2021/2022 Cyber/Data Outlook: Anticipated Changes to Privacy Laws in Canada

Privacy compliance was once a straightforward process of checking the right boxes — not much more than adequate consents and a privacy policy on a website — but that world no longer exists. We are in the midst of a global explosion of legislation governing data. With potential overlaps and even clashes between laws, as data flows grow more complex, organizations are now forced to navigate privacy legislation from multiple jurisdictions, different levels of government, and even industry-specific regulations and guidance, with increasingly harsh penalties for non-compliance.

Keeping up with what’s happening in this changing environment will help you avoid the quicksand without relinquishing the legitimate business purposes for using data. The following article summarizes anticipated changes relating to privacy legislation, cross-border data transfers, and sensitive data requirements such as biometric data and automated decisions.

WHAT’S ON THE TABLE IN CANADA?

Québec: Passed in September 2021, Québec’s Bill 64 is set to shake the Canadian privacy landscape with a fundamentally new GDPR-inspired law with massive penalties for non‑compliance of up to 8% of annual worldwide turnover for repeat offenders. Bill 64 introduced unique cyber incident reporting obligations, including a requirement to notify individuals if a confidentiality incident poses a “risk of serious injury,” as well as to take reasonable measures to reduce the risk or injury and prevent new incidents. The new transparency and consent standards require that consent be clear, free, informed and provided for specific purposes, which is a higher standard than that imposed by Canada’s current federal privacy legislation, PIPEDA. The operational requirements for cross-border transfers of personal information of Bill 64 task organizations with conducting impact assessments using prescribed privacy-related factors prior to communicating personal information outside of Québec. Privacy by default and privacy by design provisions will require a real change in mindset when acquiring technologies and designing new programs. New user rights will require new compliance approaches. Bill 64 starts to come into force in September 2022, with the penalties and most of the key provisions coming into force in September 2023.

Federal: Proposed in 2020 and potentially back on the table in similar form within the coming year, Bill C-11 would repeal PIPEDA and enact in its place the Consumer Privacy Protection Act (CPPA) and the Personal Information and Data Protection Tribunal Act (PIDPTA). The CPPA seeks to introduce new requirements for data protection in Canada and would apply to personal information that is collected in Canada. Although the Privacy Commissioner of Canada has referred to the legislation as a “step backwards,” if reintroduced and passed in similar form, Bill C-11 would significantly alter the Canadian privacy landscape, as it would pair important requirements with significant penalties of up to 5% of an organization’s gross global revenues.

Ontario: Released in June 2021, the white paper Modernizing Privacy in Ontario proposes substantial changes for a new provincial privacy statute. Broadly speaking, the white paper proposals suggest implementing stricter and less flexible requirements than those proposed in the CPPA. Although rumoured to be on the back burner as the provincial government focuses on other priorities, if introduced and passed, the Modernizing Privacy in Ontario model would introduce GDPR-inspired rights, enforcement, and penalties, including for employee personal information that currently falls into a grey area for most Ontario businesses. Also worth perusing is the Ontario IPC’s response to Modernizing Privacy in Ontario, which sets out an extensive wish list, including empowering the IPC to offer compliance support tools, such as advisory services, sectoral codes of practice and certification programs, with a special focus on “agile” regulation of SMEs. Helpfully, the IPC also calls for penalty powers that include “consideration of any regulatory action already taken by other jurisdictions as a possible mitigating factor, ensuring a harmonized, fair and proportionate approach.”

British Columbia: This fall, Bill 22 was introduced and passed in British Columbia to amend the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). A notable change that would affect public bodies in the province is the elimination of the requirement for storing and allowing access to personal information only from within Canada. This would increase the number of service providers the government could access, as many providers do not have a physical presence in Canada. Bill 22 makes room for the possibility that these cross-border data transfers would be governed by regulations and permitted.

CURRENT TRENDS

Classifying the Nature of Privacy Rights: Not only are we seeing specific rights — such as the right to be forgotten or the right to data portability — explicitly enumerated within privacy legislation, but there are some murmurs that proposed laws could recognize privacy as a fundamental right. For example, in modernizing its privacy legislation, the Ontario white paper is considering the possibility of recognizing a fundamental right to privacy within the preamble of the provincial privacy legislation. Currently, Québec is the only province that recognizes a right to privacy, which is explicitly set out in s. 5 of the Québec Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms and Civil Code. The OPC has criticized the lack of a rights-focused preamble and purpose clause in other proposed legislation, including the CPPA, but has not yet seen its lobbying efforts bear fruit federally.

This consideration arises at an interesting time, namely one in which the courts seem to be questioning the value of describing privacy as a “quasi-constitutional right.”

In 2021, the Supreme Court of Canada characterized “the nature of limits of privacy as being in a state of ‘theoretical disarray’” and cautioned that “recognizing an important interest in privacy generally could prove to be too open‑ended and difficult to apply.” It emphasized that “much turns on the context in which privacy is invoked.” These statements followed other Supreme Court decisions of the past decade (Royal Bank of Canada v. Trang, Alberta (Information and Privacy Commissioner) v. United Food and Commercial Workers), in which privacy rights gave way to more compelling competing interests, demonstrating that contextual evaluations of privacy is the preferred judicial approach. Given the broad spectrum of privacy protections — spanning from a name and mailing address to the most intimate and impactful information about a person — as well as the propensity for privacy to clash with fundamental rights and values, the reluctance to treat privacy as a unitary concept seems a wise approach.

Much Higher Penalties: Currently, PIPEDA only permits maximum fines of C$100,000 for indictable offences. Bill C-11 would see that tribunals could impose fines of up to C$10 million or 4% of an organization’s gross global revenue, and that more serious offences could lead to fines of the higher of C$25 million or 5% of gross global revenue.

In Québec, Bill 64’s penalty clauses are even more severe, with repeat offenders exposed to penalties of C$50 million or 8% of annual worldwide revenues, whichever is greater. Unhelpfully, the legislative penalty factors do not take into account the potential for penalties being awarded elsewhere premised on the same facts, thus potentially leading to “multiple jeopardy” for a privacy incident that crosses many borders and attracts the attention of many regulators. Separation of Investigation and Decision-Making Powers: If reintroduced and passed in similar form, the CPPA would grant enhanced oversight authority to the Privacy Commissioner of Canada through a range of auditing, investigating, and order-making powers. The greatest departure from existing privacy law regimes both at home and abroad would be the creation of a tribunal that would hear administrative appeals following decisions rendered by the Privacy Commissioner of Canada. The tribunal would also be able to impose financial penalties. The tribunal would provide a layer of independence compared to existing structures in Canada, where there is a concern that the “judge, jury and executioner” are all working out of the same regulatory agency. The complexities of this regime is discussed at more length in our blog on The CPPA’s Privacy Law Enforcement Regime. By contrast, the CAI in Québec is taking carriage of enforcement matters under Bill 64, with fining powers of 2% of annual worldwide turnover or C$10 million. It has promised to develop and make public a general framework for the application of administrative monetary penalties before Bill 64 comes into force.

CROSS-BORDER DATA TRANSFER COMPLEXITIES

Canada’s Adequacy Decision: Under a 2001 decision by the European Commission (most recently reaffirmed in May 2018), Canada is considered as providing an adequate level of protection for personal data transferred from the EU to recipients subject to PIPEDA, while in 2014, the EU Article 29 Working Party did not recommend that Québec receive a favourable adequacy assessment until certain improvements were made to its private sector law. Article 45(4) of the GDPR requires the Commission, on an ongoing basis, to monitor privacy-related developments in Canada that could affect the functioning of the existing adequacy decision. Unless Canada amends its federal data protection laws prior to the next review (which occurs every four years, beginning in May 2020), it is widely expected that Canada would not maintain its current adequacy status. Where there is no adequacy decision, a Transfer Impact Assessment must be completed (see full recommendations in PDF form).

Divergent Approaches: The cross-border data transfer requirements of Bill 64 are a sharp contrast to the CPPA’s liberal approach that would not restrict the transfer of personal information outside of Canada or require organizations to undertake impact assessments for such transfers. Under Bill 64, before communicating personal information outside of Québec, an organization must conduct a Privacy Impact Assessment (PIA) and then enter into a written agreement that considers the outcome of the PIA and establishes adequate protections taking into account the sensitivity of the personal information, the purpose for which it is to be used, safeguards, and the receiving jurisdiction’s legal framework.

TRENDS IN BIOMETRICS & AUTOMATED DECISION MAKING

Automated Decision Making: Following Bill 64, Québec is the first Canadian jurisdiction to introduce a right to be informed about decisions made with automated decision systems (ADS). Being informed about an ADS decision includes being informed about the principal factors and parameters that resulted in the decision, as well as the ability to comment or object to the decision. This means that companies need to get prepared to explain the ADS. The CPPA proposed similar ADS requirements, including requiring organizations to publish a general account of their use of any automated decision system to make predictions, recommendations or decisions about individuals that could have significant impacts on them, as well as an explanation of a prediction, recommendation or decision made about a specific person.

Ontario’s white paper proposal goes one step further, prohibiting ADS where the decision would significantly affect an individual, unless the individual’s express consent is obtained, or such a decision is authorized by law or necessary under contract. This is consistent with Article 22 of the GDPR, which (subject to certain exceptions) provides that data subjects shall have the right not to be subject to a decision based solely on automated processing, including profiling, which produces legal effects or similarly significantly affects. It also prohibits decisions based on the “special categories” of data, including race, political opinions and biometric data for the purpose of uniquely identifying a natural person. Automated decisions are permitted if the decision is necessary for entering into or the performance of a contract, authorized by the Union or Member State law, or based on the data subject’s explicit consent.

How to Prepare:..

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