Friday, June 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

StatCan Overreached With Plans: Privacy Czar

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Dec, 2019 08:03 PM

    OTTAWA - The federal privacy watchdog says the national statistics agency could not justify plans to collect data about Canadians' financial transactions without their knowledge or consent.

     

    Privacy commissioner Daniel Therrien says in his annual report today that his investigation did not find Statistics Canada had violated the law.

     

    However it did raise significant privacy concerns about the design of the agency's programs and the shortcomings of existing legislation.

     

    Therrien says Canadians were right to be worried given the scale of the proposed collection, the highly sensitive nature of the information and the fact the data would paint an intrusively detailed portrait of a person's lifestyle, consumer choices and interests.

     

    He says that during the investigation, Statistics Canada officials spoke about their objectives but did not demonstrate why they needed to collect so much highly sensitive information about millions of Canadians.

     

    StatCan ultimately agreed to follow the commissioner's recommendations not to carry out the collection projects as originally designed, and to work with his office to ensure they adequately respect privacy.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Watchdog Notified After Alleged Kidnapper Falls Up To 11 Storeys Into Bush Attempting To Flee From Burnaby RCMP

    Police Watchdog Notified After Alleged Kidnapper Falls Up To 11 Storeys Into Bush Attempting To Flee From Burnaby RCMP
    RCMP has notified the Independent Investigations Office of British Columbia (IIO BC) of an incident which resulted in one man being taken to hospital late yesterday evening in Burnaby.

    Police Watchdog Notified After Alleged Kidnapper Falls Up To 11 Storeys Into Bush Attempting To Flee From Burnaby RCMP

    B.C. Seniors Will No Longer Have To Accept First Available Long-Term Care Bed

    B.C. Seniors Will No Longer Have To Accept First Available Long-Term Care Bed
    Seniors in British Columbia will have more long-term care options and choices starting this month.

    B.C. Seniors Will No Longer Have To Accept First Available Long-Term Care Bed

    B.C. River Unsafe For Crews After Slide But Blocked Fish Could Be Moved: DFO

    Salmon blocked from migrating upstream to spawning grounds could be trapped and trucked above an obstruction following a rock slide in British Columbia's Fraser River, a spokeswoman for Fisheries and Oceans Canada said Wednesday.  

    B.C. River Unsafe For Crews After Slide But Blocked Fish Could Be Moved: DFO

    Canada-Wide Warrant Issued For Sex Offender Jonathan Cardinal Missing From Vancouver Halfway House

    Vancouver Police are asking for the public’s help in locating 29-year-old Jonathan Cardinal, a federal sex offender, after he failed to return to his halfway house in Vancouver on July 2.

    Canada-Wide Warrant Issued For Sex Offender Jonathan Cardinal Missing From Vancouver Halfway House

    Supreme Court Of Canada Rejects Saskatchewan Hit-Man Murder Appeal

    Supreme Court Of Canada Rejects Saskatchewan Hit-Man Murder Appeal
    Joshua Dylan Petrin was a high-ranking drug trafficker when he asked two of his associates to "take care" of his right-hand man, who was planning to walk away from their criminal enterprise without his permission.

    Supreme Court Of Canada Rejects Saskatchewan Hit-Man Murder Appeal

    Former N.S. Mountie Sentenced To Decade In Prison For Theft, Cocaine Trafficking

    Former N.S. Mountie Sentenced To Decade In Prison For Theft, Cocaine Trafficking
    A former Nova Scotia Mountie has been sentenced to 10 years in a minimum security prison for stealing 10 kilograms of cocaine from an exhibit locker and arranging sales that earned him $100,000 in cash.

    Former N.S. Mountie Sentenced To Decade In Prison For Theft, Cocaine Trafficking