Times Colonist

Feds test new e-notificati­on service to save time, cash

- JORDAN PRESS

OTTAWA — A group of digital disruptors inside the federal government is testing a way to send tens of millions of e-notificati­ons each month to save workers — and taxpayers — time and money.

Known as Notify, the system is built on open-source code from a similar service in the United Kingdom and is meant to let department­s easily and cheaply send emails or text messages.

The federal government group that designed Notify, the Canadian Digital Service, found it could send 10,000 emails in 15 minutes.

That pace would amount to 29.5 million emails a month and would cost about $4,000, the organizati­on says.

Pushed government-wide, the service would replace assorted notificati­on systems built from scratch for individual department­s.

The idea is to make it easier for Canadians to keep tabs on their applicatio­ns for federal services, for instance, or appeals of benefit decisions — eliminatin­g the need to dial into government call centres and potentiall­y wait on hold just for updates.

The email alerts are also intended to reduce costs associated with mailing letters or sending out newsletter­s, and allow call centres to focus on the more complicate­d requests from Canadians who aren’t easily reached digitally.

The three-year-old Canadian Digital Service has been working with department­s that deliver federal services and found they each had similar issues in connecting electronic­ally with Canadians, said Ross Ferguson, the agency’s director of platforms.

“We saw a common need come up a number of times,” he said Wednesday.

“These services would be enhanced by more timely notificati­ons being sent out to the users of those services, but then each time we wanted to incorporat­e that into these new products that we were developing with them, we were seeing a need to set up those notificati­ons anew, every time.”

He said the advantage to using

Notify, which the U.K. has used to send hundreds of millions notificati­ons over the past few years, is that there is “no setup cost, there’s no procuremen­t, there’s no monthly fee.”

He said the system also has “checks and balances to make sure that what’s being sent should be sent out.”

The work is part of an overall effort by federal officials to digitize government services, which has been a tough task. Officials are up against aging technology that cannot quickly be replaced, as well as procuremen­t practices that lengthen the time it takes to simplify operations.

A recent government review of 340 services across 11 department­s found just under one-third are available online from end to end.

In a blog post published Tuesday, Canadian Digital Service said offering email updates through Notify amounts to the “the bare minimum of what people expect from any online service they use,” and that following up can help “provide a sense of confidence and reassuranc­e.”

Ferguson said the organizati­on is looking to get feedback from the first tranche of service department­s that take part in Notify to learn exactly how much they save in time and money by using the one-size-fits-all service, but also why some of them have avoided doing this before.

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