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B.C. FOI complaints surge as AI tools drive more review requests

Michael Harvey said complaints rose 60% to about 3,900 as AI chatbots make it easier to draft FOI disputes.

  • On April 24, Privacy Commissioner Michael Harvey told the Select Standing Committee on Finance and Government Services that FOI complaints surged 60% this past year, reaching roughly 3,900 total files, which he described as a "hockey stick" jump.
  • Harvey suspects an "unexpected surge" stems from citizens using AI chatbots to generate complaints after receiving denied FOI responses, though he currently lacks hard evidence to quantify this impact.
  • Privacy and access complaints rose 86%, FOI reviews increased 50%, and privacy breach reports grew 28%; Harvey's office raised its file-closure rate by 36%, though he noted this increase is insufficient to handle the volume.
  • Service Minister Diana Gibson introduced legislation in Feb. to manage request volumes, but Critics and Opposition MLAs argue the bill grants officials too much leeway to reject FOI requests; Harvey disagrees, stating it will not curtail access.
  • Harvey advocates for a "cultural change" to "transparency by default" as the ultimate solution to reduce FOI request needs, and he plans to consider tracking AI-generated complaints to better understand the impact on his office's operations.
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Barriere Star Journal broke the news on Friday, May 1, 2026.
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