Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

You've Got Mail: Feds Test New E-Notification Service To Save Cash, Time

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Nov, 2019 08:29 PM

    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 up 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 work is part of an overall effort by federal officials to digitize government services.

     

    In a blog post, the organization says offering email updates is "the bare minimum of what people expect from any online service they use," and that occasionally following up "helps provide a sense of confidence and reassurance."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada Has Shown 'Uneven Progress' On Gender Equality, Says New Report

    Canada Has Shown 'Uneven Progress' On Gender Equality, Says New Report
    A new report says it would take Canada 164 years to close the economic gap between men and women if things keep going the way they are.

    Canada Has Shown 'Uneven Progress' On Gender Equality, Says New Report

    IIO Finds No Police Wrongdoing After Man Injured Falling From Burnaby Apartment

    IIO Finds No Police Wrongdoing After Man Injured Falling From Burnaby Apartment
    The Chief Civilian Director (CCD) of the Independent Investigations Office (IIO) has reached a decision in the July 4, 2019 incident in Burnaby.

    IIO Finds No Police Wrongdoing After Man Injured Falling From Burnaby Apartment

    Yuba City Attracts Largest U.S. Gathering of Sikhs This Weekend

    In fact, over 100,000 Sikhs from across the U.S. and around the world are expected to attend the annual Yuba City Nagar Kirtan.

    Yuba City Attracts Largest U.S. Gathering of Sikhs This Weekend

    24-Year-Old Niklas Agarwal Removed From House Of Commons After Staging Climate Sit-in

    The group Our Time wants to deliver 338 mandate letters to MPs elected last week asking them to prioritize a "green new deal" when Parliament resumes.    

    24-Year-Old Niklas Agarwal Removed From House Of Commons After Staging Climate Sit-in

    Vancouver Cemetery Rethinks Space, Green Dying

    Vancouver Cemetery Rethinks Space, Green Dying
    Vancouver's only cemetery is thinking outside the pine box in its efforts to find space, become more environmentally friendly and make the graveyard an interesting place for the living.

    Vancouver Cemetery Rethinks Space, Green Dying

    Five Bears Feasting On Garbage In Penticton Neighbourhood Are Euthanized

    Five Bears Feasting On Garbage In Penticton Neighbourhood Are Euthanized
    Conservation officers euthanized five bears travelling together in Penticton, B.C., on Thursday.

    Five Bears Feasting On Garbage In Penticton Neighbourhood Are Euthanized