Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
OPEN SECRETS
Red River students mine government data banks
MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS 080621 A Winnipeg Police Tactical Unit officer gestures towards the media as he and the rest of the unit prepare to go into a house in the 400 block of Dufferin Ave.
IMAGINE getting your hands on information that "doesn’t exist" — and at a bargain rate, too.
That's what happened when we entered the great abyss of the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA).
Last fall, as part of national Right to Know Week, the students in our second-year Creative Communications class at Red River College were tasked with using the province's access to information legislation to tease out secret government information and turn it into a story.
Classmates asked for everything from the number of times police had fired their weapons in the last several years to how long callers to the city's 311 line had been stuck on hold. We ran up against many of the challenges regular people deal with when asking for information from government.
Our initial request was, as far as we were concerned, simple: "Please provide the age of the offender and the date of the offence for every impaired driving conviction in Manitoba from December 31, 2002 to January 1, 2009."
The response? Request denied because no such records exist.
"Retrieving that specific information from the CCAIN system would require programming changes, considerable time and staff resources and we are therefore unable to undertake it," wrote Mary Loepp, the FIPPA co-ordinator at Manitoba Justice.
It would cost "thousands of dollars" to gather the necessary information to fulfill the request, she said.
What did this mean? Did the information exist, but was too costly to obtain? Was it impossible to gather?
Everyone we talked to seemed to pussy-foot their way around the answer. And, unless we could help the Manitoba government create a new software program that would enable them to decipher the requested information, we were out of luck.
We weren't alone. The Winnipeg Police got so fed up with requests from students that they refused to answer any more questions.
But other agencies were fast and helpful. City hall released a list of 311 wait times with relatively little fuss and allowed our classmates access to the call centre. And, when students requested some data from the province's employment standards branch, a huge list of all the complaints made by restaurant and bar staff arrived. It took a few phone calls, but the students got more years-worth of data than they originally expected.
Spurred by discussions of our classmates' progress, we refined our request. We asked for alcohol-related convictions broken down by age group for a full calendar year, any year in the last five.
The incessant search for that data began at Manitoba Justice and then went to Manitoba Public Insurance.
Next we checked with the Winnipeg Police Service and went to the Manitoba Archives. Still looking for answers, we took a crack at the RCMP and the Manitoba Law Courts.
It seemed like a fruitless venture until an unlikely hero emerged: Leesa Girouard at the Manitoba Legislative Library that's tucked at the back of the building.
She gave us a copy of the 2007 MPI Traffic Collisions Statistics Report, which gave us every alcohol-related Criminal Code conviction by age group from 1989 to 2006.
We can only assume that's the information that a parade of Manitoba government agencies told us they didn't have.
Instead of the original quote of "thousands of dollars," we ended up doling out 80 cents.
Fifty cents for parking and 30 cents for photocopying.
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition January 9, 2010 h1
More Latest News
- Back to Top
- Return to Latest News
Most Popular Latest News
- He was enjoying view, bear came out of blue
- Bear pulls camper from outhouse, before being shot
- New EI rules take aim at frequent users, force workers to accept lower pay
- Jets boost TSN Radio, CJOB takes hit
- Cyclist killed in Higgins Avenue crash
- Travolta's marriage said to be in trouble
- Man dies in workplace accident near Carberry
- Hydro tower stands out for energy efficiency
- Brad Pitt's sophisticated bachelor party
- Cyclist killed in collision on Higgins identified
- Cyclist killed in Higgins Avenue crash
- 'I don't hear voices' Vince Li says
- Feds sink key science program
- Hundreds gathered to watch eclipse
- Actor and comedian Paul O'Sullivan, 48, dies in car crash near Peterborough
- Man dies in workplace accident near Carberry
- Winnipeg man recovering after campground bear attack
- Tempers flare on CP picket line on McPhillips Street
- He was enjoying view, bear came out of blue
- Photo radar ticket case dropped
- Cyclist killed in Higgins Avenue crash
- 'I don't hear voices' Vince Li says
- Police link homicide, highway death
- Tragedy 'totally unexpected': lawyer
- Nightclub told to restore historic marble floor
- Ecstasy and tragedy
- Canalta withdraws downtown water park proposal
- Woman on anniversary hang glider ride plunges to her death in B.C.
- Man dies after fall from downtown apartment building
- Cancer drug may be linked to second cancers, Health Canada warns
- He was enjoying view, bear came out of blue
- New EI rules take aim at frequent users, force workers to accept lower pay
- Bear pulls camper from outhouse, before being shot
- Comfort foods may be too depressing
- Hydro tower stands out for energy efficiency
- Free slurpees at 7-Eleven today
- Cattle farmer fined $25K for severe case of neglect
- Holy Gothic landmark
- Driver spared jail for killing pedestrian
- Wear those bike helmets, kids
- Winnipeg man recovering after campground bear attack
- Feds sink key science program
- He was enjoying view, bear came out of blue
- Dog the Bounty Hunter to wag tongue in Winnipeg
- Free slurpees at 7-Eleven today
- Scientists lash Harper government for pulling plug on Experimental Lakes Area
- Photo radar ticket case dropped
- 'I don't hear voices' Vince Li says
- Cyclist killed in Higgins Avenue crash
- Tories launch talks on official languages, shield programs from cuts
- Dog the Bounty Hunter to wag tongue in Winnipeg
- Winnipeg man recovering after campground bear attack
- Feds sink key science program
- Osborne Village voted Canada's best neighbourhood
- He was enjoying view, bear came out of blue
- Would you sell your home to lock in profits before real estate prices drop?
- Police link homicide, highway death
- Reid gets cosy with audience
- New Hydro program to help retrofit homes
- Free slurpees at 7-Eleven today
Ads by Google









You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010; View the changes. New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.