Fed. Open Data Asks

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Fed. Open Data Asks

Tracey P. Lauriault
The following is a letter that was sent as a follow-up to the round table consultations in Ottawa, and as part of a verbal request.  In addition the request was sent to the open data portal comment section.

There has been no response yet.  I have also posted the request on datalibre.ca (http://datalibre.ca/2013/07/02/a-fed-open-data-ask/) and will be monitoring progress.

Any others have these types of issues?

Cheers
t

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From:
Date: Wed, Jun 19, 2013 at 11:52 AM
Subject: RE: Open Data Asks
To: "Tracey P. Lauriault" <[hidden email]>, Harvey Low <[hidden email]>


Dear Stephen,

As indicated at the meeting, my role today was to represent several hundred municipal and community sector organizations based in larger cities across Canada. These organisations participate in the Community Data Program (communitydata.ca), and the Quality of Life Reporting System (municipaldata.ca). The data focus of these initiatives is collect and report on data that captures social, economic, and environmental trends at the municipal or neighbourhood levels in Canadian cities and communities.

Your feedback on the following request would be greatly appreciated:

What we would be most interested in, as a starting point, is a series of open discussions with the Federal government about community data: data that measures trends and conditions in Canadian cities & communities. Community Data Canada (cdc-dcc.info) was established in 2009 as a  forum for these discussions.

A series of “Community Data Roundtables” would address two fundamental limitations of data access at the level of municipal and community geographies:

 1.    We don’t know exactly what to request of Federal departments. HSRDC is a good example. That agency has unknown quantities of administrative data related to several topics:

o   Employment Insurance

o   People with disabilities

o   Homelessness data (HIFIS)

o   Other data sets dealing with seniors, First nations, students, and much else

2.    Much of the community data we require reside with provincial government departments. In these cases, there is a role for the Federal government to act as a convenor of provincial governments. We lack the capacity and influence to reach 10-13 jurisdictions (in the case of the 3 territories). Federal government-convened Community Data Roundtables would tackle the following topics:

o   Education data: Meeting with officials of provincial ministries of Education.

o   Health data: Meeting with officials of ministries of health. This includes compelling CIHI to share their data. They are were created as a private non-profit operating at arms length from the government, but must be accountable to governments at some level.

o   Environment Data: Air quality index databases

A final note: we are already making good progress with several Federal government agencies:

·         Industry Canada – bankruptcies data

·         Citizenship & Immigration Canada – permanent residents data cube, and on track to develop an IMDB data cube (linking immigrant and income databases)

·         Environment Canada – air quality monitoring station data

·         CRA – Income data via Statistics Canada

·         CMHC - Housing data

Compelling these agencies to make their data available via a portal will ultimately be beneficial to us, but we are currently able to access these data sets through direct relationships with these agencies.

Dear Stephen,

 

As a follow-up to last week’s note, there is one specific data product we would like to add to the Federal Government’s Open Data portal:

 

·         Statistics Canada’s Business Register listings without contact information, but with 6-digit postal codes and/or street addresses

 

Statistics Canada’s response to the request made by the Community Data Program is para-phrased as follows:

 

Statistics Canada almost never releases individual business listings unless they meet three criteria at the same time:

 

1. They are needed for research purposes

2. They are needed by a federal government department or agency

3. Their release is approved by the chief statistician

 

Please advise as to whether this is possible, and what additional information you require.

Sincerely,

 

 


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