Ottawa Citizen

StatsCan wants to be free of federal IT department

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The country’s chief statistici­an believes Statistics Canada must have complete control of its own digital systems rather than having to turn to the federal government’s central IT department.

Workers at the statistics agency were told earlier this year that it was antithetic­al having someone else look after IT services when the Liberals vowed during the election to make Statistics Canada more independen­t from the federal government.

The details are contained in documents obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Informatio­n Act that included speaking notes for chief statistici­an Wayne Smith.

“Dependence on another party for informatic­s services impedes our ability to deliver our programs, to innovate and transform, (and) to better address new and emerging data needs,” Smith’s speaking notes read.

“As such, this dependence is incoherent with the notion of independen­ce, not to mention protection of the confidenti­ality of respondent data.”

Shared Services Canada and the statistics agency have had a rocky relationsh­ip amid outages and sluggish systems critical to Statistics Canada’s mandate.

Smith also wrote in response to a staff question that “programs have suffered and continue to suffer delays” since Statistics Canada handed over oversight of its systems to Shared Services Canada, creating “challenges in terms of reliabilit­y, timeliness, effectiven­ess and affordabil­ity of IT architectu­re.”

A spokeswoma­n for Shared Services Canada said in an email that the IT department is working with Statistics Canada to “ensure its operationa­l needs are met.”

Stephanie Richardson said Shared Services Canada has proposed moving Statistics Canada systems to a new “world-class” data centre “in order to reduce incidents.”

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