Commencing February 1, 2023, British Columbia’s public sector privacy statute – the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act – will require public bodies to have a privacy management program and to comply with privacy breach notification obligations. Accordingly, public bodies should now prepare for compliance with those new requirements.
British Columbia’s Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA) regulates how provincial public bodies in British Columbia (e.g., provincial government ministries and agencies, municipalities, crown corporations, post-secondary institutions, school boards, health authorities and self-governing bodies of professions) collect, use, disclose and retain personal information. FIPPA also provides access rights to certain records and personal information held by public bodies in British Columbia and establishes a regime of independent review and oversight.
In November 2021, the Government of British Columbia enacted Bill 22, Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Amendment Act, 2021 (Bill 22) to make significant amendments to FIPPA, including new requirements for privacy management programs and privacy breach notification obligations that come into force on a date set by regulation. See BLG bulletin Changes to B.C.’s public sector privacy legislation.
In November 2022, the Government of British Columbia approved Order in Council No. 638, which provides that the requirements for privacy management programs and privacy breach notification obligations will come into force on February 1, 2023.
Commencing February 1, 2023, FIPPA (as amended by Bill 22) will require the head of a public body to develop a privacy management program that complies with directions of the Minister of Citizens’ Services. Ministerial Direction 02-2022, Privacy Management Program Direction (the Direction), effective February 1, 2023, provides public bodies with a framework that outlines required components of a privacy management program. The Direction explains that privacy management programs “are vital to ensuring public bodies are accountable and transparent with respect to their management of personal information” and “promote trust by assuring information sharing partners and the public that the public body is protecting the personal information in its custody or under its control”.
The Direction details seven components that must be included in a privacy management program and explains that the components “should be reasonable and scaled commensurate with the volume and sensitivity of the personal information in the public body’s custody or under its control”. The required components are as follows:
Commencing February 1, 2023, FIPPA (as amended by Bill 22) will require the head of a public body to give notice to affected individuals and the Information and Privacy Commissioner of British Columbia (the Commissioner) of privacy breaches affecting personal information in the custody or under the control of the public body, which includes personal information processed by a service provider on behalf of the public body. The new privacy breach notification obligations are generally consistent with similar obligations under the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA) and other provincial private sector privacy laws. See BLG bulletin Frequently Asked Questions – Compliance with PIPEDA’s Security Breach Obligations.
Details of the breach notification obligations are set out in FIPPA (as amended by Bill 22) and in amendments to The Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Regulation, B.C. Reg. 155/2012. Following is a summary:
The privacy breach notification obligations imposed on the head of a public body are supported by a FIPPA requirement that an employee, officer or director of a public body, or an employee or associate of a service provider, who knows that there has been an unauthorized disclosure of personal information in the custody or under the control of the public body must immediately notify the head of the public body. FIPPA provides that failure to notify the head of the public body of an unauthorized disclosure of personal information is an offence punishable on conviction by fines of up to $50,000 for individuals and up to $500,000 for corporations.
Public bodies in British Columbia should now prepare for compliance with FIPPA’s new privacy management program requirements and privacy breach notification obligations.
To prepare for compliance with FIPPA’s new requirement for a privacy management program, public bodies should review their current privacy management policies, procedures and practices and make changes required for compliance with the Direction. BLG bulletin 2022 Privacy risk management – Top tips for organizations provides five top tips and a checklist to help organizations improve their privacy practices.
There are several steps that public bodies should take to prepare for compliance with FIPPA’s new privacy breach notification obligations, including: