Vanishing Canada: Why we’re all losers in Ottawa’s war on data (Maclean's) [View all]
This is absolutely chilling. I'd heard isolated stories of the government destroying public records, but I'm completely horrified by the extent. There's no rational excuse for this, which just reinforces my belief that Harper is insane, evil, or both.
Stories about government data and historical records being deleted, burnedeven tossed into Dumpstershave become so common in recent years that many Canadians may feel inured to them. But such accounts are only the tip of a rapidly melting iceberg. A months-long Macleans investigation, which includes interviews with dozens of academics, scientists, statisticians, economists and librarians, has found that the federal governments austerity program, which resulted in staff cuts and library closures (16 libraries since 2012)as well as arbitrary changes to policy, when it comes to datahas led to a systematic erosion of government records far deeper than most realize, with the data and data-gathering capability we do have severely compromised as a result.
Statistics Canada no longer provides a clear snapshot of the country, says John Stapleton, a Toronto-based social policy consultant. Our survey data pixelatesits a big blur. And the small data, we dont know if its right. How many Canadians live in poverty now, compared to 2011? We dont know; changes in income-data collection has made it impossible to track. Austerity measures, ironically, have resulted in an inability to keep track of the changes: StatsCan used to provide detailed, comprehensive data on salaries and employment at all levels of government; now we cant tell where, or how deep, the cuts have been.
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Less discussed, however, is how data erasure also threatens the economy, industry, the arts, and the countrys ability to compete internationally. The 2013 report Information management in the Canadian federal government is a title not likely to attract the non-librarian reader. But the conclusions drawn by its authors, a librarian at Carleton University and an information-management consultant, are chilling. Isla Jordan and Ulla de Stricker describe a country without access to large parts of its institutional memory, and leaders without access to the information needed for strategic decision-making. Toni Samek, a professor at the school of library and information studies at the University of Alberta, puts it more succinctly. Canada is facing a national amnesia, she says, a condition that will block its ability to keep government accountable, remember its past and plan its future.
http://www.macleans.ca/news/canada/vanishing-canada-why-were-all-losers-in-ottawas-war-on-data/