Lethbridge Herald

Statcan stands by request for info

- Jordan Press THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Statistics Canada won’t back down from a push to find new sources of data to fuel the nation’s thirst for informatio­n, but will only move as quickly as Canadians are comfortabl­e, the country’s chief statistici­an says.

Anil Arora said his agency needs to do a better job of telling the country why it needs informatio­n and how it protects data after blowback from a proposal to collect banking informatio­n from 500,000 Canadians.

Statistics Canada has pressed pause on the pilot project until the end of a review by the federal privacy watchdog.

In the meantime, Arora said the agency will look for other ways to feed growing data needs by tapping nontraditi­onal sources of informatio­n.

“We are one of the best statistica­l agencies in the world not because we hold back,” Arora said in an interview after his morning address.

“We (will) move at the pace at which society is accepting of the trade-offs that are there, and we need to do a better job of explaining to Canadians ... the checks and balances that are in place, the complex systems that we built over 100 years to protect their privacy.”

Statistics published by the agency are used to set interest rates on loans and mortgages, help local planners decide where to place new schools or hospitals, and set the value of federal seniors benefits like old age security.

But the data underpinni­ng the agency’s findings has started to become problemati­c and its methods are now embroiled in a political fire fight over privacy concerns.

For years, Statistics Canada has relied on Canadians to fill out surveys, some onerously time-consuming, to tell policy-makers things like how quickly the economy is growing, or changes in the cost of consumer goods.

Response rates have fallen as fewer people respond to surveys or screen out callers. This has increased the agency’s reliance on “big data” sources, which has frayed nerves within the civil service that government­s will rely solely on these sources for guidance.

Lower costs and better data quality prompted the agency to reach, under the previous Conservati­ve government, for more administra­tive data compiled by other organizati­ons, such as the banking informatio­n.

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