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Family

Can a parent without decision-making authority still get school and medical records?

TSL Written by the Treadstone Law team· Updated June 2026

Generally yes. Under the Divorce Act and Ontario's Children's Law Reform Act, a parent who does not have decision-making responsibility is usually still entitled to receive information about the child — including school reports, medical records, and extracurricular updates — unless a court order specifically restricts this.

Schools and healthcare providers in Ontario are generally required to provide information to both parents unless there is a court order saying otherwise. If you are being denied information from your child's school or doctor, you can contact them directly and provide a copy of any parenting order or agreement that confirms your right to receive it.

If your co-parent has directed a school or healthcare provider to withhold information and there is no court order supporting that direction, you can bring a motion to clarify or enforce your information rights. Courts take seriously the idea that children benefit from both parents being engaged and informed.

If there is a safety reason — for example, disclosure of your address could create a risk — courts can restrict what information is shared and how. Speak with a lawyer if you believe your information rights are being wrongly withheld.

Key takeaways

  • A parent without decision-making authority still has information rights in most cases.
  • Schools and doctors must share information with both parents absent a restricting order.
  • Bring a motion to clarify information rights if you are being unlawfully cut off.
  • Courts can restrict information sharing where safety requires it.
This is general information, not legal advice. It doesn’t create a lawyer–client relationship, and the rules can change. For advice on your situation, a Treadstone family lawyer can help.
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