B.C. ends 8-year privacy battle over IBM contract - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 29, 2024, 11:45 PM | Calgary | -17.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

B.C. ends 8-year privacy battle over IBM contract

Freedom of information advocates are claiming victory after the B.C. government confirmed it won't fight a court order to release the details of a $300 million contract with technology giant IBM.

RAW IBM contract

12 years ago
Duration 4:59
B.C. open government minister Margaret MacDiarmid on decision not to appeal court order

Freedom of information advocates are claiming victory after the B.C. government confirmed it won't fight a court order to release the details of a $300 million contract with technology giant IBM.

The decision appears to be the last word in an eight-year legal battle by Vince Gogolek and his colleagues at the B.C. Freedom of Information and Privacy Association.

Last month, the B.C. Supreme Court ruled there are no security reasons to withhold the remaining sections of the 535-page contract with IBM to provide helpdesk support and workplace technology for much of the provincial civil service.

Minister for Open Government Margaret MacDiarmid says B.C. will not to appeal the ruling requiring the government to release the complete version of its 2004 contract with IBM. (CBC)

On Tuesday, the Minister for Open Government Margaret MacDiarmid, said she has decided not to appeal the decision.

"We are acknowledging that the court has said, 'No, you are in error,' and we are going to release this information and not go forward with another appeal."

Gogolek, the executive director of the B.C. Freedom of Information and Privacy Association, says what the information advocates will now receive are pages that include the names and locations of government computer servers.

But he says there's also an important principle at stakethat taxpayers havethe right to a complete and uncensored copy of the government's contract.

"We were looking at a potential trip to the B.C. Court of Appeal over what everybody but the government seemed to agree was information that was not particularly sensitive."

The legal fight is estimated to have cost B.C. taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees.

"We feel really good that this is finally over. It had really reached the point of absurdity," said Gogolek.

As part of the 2004 deal,188 government employeesworking in information technology were offered jobs with IBM.