I asked AI: If there was corruption in the government of British Columbia, could it be hidden from the public using the mechanisms of the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FOIPPA)?


April 4, 2026
Question by Sasha Izard


I asked Google AI the following question:

If there was corruption in the government of British Columbia, could it be hidden from the public using the mechanisms of the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FOIPPA)?


If there was corruption in the government of British Columbia, could it be hidden from the public using the mechanisms of the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FOIPPA)? – Google Search

The AI responded:

While the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FOIPPA) is designed to ensure government accountability, specific legal mechanisms and procedural gaps can be used to delay or withhold information that might reveal corruption. [1, 2, 3, 4]

1. Legal Exceptions (The “Redaction” Tools)

FOIPPA includes mandatory and discretionary exceptions that allow public bodies to redact or withhold records: [5, 6, 7, 8, 9]

  • Cabinet Confidences (Section 12): Public bodies must refuse to disclose information that would reveal the substance of deliberations of the Executive Council (Cabinet), including advice or recommendations.

  • Policy Advice (Section 13): This discretionary exception is frequently used to withhold “advice or recommendations” developed for a public body. Critics argue this section is often over-applied to hide factual analysis and background data.

  • Harm to Economic Interests (Section 17): Government can refuse to disclose information that might harm the financial or economic interests of a public body or the province.

  • Law Enforcement (Section 15): Information can be withheld if its disclosure would harm an ongoing investigation or reveal law enforcement techniques. [6, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14]

2. Procedural Hurdles

Even if a record should be public, several mechanisms can effectively “hide” it by making it inaccessible: [15]

  • Fees: The government introduced a mandatory $10 application fee and can charge significant “search and preparation” fees for large requests, which critics call a “paywall” for transparency.

  • Delays: While the law mandates a 30-day response time, the Information and Privacy Commissioner has noted that the government often extends these timelines without legal authority, undermining public trust.

  • “Information Laundering”: Some public bodies have been accused of moving functions to wholly-owned subsidiary companies that claim they are not covered by FOIPPA because they are “private,” effectively removing billions in spending from public oversight. [12, 16, 17, 18]

3. The Counter-Mechanism: Section 25

Section 25 is a “public interest override” that theoretically prevents the hiding of corruption. It mandates that a public body must disclose information—without a request and regardless of other exceptions—if the disclosure is clearly in the public interest. However, the legal threshold for this is extremely high and is usually only triggered in “the clearest and most serious situations,” such as risks to public health or safety. [19, 20, 21, 22, 23]

Summary of Risks

Mechanism [10, 12, 16, 18, 24]Potential for Misuse
Cabinet ConfidenceHiding high-level political decisions from scrutiny.
Policy AdviceRedacting the facts and analysis used to justify controversial decisions.
Fees & DelaysMaking it too expensive or slow for journalists/citizens to obtain records.
Shell CompaniesMoving records out of the “public body” definition to avoid FOI entirely.


Would you like to know more about the appeals process through the Information and Privacy Commissioner if a request is denied?

[1] https://bccla.org

[2] https://bccla.org

[3] https://www.publicsafety.gc.ca

[4] https://www.publicsafety.gc.ca

[5] https://www2.gov.bc.ca

[6] https://www2.gov.bc.ca

[7] https://www2.gov.bc.ca

[8] https://oipc.novascotia.ca

[9] https://www.oipc.bc.ca

[10] https://www.bclaws.gov.bc.ca

[11] https://www2.gov.bc.ca

[12] https://lims.leg.bc.ca

[13] https://www2.gov.bc.ca

[14] https://www.bclaws.gov.bc.ca

[15] https://mytrainingbc.ca

[16] https://cba.org

[17] https://fipa.bc.ca

[18] https://www.cbc.ca

[19] https://www2.gov.bc.ca

[20] https://www.canlii.org

[21] https://www.oipc.bc.ca

[22] https://fipa.bc.ca

[23] https://www.oipc.bc.ca

[24] https://www.canlii.org



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See also:

Index of Exorbitant Cost Estimates Provided for Freedom of Information in British Columbia – CRD Watch Homepage

Petition · That Section 13 of British Columbia’s Freedom of Information Legislation FOIPPA be removed – Canada · Change.org

BC MLAs that are not Ministers, are not subject to Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FOIPPA) requirements. – CRD Watch Homepage

The Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner (OIPC), has concluded that the Union of BC Municipalities (UBCM) is not subject to the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act – CRD Watch Homepage


BC Government Accused of a Stealth Attack on Freedom of Information | The Tyee

B.C. NDP no longer cares about access to information – Victoria Times Colonist

Petition that Section 13 of British Columbia’s Freedom of Information Legislation FOIPPA be removed. – CRD Watch Homepage

Index of articles regarding Law and Bylaw – CRD Watch Homepage

Index of Crown Corporations and Statutory Entities that have acted evasively about their UDI memberships. – CRD Watch Homepage

10 responses to “I asked AI: If there was corruption in the government of British Columbia, could it be hidden from the public using the mechanisms of the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FOIPPA)?”

  1. Milo Avatar
    Milo

    I was intrigued by your work – but you have lost all credibility “asking AI” to do research for you. You have received a manipulative answer that appeases to your algorithm and what Google AI (gemini) has fed into the LLM.

    You should be ashamed of such low grade work. Do better.

    Also, don’t you make arguments for the environment? Using AI makes you very hypocritical.

    Like

    1. Sasha Izard Avatar
      Sasha Izard

      Thank you Milo, but your post makes you appear to be a luddite.

      There is no “work” here on my part, except asking a question and seeing what the result was from Google’s AI and then sharing it.

      If you are above asking a question to Google, then I suggest not using Google ever again.

      Like

  2. Milo Avatar
    Milo

    Asides the point but I don’t use Google anyway… Anyway, you are presenting an AI response as if it is fact. Gemeni (specifically) operates off your google search history and can access the cookies on your computer – generally returning a result that fits a narrative.

    I asked Google: Is it possible that people may believe there is corruption in the government of British Columbia, because they don’t understand process or legislation such as the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FOIPPA)

    And it’s response:

    Yes, it is highly possible that public perception of corruption in the BC government stems from a misunderstanding of legislative processes like 

    FOIPPA. While FOIPPA is designed for transparency, its complex exemptions—such as cabinet confidences (Section 12), policy advice (Section 13), and intergovernmental relations (Section 16)—can cause legitimate, legal withholding of information to be misinterpreted as cover-ups or corruption.

    Key factors contributing to this perception include:

    • Legal Exemptions Misunderstood: The use of mandated exemptions to withhold information is often viewed by the public as a deliberate attempt to hide wrongdoing.
    • “Information Laundering” Concerns: Public bodies sometimes use wholly-owned subsidiary companies that are not fully covered by FOI laws, leading to suspicions of secrecy regarding public funds.
    • Access Barriers: Fees and delays associated with the FOI process, such as the $10 application fee, are seen as barriers to accountability, causing distrust.
    • Complex Procedures: The intricate nature of FOIPPA, whistleblower laws, and investigation processes can make legitimate administrative decisions appear suspicious to the average person.

    While some reports, such as the Cullen Commission, found no evidence of official corruption, they did identify significant regulatory and government failures that can foster a perception of corruption.

    Like

    1. Sasha Izard Avatar
      Sasha Izard

      Now ask the AI, the same question I asked it and see what the response is.

      Like

  3. Milo Avatar
    Milo

    Posts like this are going to ruin your credibility when arguing fee waivers because your blog will not be deemed to have any public benefit. It will be argued that it is unreasonable to shift the burden of cost onto other tax payers for someone who targets a minority of people with AI content.

    Back to one of my original points. You are using AI a fair amount for posts and images. If an AI data centre gets proposed in Saanich, would you oppose it?

    Like

    1. Sasha Izard Avatar
      Sasha Izard

      There are many ways and infinite excuses to withhold information and you just came up with another one. You should work for the government. It pays well.

      “Back to one of my original points. You are using AI a fair amount for posts and images.”

      I’ve used AI for I think 2 posts in total and for a total of 2 cartoons. That’s 4 uses of AI, in approaching 400 articles on here.

      “If an AI data centre gets proposed in Saanich, would you oppose it?”

      Would it require increasing the building footprint?

      Like

      1. Sasha Izard Avatar
        Sasha Izard

        Btw, the BC Government uses AI extensively. The Behavioural Insights Group, a branch of the same Ministry that is responsible for FOIs, uses it extensively.

        The Ministry of Mining and Critical Minerals is using AI to track mining permits.

        Streamlining Mines Act permit tracking with AI – Province of British Columbia

        Where is your outrage at the Government of BC for using AI on a vast scale?

        Like

      2. Milo Avatar
        Milo

        You use it on your corresponding facebook page too. In the last 2 weeks you have posted screen shots of Google AI 5 times.

        A data centre isn’t about a building’s footprint, it’s about the environmental damage. One you are clearly overlooking. It is hypocritical to be as environmental as you are but rely on AI to help form your opinions or provide you with definitions.

        I’m not trying to change your mind, that’s not possible, but even trying to reason with you is like talking to a brick wall. You seem to take any feedback, here and in facebook, as a personal attack and then try and make snide comments to attack the other person who has an observation.

        Like

  4. Sasha Izard Avatar
    Sasha Izard

    5 screenshots posted on Facebook? I should self-flagellate immediately!

    Like

  5. Paweł Avatar
    Paweł

    So, when government and business uses AI to extend their agenda that’s ok, but when ordinary people are using it against government overreaching and actual authoritarian attempts that’s being anti-environmentalist? We should then abandon any attempts on protesting and leave big business to do as they will. Using their tools again them should be put in disclaimer for the user.

    You are providing argument at absurdum.

    Turnig very small amount of AI use in good faith into environmental disaster.

    The increase of development of AI is caused by apparent business advantage. Small scale users bring very small overall footprint as their requests are very similar and don’t require huge amounts of computing power.

    More and more models are run locally on their local computers and only contact external systems for updates or additional dataz passing usage metrics etc.

    AI centers are also misleading as they are being data centers with computing and data storage capacities, people just tend now to name them AI centers where indeed they are same old data centers with additional TPU computing capacities and that’s happening regardless of AI as the old school computing is still required by vast array of digital services.

    Like

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