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Local News > After 20 years of delays, freedom-of-info bill published

After 20 years of delays, freedom-of-info bill published

A freedom-of-information law promised by successive governments for more than two decades is finally back on the table with the release of a draft bill that would give the public …

Continue reading “After 20 years of delays, freedom-of-info bill published”

by FREEMAN ROGERS | January 16, 2026

A freedom-of-information law promised by successive governments for more than two decades is finally back on the table with the release of a draft bill that would give the public a legal right to access government records.

For the first time on Jan. 12, the government circulated the draft Freedom of Information Act, 2012, inviting public feedback as part of a consultation process being led by the Premier’s Office.

If enacted, the law — which is on the House of Assembly’s legislative agenda for 2026, according to the Tuesday Speech from the Throne — would require government agencies and statutory bodies to disclose official documents on request, subject to specific exemptions.

Government officials described the move as a major step toward improving transparency, accountability and public participation in governance.

“The draft Freedom of Information Act is intended to provide the public with a clear legal right to access official documents held by government ministries, departments and public authorities, subject to carefully defined exemptions that protect essential public interests, personal privacy and national security,” Premier’s Office Permanent Secretary Carolyn Stoutt Igwe said in a Jan. 12 press release.

She added that the bill goes beyond requiring reactive disclosure.

“The legislation also establishes systems and obligations to proactively publish key government information, promote sound record-keeping, and ensure timely responses to information requests,” she said.

Proposed rules

The bill would apply broadly across government while carving out exemptions for information linked to Cabinet deliberations, the governor’s constitutional functions, national security, law enforcement, personal privacy and confidential communications.

The bill would also establish a Freedom of Information Unit to manage requests and support access, and it would grant oversight and enforcement powers to the complaints commissioner.

Members of the public would not be required to give a reason for requesting information, and government agencies would be bound by specific response timelines.

Other provisions include a public-interest test for certain exemptions, whistleblower protections, mandatory training for public officers, and requirements for improved records management.

UK law compared

The draft bill, however, falls short of the freedom-of-information regime in the United Kingdom, which has narrower exemptions and stronger enforcement mechanisms.

Unlike the UK’s Freedom of Information Act, which applies retroactively to historical documents, the VI draft would grant access only to historical documents created or held within five years before the law’s commencement.

And while the VI bill would place enforcement largely in the hands of the complaints commissioner, the UK law provides for stronger oversight by an independent information commissioner with sanctioning powers.

Also under the proposed VI law, government ministers would be granted the power to conclusively determine whether certain information is exempt from disclosure by signing a certificate.

The governor would have even broader powers to withhold information from the public through decisions that would not be subject to judicial review.

Decades of delay

The release of the draft legislation comes after years of stalled reform. A version of a freedom-of-information law was drafted by the now-disbanded Law Reform Commission in 2004.

Since then, successive governments have repeatedly promised such a law, but no bill was ever brought to the House of Assembly for debate.

In recent years, calls for the move have mounted from civil society, and the Constitutional Review Commission recently urged the adoption of a freedom-of-information regime ahead of constitutional negotiations with the UK.

Meanwhile, such laws have become standard across much of the world, and more than 125 countries now have one in place, according to the United Nations.

This region is no exception. A 2024 report by the Jamaica-based Media Institute of the Caribbean found that nine of the 17 English-speaking Caribbean countries and territories — including Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, the Cayman Islands and the Bahamas — had enacted freedom-of-information laws.

Public consultation

This week, Ms. Stoutt Igwe said the VI’s draft legislation reflects technical work already completed, drawing on previous recommendations from the former Law Reform Commission.

Though the draft aligns with internationally recognised open-government standards, she said, it is tailored to the VI’s constitutional and administrative frameworks.

Now, the Premier’s Office is urging members of the public, civil society organisations, the private sector and other stakeholders to review the draft bill and submit feedback before it is finalised and brought to the HOA.

Comments can be emailed to premieroffice@gov.vg. The government did not provide a timeline for submissions.

 

CategoriesLocal News Tagsaccess to government records, access to information rights, accountability in government, accountability mechanisms, Bahamas FOI law, British Virgin Islands, BVI legislation, cabinet deliberations exemption, Caribbean freedom of information, Caribbean governance reform, carolyn stoutt-igwe, Cayman Islands FOI law, civic engagement, civil society advocacy, Complaints Commissioner, confidential communications, constitutional negotiations with the UK, Constitutional Review Commission, decades of delay, delayed legislative reform, democratic participation, democratic reform, draft bill consultation, draft freedom of information act 2012, exemptions to disclosure, five year document limit, FOI law, Freedom of Information Act, Freedom of Information Unit, freedom of the press, global freedom of information laws, good governance, government accountability, government agencies transparency, government consultation process, government reform Virgin Islands, government transparency, governor constitutional powers, historical documents access, HOA legislative agenda 2026, information commissioner oversight, information disclosure, international open government standards, investigative journalism tools, Jamaica FOI law, Jamaica media institute, judicial review limitations, law enforcement exemption, Law Reform Commission 2004, Media Institute of the Caribbean report, media transparency, ministerial exemption certificates, national security exemption, open government, oversight and enforcement, Permanent Secretary Premier’s Office, personal privacy protection, Premier's Office, proactive disclosure, public access to information, public consultation, public interest test, public participation in governance, public records access, public sector record keeping, public sector reform, reactive disclosure, records management, reedom of information, retroactive disclosure, right to information, sanctions and enforcement, Speech from the Throne, statutory bodies disclosure, transparency legislation, transparency reform, Trinidad and Tobago FOI law, UK FOI law, UK Freedom of Information Act comparison, United Nations transparency laws, VI House of Assembly, virgin islands government, whistleblower protections

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