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Definitions for each category of finding under the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents (PIPED) Act

Two new complaint dispositions under the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act

In keeping with the ombudsman role of the Privacy Commissioner, the Office of the Privacy Commissioner has been increasingly focusing its investigations efforts on resolving, or settling complaints to the satisfaction of all parties, without always issuing formal findings under the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act.

Starting in January 2004, we introduced two new types of complaints dispositions: Settled during the course of the investigation and early resolution.

  • Settled during the course of the investigation
    This disposition is used when the Office has helped negotiate a solution during the course of the investigation that satisfies all involved parties. The Assistant Privacy Commissioner does not issue a finding.
  • Early resolution
    This new disposition is applied to situations where the issue is dealt with before a formal investigation is undertaken.
  • Not well-founded:
    There is no evidence to lead the Commissioner to conclude that the complainant's rights under the Act have been contravened.
  • Well-founded:
    The organization failed to respect a provision of the Act.
  • Resolved:
    The allegations raised in the complaint were substantiated by the investigation, but the organization agreed to take corrective measures to rectify the problem, to the satisfaction of this Office.
  • Discontinued:
    Investigation is terminated before all the allegations have been fully investigated, for example when the complainant is no longer interested in pursuing the matter, or can no longer be located to provide additional information that is critical to reaching a conclusion.