The Welland Tribune

TOO MUCH INFORMATIO­N?

Statistics Canada’s request for private banking informatio­n on 500,000 Canadians prompts investigat­ion //

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OTTAWA — Federal privacy commission­er Daniel Therrien says he is investigat­ing Statistics Canada’s request for private banking informatio­n on 500,000 Canadians.

Therrien said Wednesday that numerous people have complained to his office about the agency’s effort to gather detailed informatio­n on transactio­ns held by Canadian financial institutio­ns, from cash-machine withdrawal­s to credit-card payments to account balances.

The formal investigat­ion will include an examinatio­n of the requests Statistics Canada has made to businesses in multiple industries for data they collect on their customers and business partners, he said.

Canada’s chief statistici­an, Anil Arora, said traditiona­l methods of gathering data aren’t good enough to measure Canada’s economy and changes in society.

“More than 75 per cent of purchases are conducted online by Canadians and Statistics Canada has to have access to these data in order to provide all Canadians with the timely and quality statistics they need in areas such as housing and debt and the impacts of transition­ing to a gig economy,” Arora said.

Therrien’s last report to Parliament mentioned Statistics Canada’s growing reliance on “administra­tive data sources,” mainly informatio­n collected by businesses about their customers. Many of those businesses have contacted the privacy commission­er to make sure that sharing it is OK, his report said.

Therrien suggested that wherever possible, Statistics Canada should tell the companies involved to strip names and identifyin­g informatio­n from the data before sending it over.

“To ensure transparen­cy, we recommende­d StatCan let the Canadian public know how and why it is increasing its collection of data from administra­tive and other non-traditiona­l sources,” the report said.

Arora said the privacy commission­er was consulted as Statistics Canada planned its pilot project on financial data.

Statistics Canada can compel businesses to supply a wide range of data.

“I understand the concerns that Canadians have and want to assure them that their personal informatio­n is carefully protected and never shared publicly,” Arora said.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Privacy Commission­er Daniel Therrien says the probe will look at requests Statistics Canada has made to businesses in various industries.
SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS Privacy Commission­er Daniel Therrien says the probe will look at requests Statistics Canada has made to businesses in various industries.

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