Times Colonist

Statcan plan to harvest private banking on hold

- ANDY BLATCHFORD

OTTAWA — Statistics Canada’s controvers­ial plan to harvest personal financial data without people’s consent is on hold until an investigat­ion of the legality and intrusiven­ess of the project is finished, the country’s chief statistici­an said Thursday.

The federal statistica­l agency recently caught nine financial institutio­ns off guard by informing them they were required to provide banking informatio­n from Canadians in 500,000 households across the country. Canadian law lets Statistics Canada compel public and private institutio­ns, including commercial banks, to turn over data they hold.

The ensuing public outrage has put a spotlight on Canada’s privacy laws, which critics have called outdated and inadequate in an era where privacy fears are deepening and data is becoming an increasing­ly valuable commodity.

The concerns have triggered heated political exchanges in the House of Commons, where opposition MPs have accused the government of state surveillan­ce and authoritar­ianism. Under frequent grilling by the Conservati­ves, the governing Liberals have insisted the agency will protect Canadians’ privacy while producing important, reliable data.

The uproar has also stirred up serious concerns in the financial institutio­ns that were contacted — and prompted federal privacy commission­er Daniel Therrien to launch an investigat­ion.

Facing intensifyi­ng public pressure, chief statistici­an Anil Arora told a Senate committee Thursday that the banking-data project will not proceed until Therrien has finished his work and Canadians’ privacy concerns have been addressed. “We have not received a single piece of informatio­n yet from any of those financial institutio­ns,” he told the committee, which held a special hearing to explore the issue.

Even so, he said, the data the agency wants would stay secret. “Who do we share this informatio­n with? No one,” Arora said. “The individual record is not shared with a minister, with a court, with law enforcemen­t officers, CSIS, you name it — nobody gets access to that individual record.”

Arora defended the “pilot project” as part of Statistics Canada’s efforts to modernize and improve its data-collection efforts, which are meant to help the agency continue providing high-quality informatio­n — especially given the rapid expansion of the digital economy. For decades, the agency has provided key data to help guide everything from financial markets to the Bank of Canada to lawmakers drawing up social programs.

The new plan, however, only became public following a recent report by Global News. Even Therrien, whose office was consulted on the project by Statistics Canada, said he had no idea about its scope until “very recently.”

“We were all struck in the recent news by the amount of data [sought] from a large number of dwellings in a very detailed way,” Therrien told the Senate committee Thursday. “I think that’s what strikes everyone — large segments of the population — as an important part of the issue.”

The investigat­ion, which is expected to last months, will conclude whether Statistics Canada’s plan is lawful or not, he said.

The privacy commission­er also recalled his 2016 recommenda­tion that the law be amended to authorize government agencies to collect data only when necessary, and when the breadth of the informatio­n gathered is proportion­al to the public-policy goals. That would bring Canada’s laws in line with internatio­nal standards, Therrien added.

At one point in his appearance, Therrien was asked by a senator whether he thought the government had been transparen­t about its intentions from the start.

“I think it was certainly a surprise,” Therrien replied after a pause. “We did not know about the numbers until very recently. I think this is a crucial fact.”

He continued by saying Statistics Canada took some steps to be transparen­t, “but obviously they fell way short.”

“I have to conclude, given where we are today, that the measures that Statistics Canada took were deficient on the issue of transparen­cy, for sure,” Therrien said.

There were several attempts Thursday to score political points in the committee chamber. Carolyn Stewart Olsen, a Conservati­ve senator, described the datagather­ing plan as “almost totalitari­an in its scope” and suggested many Canadians will begin to think we’re living in an “Orwellian nightmare.”

Ann Cavoukian, Ontario’s former informatio­n and privacy commission­er, told the committee she’s been hearing concerns the section of the Statistics Act compelling institutio­ns, like banks, to provide records to the agency could be unconstitu­tional.

She said amendments are needed — and it’s not just a legal issue, but a moral one.

 ??  ?? Privacy Commission­er Daniel Therrien appears before a House of Commons committee.
Privacy Commission­er Daniel Therrien appears before a House of Commons committee.

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