By 1982, twelve countries, including France, Denmark, Finland, Sweden, the Netherlands, and the U.S. (1966), had enacted modern ATI legislation. Canada's
Access to Information Act came into force in 1983, under the
Pierre Trudeau government. In 1987, the
Solicitor General tabled a unanimous report to Parliament,
Open and Shut: Enhancing the Right to Know and the Right to Privacy which contained over 100 recommendations for amending the ATI and privacy acts. In 1998, the government would append a clause to the Access Act, making it a federal offence to destroy, falsify, or conceal public documents. However, the standards for document production and retention in Canada are still considered insufficient by many scholars. In August 2000, the Ministry of Justice and the president of the Treasury Board launched a task force to review the Access Act. The committee's report, delivered in June 2002, found "a crisis in information management" within government.
Université de Moncton professor
Donald Savoie’s 2003 book,
Breaking the Bargain, argues that in Canada, there is a reluctance to put anything in writing, including e-mail, that might find its way into public discourse. In the fall of 2003,
John Bryden, attempted to initiate a comprehensive overhaul of the Act through a
private members bill, Bill C-462, which died on the Order Paper with the dissolution of the 37th Parliament in May 2004. A similar bill was introduced by NDP MP
Pat Martin on 7 October 2004 as Bill C-201. In April 2005, the Justice Minister
Irwin Cotler introduced a discussion paper entitled
A Comprehensive Framework for Access to Information Reform. On April 1, 2008, the
Stephen Harper government shut down
CAIRS, the access to information database. He justified this decision by saying that CAIRS was "deemed expensive, [and] deemed to slow down the access to information." In response,
Leader of the Opposition Stéphane Dion described Harper's government as "the most secretive government in the history of our country." In 2009,
The Walrus published a detailed history of FOI in Canada. In 2026, the
Doug Ford government announced changes to Ontario's existing FOI laws, restricting access to government records from the premier's office, Cabinet ministers, and parliamentary assistants. The legislation faced backlash from opposition parties and Ontario's privacy commissioner. ==Federal==