REGINA — A judge has ruled that the University of Regina must provide information to one of its professors about who is funding research into the oil and gas industry.
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"Ultimately, requiring that funding identity information be disclosed is in keeping with promoting transparency, openness and accountability in public institutions, such as the university," Justice Meghan McCreary wrote in her decision released Tuesday.
Emily Eaton, who teaches in the university's geography and environmental studies department, is researching the influence of the fossil fuel industry on education in Saskatchewan.
Under freedom-of-information legislation, she requested that the school disclose who is funding research related to oil and gas, coal, carbon capture and climate change, as well as which departments receive the money.
Eaton was denied her request and turned to the courts.
The university used a "discretionary class exemption" in the province's freedom-of-information laws that allowed it refuse to provide details of the academic research.
But McCreary ruled that the types of records Eaton requested did not fall within the exemption.
"This is because disclosing the amount of funding does not reveal the particulars of the research — the questions, methodology, results and conclusions of the research, itself," the judge wrote.
She said she agrees with the university that "there may be harms in disclosing funding identity information," but that it did not provide enough evidence that it would be the case in this situation.
"The university is entitled to consider whether disclosing funding identity information for any specific research may result in harm prohibited by other provisions of (the act)," she said.
"However, I reiterate that the effect of my decision is that the university cannot rely on (this section of the act) as a blanket exemption to refuse to provide funding identity information."
She added that if the university does not find proper reasoning, "the research files in question must be disclosed."
"If this information is publicly available it provides community members with information that may be relevant to the context of the academic research, thereby providing the public with the ability to consider, analyze and debate the funding choices made by a public institution."
Eaton applauded McCreary's decision on Twitter, calling it a "positive precedent" for transparency of fossil fuel funding in university research.
A lawyer representing the university in the case declined to comment.
University of Regina officials were not immediately available for comment.
— By Daniela Germano in Edmonton
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 9, 2021.
The Canadian Press
"Ultimately, requiring that funding identity information be disclosed is in keeping with promoting transparency, openness and accountability in public institutions, such as the university," Justice Meghan McCreary wrote in her decision released Tuesday.
Emily Eaton, who teaches in the university's geography and environmental studies department, is researching the influence of the fossil fuel industry on education in Saskatchewan.
Under freedom-of-information legislation, she requested that the school disclose who is funding research related to oil and gas, coal, carbon capture and climate change, as well as which departments receive the money.
Eaton was denied her request and turned to the courts.
The university used a "discretionary class exemption" in the province's freedom-of-information laws that allowed it refuse to provide details of the academic research.
But McCreary ruled that the types of records Eaton requested did not fall within the exemption.
"This is because disclosing the amount of funding does not reveal the particulars of the research — the questions, methodology, results and conclusions of the research, itself," the judge wrote.
She said she agrees with the university that "there may be harms in disclosing funding identity information," but that it did not provide enough evidence that it would be the case in this situation.
"The university is entitled to consider whether disclosing funding identity information for any specific research may result in harm prohibited by other provisions of (the act)," she said.
"However, I reiterate that the effect of my decision is that the university cannot rely on (this section of the act) as a blanket exemption to refuse to provide funding identity information."
She added that if the university does not find proper reasoning, "the research files in question must be disclosed."
"If this information is publicly available it provides community members with information that may be relevant to the context of the academic research, thereby providing the public with the ability to consider, analyze and debate the funding choices made by a public institution."
Eaton applauded McCreary's decision on Twitter, calling it a "positive precedent" for transparency of fossil fuel funding in university research.
A lawyer representing the university in the case declined to comment.
University of Regina officials were not immediately available for comment.
— By Daniela Germano in Edmonton
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 9, 2021.
The Canadian Press
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