have been taking the view that not to be
fully supportive of this piece of legislation is some how not to be
supportive of privacy. It is important to protect privacy, obviously,
but it is crucially important to do so in a way that is effective and
does not have the unintended consequence of weakening privacy
rights when one is setting out to strengthen them.
|
| Senator Finestone: Following your evaluation and your
analysis, you are of the view that, had this been a declaration or
some kind of different kind of bill - that is, if clauses 4, 5 and 6
had not been in there - it could have been a complementary
factor for the work that you believe still remains to be done. Do I
understand that correctly?
|
| Mr. Radwanski: That is correct. That is the conversation that
we had in February. At the time, you agreed with me. My view
was that if this bill were to focus on the issue of ensuring that the
laws of Canada are consistent with the principles enunciated in
your bill - and, of course, that would be for the courts to
determine - that would be great.
|
| It is when you stray into making individual complaints about
alleged violations of individual privacy rights, litigatable in court,
that you risk undermining - with the best of intentions - the
thoughtful and careful edifice of privacy law that has already been
built up.
|
| Senator Finestone: As I understood our conversation - and I
think I understood it quite well and I wrote you to that effect -
you asked me to consider removing clauses 4, 5 and 6. That is
precisely what I am prepared to envisage if that is the view of the
Senate committee.
|
| I am no longer the owner of that bill. This bill belongs to the
Senate of Canada. It does not belong to Sheila Finestone. That
must be made eminently clear. It is up to this Senate to make a
decision and - perhaps wisely after listening to you - remove
those three clauses.
|
| My sense was that it would be important for you to understand
that this would be a complementary bill. You have made your
point about where there are problems inherent in the approach
that we have taken. Fine. Come and make them before the Senate
as they are discussing this bill and put into place what you believe
will help re-establish and reaffirm and affirm privacy rights for
Canadians, which I believe to be under jeopardy and under threat
under the present circumstances more so than ever before.
|
| Mr. Radwanski: I am certainly not here to criticize you and I
hope that is not how you are taking the remarks that I am making.
The difficulty I have is that I can only, at this time in these
circumstances, comment on the bill that is before me. For the
reasons that I have articulated, I have no choice but to most
vigorously oppose this bill in this form.
|
| The concern I have is that, if it continues making its way
through the legislative process in this form, it is sending a very
confusing message as to the direction in which the government
might be moving. Certainly with regard to the credibility of
Bill C-6 and the PIPED Act, this will cause very serious
problems. I have no choice but to articulate these concerns.
|
| I also would emphasize that we must be careful not to create a
self-fulfilling prophesy in terms of privacy being under threat.
Certainly there are journalists who correctly want to raise the
issue that privacy may be under attack. However, I am heartened
by what I have heard the government and certainly the Prime
Minister say in terms of not throwing Canadian values or
Canadian rights out the window. It is my determination to be
vigilant to ensure that does not happen.
|
| As opinion leaders, we must exercise some care not to feed a
perception that the sky is falling as far as privacy rights are
concerned, because it might become a self-fulfilling prophecy.
|
| Senator Finestone: If I may finish one comment, it is
important to place this on the record and for senators to know
this. From the day I started to write this bill, I went to the
Ministry of Justice and I went to the Privacy Commissioner -
you were not the Privacy Commissioner at that time.
|
| I asked for their support. The Privacy Commissioner was
outstanding in his support and he had me remove things that
would have made this an illegal bill. He recognized the
constraints under which we worked. The Ministry of Justice staff
was totally incompetent and uncooperative. If they had the sense
of what you are telling me now, we could have avoided this
problem, if it is such a problem.
|
| I tend to agree, if you are saying that these are the things that
you are hearing and you have seen. They must be addressed, but
they must be addressed in a committee. I do not see where that
will cause the kind of problems to which you allude with respect
to Bill C-6 - which has enough problems as it is - or with the
application of the issue of health rights.
|
| I thank you for your presentation from my perspective. I do not
think the confusion is enough not to take a look at why Canadians
cannot be assured that they have privacy rights under the law.
|
| The Chairman: Next, we have a panel of two witnesses, both
of whom are lawyers. Ms Steeves is Director of the Technology
Project for law and social change at Carleton University and
Elizabeth Sanderson is the Senior General Counsel in the Public
Law Policy section of the Department of Justice. I know you both
have done quite lengthy briefs. I would ask you to focus on
effectively doing a précis of your argument so that we can then go
directly to questions. I would like to begin with Ms Sanderson,
please.
|
| Ms Elizabeth Sanderson, Senior General Counsel, Public
Law Policy Section, Justice Canada: I will try to be more
specific in my comments than in the original presentation we had
prepared. We had prepared our comments around the four issues
that you had raised earlier this morning. I will try to focus on
those questions as I go through my comments.
|
| My colleagues at the Department of Justice view this bill as the
end product of the hard work and dedication of Senator Finestone.
She is to be commended for her work in this important issue.
|
| The approach she has taken in this bill is a novel one and
attempts to change the paradigm of our thinking about privacy.
|
| What is privacy? In many countries it has been linked to data
protection and that is very much reflected in our Privacy Act that
we have heard about this morning. Elsewhere it has been seen as
a demarcation line setting out how far a society can intrude in
individual's affairs. We see this very much in the area of the
Criminal Code protections for things like search and seizure and
warrants for wiretaps, and so forth. We can speak of bodily
privacy, territorial privacy and informational privacy. As Senator
Finestone points out, privacy may be referred to as a fundamental
human right.
|
| I would like to direct my comments to the notion of the
existing privacy regime at the federal level, in part going into the
provincial level to give the senators an idea of our sense of
existing protection of privacy in Canada.
|
| [Translation]
|
| How do Canadian laws and courts protect privacy in Canada?
The Supreme Court of Canada has already interpreted the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which is part of the
Canadian Constitution, to include the right to privacy. In addition,
a number of other pieces of legislation complete the current
privacy protection system in Canada, such as the Criminal Code,
the Privacy Act and the Personal Information Protection and
Electronic Documents Act.
|
| Although the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms does
not say so explicitly, the courts have recognized that privacy
interests are provided for under sections 7 and 8 in particular. For
example, section 8 says that "everyone has the right to be secure
against unreasonable search or seizure" and has been construed to
protect a person's reasonable right to privacy.
|
| [English]
|
| I refer to the case of Hunter v. Southam case, where the courts
speak directly to the right of privacy as being covered by section
8 of the Charter. There are other paragraphs in my brief that speak
to section 8.
|
| This is not an academic theory for lawyers and the Department
of Justice. In section 4.1 of the Department of Justice Act, the
Minister of Justice is required to review all legislation from the
perspective of conformity with the Charter. We have a unit in the
Department of Justice - the Human Rights Law Section -
whose primary job is to advise government departments on
Charter questions and their work emanates from this responsibil
ity in the Department of Justice Act. That includes sections 7 and
8 and the regime that is foreseen in sections 7 and 8, including
privacy.
|
| Next I would like to talk about some of the Criminal Code
protections. The government took into account a number of these
Supreme Court of Canada decisions dealing with privacy, special
procedures and powers - Hunter, Duarte and Dyment - when it
amended the Criminal Code in 1993 to better protect the privacy
of persons when their private communications or private activities
become of interest to the state in the investigation and prosecution
of offences.
|
| Before 1993, a person, including a law enforcement officer,
could be considered as consenting to having his conversation with
another individual recorded for the purposes of an investigation.
However, as a result of the amendment to the Criminal Code in
1993, consent of the law enforcement officer is not sufficient.
Officers must now seek and obtain approval from the courts
before engaging in electronic recording and tracking operations.
|
| [Translation]
|
| With respect to federal laws dealing with privacy protection,
the Privacy Act protects individuals by controlling the collection,
use, disclosure and storage of personal information by government institutions. Its purpose is to limit the collection of personal
information to that which is needed for program or service
delivery and to allow that information to be conveyed to other
departments and governments only for the sake of consistency.
|
| Its supplementary, the Personal Information Protection and
Electronic Documents Act creates a similar right to privacy
protection but in the private sector. To be more precise, this act
requires private sector organizations to obtain consent to gather,
use and disclose personal information.
|
| [English]
|
| I will not go into the details of the so-called PIPED Act - we
heard the Privacy Commissioner speak to it this morning. The
important question here is that it involves harmonization of
federal and provincial laws and that law has taken the federal
jurisdiction as far as it can in terms of the trade and commerce
power. Various departments are working with the provinces to
enhance the harmonization, particularly in the health information
area.
|
| I will now move to the impact and problems that we have seen
with Bill S-21.
|
| Bill S-21 would create a good deal of uncertainty and quite
possibly may pose obstacles to many government programs and
policy. This bill raises doubts about the legality of statutory
enforcement regimes currently in force and in compliance with
the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and other relevant
legislation.
|
| The statement of principles in a declaration of intent is
acceptable, and we can agree with the sentiments of the preamble
to this bill. I can assure you all those at the Department of Justice
who work in this area are sympathetic with the sentiments in that
preamble.
|
| Privacy is extremely important as is reflected in the Canadian
Charter, case law and other federal legislation that I have
mentioned earlier. However, it would be necessary for government departments to apply this bill and the courts would have to
interpret it. The law is a rigorous discipline. Language that is not precise may cause great problems and complications in
implementation and interpretation that may not have been
intended. I would like to give some examples of this.
|
| [Translation]
|
| What appears to be a broad reaching application raises a
fundamental problem. According to its current wording, the bill
appears to cover not only government institutions and federal
undertakings, but also individuals generally. If individuals infringe
the text of Bill S-21, by engaging in surveillance activities with
respect to their property, for example, then under subsection 4(3),
they run the risk of being prosecuted under section 126 of the
Criminal Code. Even if Bill S-21 were amended to restrict its
application to federal organizations and government institutions,
or just to government institutions, federal departments would still
have trouble fulfilling their mandate under Bill S-21, particularly
with regard to property surveillance activities, and possibly
security activities.
|
| Given the apparent broad scope of the bill, we are unsure under
which heading of constitutional jurisdiction Parliament intends
Bill S-21 to come. This question was debated when Bill C-6 was
tabled in the House under the federal authority to regulate trade
and commerce, which is conferred on the Parliament of Canada
under subsection 91(2) of the Constitution Act of 1867. So the
question is: is the true nature of Bill S-21 a matter of federal
jurisdiction, provincial or both? If Bill S-21 is not supposed to be
a criminal statute, then which is the correct heading of
constitutional jurisdiction?
|
| [English]
|
| The bill states that no person shall unjustifiably infringe an
individual's right to privacy, and that that infringement on an
individual's right to privacy is justifiable, if it is lawful. This
differs from the current laws, where a person, including the
Crown in some circumstances, is free to act unless the action is
prohibited by law. This recognition that one can do as one sees fit
unless a democratically elected body has decided otherwise is a
cornerstone of our notion of freedom and liberty.
|
| However, a review of this bill seems to indicate that the reverse
could become the norm. It would be that a person would not be
able to act in some circumstances unless Parliament or the courts
have previously deemed the proposed action lawful.
|
| This was raised in the press this summer and concerned public
safety on federal property, including parking lots. If a government
department received complaints about safety in a parking lot
under its control, and decided that video surveillance would
reduce the threat of harm, under this bill it would first have to
meet the tests set out in clause 5, including ensuring the
lawfulness of the surveillance.
|
| [Translation]
|
| Only rarely and with great caution do our laws resort to this
type of technique, where the burden of proof is reversed such that
the person concerned must prove that an act is lawful; the person
cannot merely assert that the act may be committed unless it is
unlawful.
|
| [English]
|
| The same section includes additional tests. For example, clause
5(3)(c) states that one must demonstrate that the objective cannot
be achieved by any other less intrusive means, which appears to
borrow text from judicial interpretations of section 1 of the
Canadian Charter. How would this impact on legitimate law
enforcement activities? Would search warrants, for example, need
to meet the test in clause 5, in addition to the strictures currently
in place in the Criminal Code? All of the law enforcement
procedures could be thrown into confusion.
|
| A cursory review of our Criminal Code demonstrates that, over
the years, a fine balance has been struck between the interests of
the individual and the interests of society. We have been informed
that departments involved in law enforcement are very concerned
that the bill may affect adversely their activities, which were
approved by Parliament or are in accordance with common law,
and may set different standards than those set out in Bill S-21. I
would add they would have gone through the review process in
respect of the Charter, as well.
|
| [Translation]
|
| This brings us to the paramountcy provision. That would give
Bill S-21 quasi-constitutional status and would place it above the
Criminal Code and other special federal statutes, thus disturbing
the harmony that Parliament has already established between the
specific needs of departments, which must fulfilled their
obligations under acts or regulations aimed at protecting the
public, and the individual's rights to privacy.
|
| Bill S-21 could turn out to be a source of confusion and
uncertainty in a number of other areas of the law. For example,
the case law with respect to the Charter of Rights and Freedoms,
which is highly developed, has established well-considered
concepts, for example, reasonable expectations of privacy, and has
protected this right based on sections 7 and 8.
|
| However, repeatedly, in Charter case law, the courts have
stressed the need to take a contextual and teleological approach to
determine the scope of Charter-protected rights.
|
| Individual rights must be reconciled with the rights and
interests of others. There are a number of circumstances under
which a social value may conflict with other values. The
conflicting interests on which the courts may have to rule are not
always a matter of individual privacy rights and public safety.
|
| Take, for example, an accused's right to full answer and
defence versus a complainant's right to privacy. As another
example of conflict, there is the individual right to bodily privacy
and the risk of harm to the most vulnerable members of our
society, as the Supreme Court of Canada noted when faced with
the bitter dilemma of deciding in Rodriguez whether to uphold the
validity of the offence of assisted suicide under the Criminal
Code.
|
| There is a serious risk that the bill will hamper and confuse the
teleological approach taken by courts when applying the Charter.
In our opinion, it will not allow an interpretation that takes into
account the relevant context and weighs various and conflicting
values in many situations.
|
| [English]
|
| It is reasonable to assume that the test in the senator's bill for
balancing the right to privacy versus the public interest may be
interpreted differently from the Charter. As a result, many areas of
law, well defined right now, would need to be re-litigated. The
cost of this exercise, in time and dollars, both public and private,
could be exorbitant.
|
| Let me give you a concrete example where the bill could affect
departmental legislation and operations. Citizenship and Immigra
tion Canada (CIC) collects a great deal of personal information
relating to immigration applications and to the enforcement of
deportation orders and immigration offences. Bill S-21 would
potentially require CIC to defend its information gathering and
sharing activities in court under the Bill S-21 tests. To be safe and
to avoid litigation, CIC would likely be forced to have all its
current information-gathering activities included in regulations
made under clause 7(1)(b) of the bill codifying practices that are
"justifiable" infringements.
|
| This would require, I am told, complex and lengthy consulta
tions with CIC and other information-gathering departments
before such regulations could be drafted. Those regulations would
have to be prepared before the enactment of the bill, that is,
within one year.
|
| Honourable senators, other issues arise with respect to this bill,
such as the uncertainty around remedies and the role of the
Federal Privacy Commissioner.
|
| In conclusion, while Bill S-21 can be praised as intending to
enhance the privacy of Canadians, the devil may be in the detail.
Changes could come at the expense of certainty, public safety,
operational efficiency and fiscal responsibility. Supporting privacy
should not lead to an erosion of other values in our society, and
the balance that Parliament has achieved in other pieces of
legislation.
|
| The honourable senator's desire to broaden and strengthen
privacy protection is worthy of our serious consideration, but
there is more than one solution. We currently have the Canadian
Charter and case law, as well as the other pieces of federal
legislation. We cannot say that we are without privacy protection.
|
| [Translation]
|
| We do not believe that Bill S-21 clarifies privacy legislation.
And now more than ever, we need certainty, after the events of
last week.
|
| [English]
|
| We fully appreciate that Bill S-21 gives us a sighting on the
horizon - a point of reference for the government's future work.
We are already using Senator Finestone's work on Bill S-21 to
inform the government's work in the area of privacy reform. We
will no doubt profit from the debate and discussion around this
bill as we proceed.
|
| [Translation]
|
| The events that occurred on September 11, 2001, have made
this debate even more important. Privacy protection and security
have leaped onto the front pages of our newspapers and have
taken top spot in our collective consciousness. In their search for
leadership, wisdom and reassurance, Canadians have turned to
their federal government.
|
| [English]
|
| In conclusion, I would like to quote the Minister of Justice
during her intervention in the debate on Tuesday in the House of
Commons. I quote:
|
| As we search for effective means of security, privacy
issues will be important. My department has been reviewing
the privacy regime in Canada, and in the course of this work,
the balance between the privacy and safety of Canadians will
be a key consideration.
|
| The Chairman: I will now turn to Ms Steeves. Ms Steeves,
you have written an interesting paper which I found to be a good
summary of many of the questions before us. If you could hit the
highlights of the paper and then we would have time for a few
questions, that would be appreciated.
|
| Professor Valerie Steeves, Director of the Technology
Project, Centre for Law and Social Change, Carleton
University: Honourable senators, it is a pleasure to be here. If I
may, I would like to take some of my friend's comments as a
point of entry into this debate. Ms Sanderson has hit the crux of
the debate. In her summary, she indicated that she was concerned
that legislation that reinforces a position of privacy as a
fundamental human right in this country will bring into question
certainty, operational efficiency and fiscal responsibility.
|
| Senator Callbeck asked earlier what harm this particular
legislation address that is not covered by the pieces of legislation
already in place. That is a good question because it refers us back
to the facts of privacy legislation in Canada. There is a patchwork
in place. We have pieces of the puzzle that deal with certain
issues. Information as it is used in an electronic commerce
environment is dealt with in Bill C-6. Collection of information
by the public sector is dealt with under the Privacy Act. A
fundamental notion of privacy and the relationship between the
individual and the state is dealt with in the Criminal Code. The
fundamental balance between the state's power to invade our
personal sphere and the protections we require have some judicial
oversight.
|
| In other words, we have this patchwork in place. What is
missing is an umbrella statement of principles. I would suggest to
you that that is where Bill S-21 is properly placed, in this position
of an umbrella statement of principles.
|
| The paper I given provided to the committee is the culmination
of about 10 years of legal research into these issues. It starts from
the position of asking, what is privacy. Perhaps it is more effective
for us to ask, why privacy? If you go through the case law that
has been developed by the Supreme Court of Canada and the
academic material that has been developed around this issue, we
really look at privacy from four different points of view. We call
privacy a fundamental human right, because it is an essential
piece of our sense of autonomy in a free and democratic society.
We call privacy a social value because we know that without
some control over what people know about us, it is impossible to
enter into relationships of trust. That is a foundation of Bill C-6, is
that without trust in the electronic marketplace, we cannot
proceed and benefit from the advantages of this new form of
commerce.
|
| We also see many statements in the jurisprudence that privacy
is an essential democratic value, because if we cannot maintain a
sense of self and personal domain, we will be much less likely to
exercise our other fundamental human rights. If the government
has cameras outside the street that can digitally capture your face
and identify you and pull up all of your records all within
seconds, you are much less likely to exercise your right to free
assembly or free speech, and attend a political event, for example.
|
| The last strand in the literature and in the legislation, more than
the case law, is that privacy has to do with data protection. The
crux of the issue here is that in some of our patchwork pieces, we
have said this information is flowing all around us, we need a set
of rules that we can devise that will give us some sense of control,
some sense of balance in the way information flows and our right
to a private life.
|
| In other words, we have developed a number of policy
mechanisms from the Criminal Code, the Charter, the specific
statements of restrictions on the Customs and Revenue Agency's
ability to get information from us; all these pieces of the puzzle
are there. The question then becomes what language do we use
when we seek to understand these different pieces of the puzzle?
What foundational principles do we apply? Do we worry about
certainty, operational efficiency or fiscal responsibility as our
primary focus, or do we look at the importance of privacy as a
fundamental human right, its role in securing our autonomy as a
democratic value, or its role in sustaining the democratic nature of
a free society that we all enjoy?
|
| I would suggest to you that there is a tension there. My friend
has also suggested that this will lead to a great deal of uncertainty.
She indicated that this would require the government to sit down
and review all of its activities.
|
| Again, it depends to which value we are trying to give
paramountcy. If we are trying to establish the most efficient way
of controlling citizens, exercising methods of social control and
delivering government services to consumers of those services, a
free flow of information and an ability to cross that private line
with a great deal of ease makes sense. It makes things easier.
|
| Does it make things less democratic? This legislation hits the
issue right on the head of the nail because it brings us back to first
principles. How will we look at Bill C-6 and bring that into some
kind of meaning as we go into the next few years? How will we
review some of the programs that we see being put in place by the
government right now?
|
| This proposed legislation brings us back to the fundamental
principle that these things do play an essential role in our
democracy. We are talking about a human right. In that sense, it
fills the gap that was so well described in the 1997 report,
"Privacy: Where do we draw the line?" In that report, the House
of Commons Standing Committee on Human Rights and the
Status of Persons with Disabilities argued that we needed an
umbrella statement of principles so that we could then look at the
missing pieces of the puzzle, and there are many missing pieces.
We must deal with genetic privacy in the next few years. Medical
privacy is a huge issue and Bill C-6 will not cover it entirely
because that only captures information that is processed through
commercial activity. We must deal with questions of terrorism and
responses to hateful acts of violence. All of these things must be
done; all of these pieces of the puzzle must be drafted.
|
| We will be in a stronger position to do that if we can rely upon
the language of human rights. The way we ask this question will
determine the kinds of answers we get. If we use the language of
efficiency and the language of fiscal responsibility, then I suggest
to you that we will willingly cross the line of privacy because it is
far more convenient. If we use the language of human rights, I
suggest to you that our debate will be anchored in the principles
of democratic freedom.
|
| I will be happy to entertain questions. I would be happy to
enter into a discussion with my friend, since I am sure she has
some responses she would like to make.
|
| The Chairman: We will begin by asking Ms Sanderson if she
has a rebuttal, and then I will open the floor to questions.
|
| Ms Sanderson: Just two quick comments. First, the comments
of the Department of Justice today would be quite different if we
were talking about an umbrella statement of principles. We are
talking about a bill, the second clause of which talks about an act
to give effect to certain principles, and the provisions of the bill
that follows that are intended to give legal effect to those
statements of principle. That is the first point I would make.
|
| Again, I would also refer to the Minister of Justice's comment
on Tuesday. There are many interests in society. What we are
talking about is not putting a focus one over the other, but finding
the right balance between these various interests in society.
Security is very much part of that balance in relation to privacy. I
think the word is balance more than one over the other or using
any sort of trumping of one interest over another.
|
| The Chairman: Section 1 of the Charter was designed
precisely to allow that if you want trade-offs to be made.
|
| I want to pick up on a point and, because it was a question, I
would like to hear from both of you on it. Obviously, there is a
difference between a bill and a statement of principles. Are there
mechanisms in which one could get a statement of principles
adopted by Parliament, for example, which would not necessarily
have all the force of law and therefore not necessarily create the
problems that the Privacy Commissioner and the Department of
Justice have outlined? In other words, is it possible to meet the
objective and to have a clear parliamentary statement on the
divorce of privacy and what that means without having the
complicating factors relating to existing legislation?
|
| Ms Sanderson: I assume you are asking me?
|
| The Chairman: I was asking both of you. Let us hear from
both of you.
|
| Ms Sanderson: I am not an expert in parliamentary process
and procedure. One of the ideas that we debated earlier, and in
some of our discussions with Senator Finestone's staff, was the
idea of a Senate motion or a joint motion of the House of
Commons and the Senate. That has definitely an influence on our
work. I have seen it in other areas. I cannot remember specifics,
but I have seen examples where there have been motions of
Parliament that are taken into consideration and can influence the
work of officials and can be used by parties in a court setting, say.
There are mechanisms but that is the one that comes to mind.
|
| Ms Steeves: One of the most appropriate models might be to
leave it in the form of a bill but send it on to a section-by-section
analysis and, perhaps, remove sections 4 to 6 and replace them
with something that is modelled on the Canadian Bill of Rights.
Basically, that gives the courts the power to look at other pieces of
federal legislation to see if they are in keeping with the principle
set out in this bill. It would be very effective because it would
enable us to assure ourselves that, as the courts look at the
interpretation of Bill C-6 and other pieces of legislation that come
into place in the next two or three years, they will be able to
interpret them in a way that is consistent with these fundamental
principles.
|
| A joint statement of the two Houses of Parliament would be
less likely to get into the courts. I understand that officials would
be interested in reassessing their approach to their particular
bailiwicks because of that type of joint statement, but my concern
as a legal scholar would be that the courts be given the language,
the impetus, the jurisdiction to extend some of the incredibly good
thinking they have done through their interpretations of sections 7
and 8 of the Charter, for example, into other pieces of legislation
such as Bill C-6 and the Privacy Act.
|
| Senator LeBreton: With regard to sections 4, 5 and 6, the
Privacy Commissioner, Mr. Radwanski, talked about an individual. That is to say, rather than a complaint to the Privacy
Commissioner it could go directly to the court and end up with
competing findings. This is a question directed to both of you. For
those who support the bill, the Justice Department has problems
with it. By removing sections 4, 5 and 6, would we then eliminate
the concerns of the Privacy Commissioner about the competing
findings? If they were removed, would we then remove any
chance of those competing findings being in the system? What
happens then if the Privacy Commissioner ends up saying one
thing and the courts another? Who adjudicates after that?
|
| Ms Steeves: I have had detailed discussions with the Privacy
Commissioner on this issue. The position that he presented to me
is consistent with the position that he presented here, namely, that
if those sections were removed he would be far more comfortable
with the bill and would give the amended bill his support.
|
| I would step back, though, for a second, to be honest with you.
Privacy is such a foundational value and right that it is woven into
so many different parts of our legal system. If the police break
down my door and take me off to jail, wrongfully, I will not be
filing a complaint with the Privacy Commissioner. Chances are I
will not even be relying on sections 7 and 8 of the Charter. I will
sue them for trespass, all those types of torts.
|
| In other words, when we see privacy issues come up, there are
a number of different laws that seek to maintain these principles.
It gets into the courts in a number of different ways. We simply
do not live in a world where all privacy matters are funnelled
through the Privacy Commissioner's office. That reflects the fact
that we have different regulatory mechanisms available to us. This
is such a foundational principle that it is woven into a number of
them. Yes, for data protection a Privacy Commissioner is an
essential recourse for the citizen, but it will not be the only
recourse.
|
| I would also be comfortable with an umbrella statement of
principles that drew us all back to the importance of privacy as a
fundamental human right. There are indications in the academic
literature, for example, that regulation has its own problems
attached to it. Often regulators enter into long-term negotiations
with those they regulate. It creates a different political dynamic -
not necessarily a good or bad one but less an independent one is
the statement that we find in this particular piece of legislation.
|
| The Privacy Commissioner's enabling pieces of legislation, the
Privacy Act and Bill C-6 are pieces of the puzzle, but they are not
the whole puzzle. They will not enable us to deal with
discrimination that flows from access to genetic codes, for
example. It is not a piece of information that is easily dealt with
under fair information practices. It will not help us deal with
employment issues. That is another missing piece of the puzzle.
We can try to apply fair information practices, but they assume
there is an equality of bargaining power. If I go to apply for a job
and the guy I want a job from says, "I want to see your medical
record," I can say no and not get the job. That is not an equality
of bargaining power. If we truly want to protect our right to a
private space, we must evaluate each of these different situations
and come up with an appropriate legislative response.
|
| It will never all funnel through the Privacy Commissioner's
office, and that is a good thing. That is not to take away from the
absolutely essential role that the Privacy Commissioner has in this
country to advance privacy as a human right. In many ways, it is
because we have had a history of Privacy Commissioners who
have taken a great deal of responsibility as privacy advocates and
who continue to raise these issues with legislators. In many ways,
that is why we are still having this debate.
|
| Ms Sanderson: I agree with Ms Steeves. The other thing we
must talk about is the limitations on federal jurisdiction to deal
with all these questions of privacy. Health information is a good
example where we have to work hand and glove with the
provinces. This is not something we can deal with ourselves.
Another example is employment contracts or the situation
between an employer and an employee. The federal government
is limited in its ability to deal with those sorts of invasions of
privacy except as an employer itself or with the federal Crown
corporations or federally regulated private sector.
|
| Your original question was: If we took out certain provisions
would that be the acceptable statement of principles? I am a little
nervous about that because, even within some of these articles,
there is language that looks like it is giving legal effect to the
statement of principles. I will give you a few examples that make
me a little nervous.
|
| In clause 2, it says that the purpose of this act is "to give effect
to the principles that ..." It would become an act of Parliament if it
passed, the purpose of which would be to give effect to. There is
other language as well. I want to give you a few more examples.
|
| Clause 6, which requires that the Minister of Justice review all
laws from the perspective of this charter, does not meld well with
the provision to which I referred earlier in the Department of
Justice Act where we are already required to look at it from the
perspective of the Canadian Charter? There are some constitutional questions as well. Clause 8 deals with contractual
situations. That is only of limited application at the federal level
because contracts are generally a matter in the provinces.
|
| Clauses 9, 10 and 11 make me feel a little uncomfortable as
well. Clause 9 refers to this act applying to all persons and matters
coming within the legislative authority of Parliament. There may
be room there for interpretation as to what the word "applying"
means. Clause 10 refers to it being "binding" on Her Majesty. Of
greater concern is the primacy statement in clause 11. If that
became an umbrella statement of principles, it would give this bill
primacy over other pieces of federal legislation.
|
| We have had some trouble in that area already. One is the
Canadian Human Rights Act, which, through judicial interpreta
tion, in part speared on by the Charter, has been given primacy
over other acts. In order to derogate from it, there must be a clear
statement to the contrary. There is a question about how would
this bill and the Canadian Human Rights Act or the Official
Languages Act, which are both of a higher nature because of their
fundamental place in Canadian society, play together?
|
| I am not sure that we would necessarily be getting rid of the
confusion by getting rid of clause 4, clause 5 and clause 6.
|
| That is off the top of my head. It should receive more study.
|
| Ms Steeves: I am encouraged because it appears that Ms Sanderson is anxious to enter into a clause-by-clause review
of this piece of legislation. It is my great hope that she will have
the opportunity to do that with you.
|
| Her analysis is a good indication that we could look at the
wording of this bill, address the concerns and make it better.
|
| It is interesting that we are sitting down and saying that this
legislation might derogate from the Human Rights Act. It seems
to me that they are complementary statements of principles.
Again, it is an issue of wording.
|
| The fact that this is federal legislation and can only reach so far
does not bother me at all, because you have a unique
responsibility and opportunity to take political leadership that will
raise the bar in this country. During the last 10 years we have seen
that when one jurisdiction raises the bar, others seek to follow as
well.
|
| Quebec actually has proven that to be true in the Canadian
context. When one jurisdiction acts, others follow. It is a time for
political leadership, particularly because of the incredible challenges we see to our democratic system right now.
|
| I would not be too disheartened by the fact that this is only
federal legislation. I think it is an opportunity to exercise that
leadership in a positive way.
|
| Senator Finestone: I was not planning to ask a question but I
would be encouraged if the Department of Justice, who had not
been as forthcoming as I wished they had been, would like to join
us in a clause-by-clause review instead of doing it behind our
back. That would be very helpful.
|
| The Chairman: Senators, we must adjourn soon. I request that
for both last night's sitting and today's, staff prepare two things.
One is a summary of the arguments on both sides as they have
been advanced. Second, specifically with respect to last night,
there were several additional pieces of information we wanted.
One was a Justice Department opinion.
|
| I also ask staff to think through the option outlined by
Ms Steeves that talked about effectively patterning this issue after
the Canadian Bill of Rights, so we could understand what that
actually means in real practice. Once those two summaries are
done, we will reconvene. We will meet next week.
|
| Senator LeBreton: We already have quite a list of witnesses.
In view of the events in the United States and elsewhere, there
will be numerous witnesses that will want to be heard. There will
be a lot of media attention on this particular legislation.
Newspaper people are commenting already. I am warning you we
could be in for a long serious meeting.
|
| The Chairman: This is a serious issue and we should have a
good complement for our meetings. We are adjourned until
3:30 p.m., Wednesday, September 26, 2001.
|
| The committee adjourned.
|