About this information
Search the summaries of completed Access to Information (ATI) requests to find information about ATI requests made to the Government of Canada after January 2020. If you find a summary of interest, you can request a copy of the records at no cost using the form below each summary. Requests made through this form are considered informal requests and are not subject to the same requirements as requests under the Access to Information Act (ATIA).
If you don’t find what you are looking for you can request additional government records under an institution’s control by contacting the institution’s Access to Information and Privacy Coordinator or by submitting a formal access to information request.
*All information provided will incorporate the necessary exemptions and exclusions as per the Access to Information Act and the Privacy Act.
Download datasets of the summaries of completed access to information requests.
Current Search
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Organization
Disposition
Year
Month
Found 164 record(s)
January 2024
Req # A-2023-000098
Correspondence sent by Minister Sean Fraser to municipalities across Canada related to the Housing Accelerator Fund or zoning changes in the municipalities between July 28 to November 24, 2023Organization: Infrastructure Canada
January 2024
Req # A-2023-000101
Records detailing costs associated with personal drivers for the executive team. Include staffing costs for any drivers on-staff, or the costs of hiring them on a as-needed basis. Also include details for any vehicles purchased, or any vehicle maintenance costs. Limit time frame between 2018 and 2023Organization: Infrastructure Canada
January 2024
Req # A-2023-000105
Any report, study, briefing note or other document showing how the government produced its estimates for housing starts under the Housing Accelerator FundOrganization: Infrastructure Canada
January 2024
Req # A-2023-000106
Most up-to-date version of your department’s Code of Conduct, Values and Ethics.Organization: Infrastructure Canada
January 2024
Nothing to report this month
Organization: Patented Medicine Prices Review Board Canada
Req # A-2022-10690
Records from January 1, 2017 to May 1, 2022, relating to live reptile importations destined for Ontario, including but not limited to emails, letters, notes, memorandums, reports, videos, photographs, phone logs and import and export records, including permits and health certificates. Statistics broken down by: year of import or export, number of individual animals imported or exported, species or lowest available taxonomic, the country of origin, the country from where consigned, country to which animals are exported, the animal source (wild-caught, captive-bred, ranched), and the purpose of importation or export such as commercial, zoo, or private collection.Organization: Canada Border Services Agency
January 2023
Req # A-2022-10841
Briefing note: 22-00183 - Roxham Road, February 15, 2022.Organization: Canada Border Services Agency
January 2023
Req # A-2022-12532
Briefing note: 19-01733 - Update on the National Immigration Detention Framework, June 24, 2019.Organization: Canada Border Services Agency
January 2023
Req # A-2022-12645
Statistics for Montreal-Trudeau International (YUL), Toronto Pearson (YYZ), Vancouver International (YVR) airports from January 1, 2020 to June 8, 2022, broken down by month and airport providing: the number of people who left Canada, the number of people who entered Canada, the number of Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) employees who were working on entries into Canada, the number of people who were issued lookouts or sent to secondary inspection. Additionally: for those issued lookouts or sent to secondary the top ten nationalities and their statuses in Canada along with the total numbers and percentages, the number and percentage of those lookouts or secondary inspections that ended up with a complete release, warnings, customs fines, item seizures, any other negative action not related to COVID-19 or any negative action related to COVID-19; plus for this group the top ten nationalities and their statuses in Canada along with the total numbers and percentages. Further, the number of people whose phones, laptops, or other digital devices were accessed by CBSA agents with permission versus accessed without permission by any kind of force, password cracking, versus refused access and the CBSA agent accepted the refusal. Finally, the number of people who had to stay in CBSA secondary inspection area or other custody for more than 1 hour, and the number of doctor, medical or ambulance calls, hospitalizations or deaths of persons in CBSA custody.Organization: Canada Border Services Agency
January 2023