Sunday, December 21, 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

    HIGHLIGHTS: Justin Trudeau Targeted In English Leaders’ Debate

    The only English-language debate to feature all six federal party leaders devolved Monday into crosstalk and mudslinging as the leaders tried to break the impasse in voting intentions that has persisted through three weeks of campaigning.

    HIGHLIGHTS: Justin Trudeau Targeted In English Leaders’ Debate

    Emily Carr University In Vancouver Closed Until Wednesday After Possible Arson

    The Vancouver campus of Emily Carr University of Art + Design won't reopen until Wednesday following what police believe was a deliberately set fire.

    Emily Carr University In Vancouver Closed Until Wednesday After Possible Arson

    Trudeau Attacks Tories For Not Releasing Platform As Leaders Prepare For Debate

     Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau took aim at the Conservatives on Sunday for not releasing their election platform as the majority of federal party leaders spent the day cramming for Monday's critical English-language debate.

    Trudeau Attacks Tories For Not Releasing Platform As Leaders Prepare For Debate

    Ontario Provincial Government Reaches Deal With Education Workers, Avoid Strike

    Ontario Provincial Government Reaches Deal With Education Workers, Avoid Strike
    Education Minister Stephen Lecce and the bargaining unit for the Canadian Union of Public Employees announced the deal just hours before a midnight strike deadline.

    Ontario Provincial Government Reaches Deal With Education Workers, Avoid Strike

    Quebec Backs Down On Banning Retail Workers From Using 'Bonjour-Hi' Greeting

    MONTREAL - Quebec's immigration minister now says there is no plan to bring in legislation to prevent retail workers from greeting their customers with "bonjour-hi," three days after he raised the possibility of banning the bilingual greeting.

    Quebec Backs Down On Banning Retail Workers From Using 'Bonjour-Hi' Greeting

    Extinction Rebellion Protest: Demonstrators Block Vancouver’s Burrard Street Bridge

    Traffic cameras showed several dozen demonstrators marching in the traffic lanes of the Burrard Street Bridge, one of three spans into the city's downtown core.

    Extinction Rebellion Protest: Demonstrators Block Vancouver’s Burrard Street Bridge