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Ford Government Withholds Secret Report on Selling ROM Artifacts

by Rachel Morgan News Editor June 18, 2026
written by Rachel Morgan News Editor

The Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) required external provincial support to achieve financial sustainability following pandemic-related revenue losses, according to a 2022 audit by consultancy firm Ernst & Young. While the Ford government has suppressed the full report, documents show the audit proposed selling museum artifacts and an Oakville storage facility to address cash flow challenges.

Why the government is withholding the report

The Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Gaming is currently fighting a freedom of information appeal to keep the full Ernst & Young audit secret. The government argues that disclosing the report would reveal internal cabinet deliberations and advice, claiming that releasing these details could harm the province’s economy. While a heavily redacted version was released, it removed all analysis, costs, and specific loss figures.

Why the government is withholding the report

Did You Know? The Ernst & Young audit was commissioned in late 2022 after the museum struggled with pandemic-era closures, funding shortages, and declining admission revenue.

Financial health and the debate over assets

There is a stark contrast between the government’s 2022 findings and current claims made by museum leadership. While the provincial government admitted in commission filings that the museum could not reach sustainability under its previous operational model, a ROM spokesperson stated the institution is on “solid footing.” The museum reported a surplus of $4.197 million for the 2024/2025 fiscal year.

Canada’s Royal Ontario Museum gets first climate curator in North America

Expert Insight: The tension between the government’s 2022 assessment of “dire” finances and the museum’s recent reported surplus highlights a lack of transparency that critics argue mirrors the abrupt 2024 closure of the Ontario Science Centre. Without full disclosure of the audit’s methodology, the public cannot verify whether the current fiscal momentum is a result of structural changes or temporary funding interventions.

What happens next

The release of the full report remains subject to an ongoing appeal before the Information and Privacy Commissioner. Should the commissioner rule against the government, the public may finally see the full scope of the “drastic measures” proposed for the museum’s collection. If the government continues to withhold the document, political pressure from critics like NDP MPP Jessica Bell is likely to intensify, particularly regarding the precedent set by other recent government-led closures and funding controversies.

What happens next

Frequently Asked Questions

Did the museum actually sell any artifacts?
No. Both the ROM and the provincial government maintain that the suggestion to sell artifacts or the Oakville storage facility was never seriously considered.

Why was the audit conducted in 2022?
The provincial government commissioned the audit to examine how the museum was funded by taxpayers and to assess its recovery plans following COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns.

What is the current financial status of the ROM?
According to a spokesperson for the museum, the institution reported a surplus of $4.197 million in the 2024/2025 fiscal year and is currently experiencing positive momentum.

How much transparency should the public expect from provincial institutions regarding their long-term financial stability?

June 18, 2026 0 comments
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News

Ontario Court Denies Appeal to Block Doug Ford’s Phone Records

by Rachel Morgan News Editor May 25, 2026
written by Rachel Morgan News Editor

The Ontario Court of Appeal has dismissed an attempt by the provincial government to block an order requiring access to Premier Doug Ford’s personal cellphone records. The decision reactivates a directive for the premier to surrender call logs for review by civil servants, who are tasked with determining which entries relate to government business.

This development marks the latest turn in a long-standing transparency dispute. The initial order, issued by the Information and Privacy Commissioner (IPC), stemmed from a request for records dating back to November 2022, a period when the government moved to allow development on protected Greenbelt lands. A panel of three judges previously affirmed that the premier uses his personal device for official communications, necessitating the disclosure of relevant records.

Did You Know? The order to disclose records specifically involves a week of call logs from November 2022, a period that coincided with government decisions regarding development on protected lands in the Greenbelt.

Implications and Legal Hurdles

Following the May 19, 2026, dismissal of the government’s request for leave to appeal, the IPC notified civil servants that the stay on Order PO-4577-F is lifted. Officials have been given a 30-day deadline to obtain the records from the premier and determine which calls must be released to the public.

Implications and Legal Hurdles
Ontario Court Denies Appeal Expert Insight

Despite the court’s ruling, the practical release of these documents faces significant obstacles. In April, the government enacted changes to transparency laws as part of the 2026 budget, retroactively providing the premier, his cabinet, and their staff with broad immunity from freedom of information requests.

Expert Insight: The intersection of a court-mandated disclosure and newly enacted, retroactive transparency exemptions creates a complex legal landscape. While the judiciary has affirmed the principle of transparency regarding the premier’s personal device, the government’s recent legislative changes may effectively neutralize the ability of oversight bodies to enforce that principle in practice.

What Happens Next

The government may use the new, retroactive rules to classify the records as exempt from transparency requirements. If civil servants decide to withhold the records based on these legislative amendments, that decision would likely face further legal scrutiny, as a spokesperson for the IPC noted that any access decision remains subject to appeal.

Ontario court ruled that Premier Doug Ford would have to hand phone records. #ontario #canada🇨🇦

Frequently Asked Questions

Why was the premier ordered to release his phone records?
The IPC and a divisional court concluded that the premier utilizes his personal device to conduct official government business, making those specific call logs subject to transparency and access requirements.

What is the current status of the order?
Following the May 19 dismissal of the government’s appeal, the IPC has lifted the stay on its order, meaning the requirement for the premier to turn over relevant call logs to civil servants is currently active.

How could the 2026 budget changes impact this case?
The government’s retroactive changes to transparency laws exempt the premier and his staff from certain freedom of information requests, which may allow the government to declare the phone records ineligible for release despite the court ruling.

How should the public balance the need for government transparency with the privacy of an elected official’s personal communications?

May 25, 2026 0 comments
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