The 2023 survey was conducted by the AB govt. with public funds, but the results aren’t public.
The reply cites section 24 (1) of the FOIP Act, which given that the request was for raw public response to a survey, doesn’t obviously apply.
As of late 2024, the text of that section reads:
24(1) The head of a public body may refuse to disclose
information to an applicant if the disclosure could reasonably be
expected to reveal
- (a) advice, proposals, recommendations, analyses or policy
options developed by or for a public body or a member of
the Executive Council,- (b) consultations or deliberations involving
- (i) officers or employees of a public body,
- (ii) a member of the Executive Council, or
- (iii) the staff of a member of the Executive Council,
- (c) positions, plans, procedures, criteria or instructions
developed for the purpose of contractual or other
negotiations by or on behalf of the Government of Alberta
or a public body, or considerations that relate to those
negotiations,- (d) plans relating to the management of personnel or the
administration of a public body that have not yet been
implemented,- (e) the contents of draft legislation, regulations and orders of
members of the Executive Council or the Lieutenant
Governor in Council,- (f) the contents of agendas or minutes of meetings
- (i) of the governing body of an agency, board, commission,
corporation, office or other body that is designated as a
public body in the regulations, or- (ii) of a committee of a governing body referred to in
subclause (i),- (g) information, including the proposed plans, policies or
projects of a public body, the disclosure of which could
reasonably be expected to result in disclosure of a pending
policy or budgetary decision, or- (h) the contents of a formal research or audit report that in the
opinion of the head of the public body is incomplete unless
no progress has been made on the report for at least 3 years.