Thank you, Chairman.
As indicated, I had said some time ago that I would be available here from 4:30 to 5:30, and of course we can never account when we are interrupted by a democratic impulse, which we all just satisfied, and now we've returned. I will stick with my commitment to be here until 5:30, and of course I'm willing to be here next week also, if that's of any help to my colleagues.
The whole issue of open government is something that we have been, as a government, pursuing for some time. I certainly, in relation to my Treasury Board responsibilities, for some months now have been wanting to move this file along. I appreciate the work of the committee and your interest in this.
Some people might say or think or wonder if there's any coincidence in terms of us talking right now about open government, open information, open data.
I would say that this presentation, which has been booked for some time, has been somewhat overtaken by events. Some may see it as a happy coincidence. Others may have another particular view on it.
I want to walk you though what we have so far. This is a new approach to making information available. It's something that some other governments have done. It's something we have been doing in some departments, to a degree, and now we've brought it together all into one focus.
I would like to congratulate you for the work you have done and for your goal to have a more open and more specific portal for our fellow citizens.
It's the approach we're going to take.
I'm going to abbreviate my remarks, given the time, but I do want you to see for yourselves, if you haven't yet, what we're talking about.
Mr. Chairman, this is what the site actually looks like.
We're talking about open government. We're dividing this into three sections, the first being open data, the second being open information, and the third being open dialogue.
I have outlined some of this publicly already and what we are talking about with open data.
First of all, as we all know, all departments and agencies have huge amounts of data available to them from all the work that is done. Largely, that data has not been available in readily readable format for the individual citizen. Because of the increasing demand and expectation for openness and transparency and for all the information that government has that it can legally bring forward, we've selected ten departments and we have indicated to them that they need to start making their data available in a form that is more readily accessible and readable.
It's a comprehensive approach. It's incremental in terms of our being open about the fact that we haven't developed this perfectly. This is a work in progress. This work is going to continue, with your advice too, as it moves along.
Open data is offering government data in useful forms to help citizens, not-for-profit organizations, and others to see what is there, and then to be able to use the massive amounts of the data for viable purposes.
There are five elements of the plan, and we have talked about this. There is the building of a public-facing Government of Canada open data portal, then providing and increasing the access to data that is federally available from departments and agencies, and then exploring the potential. We want to continue to push this envelope, and I know that your committee will assist in doing that.
There have been certain policies relative to open data that have to continue to move not just with the demand, but with the technological capability that's there to make information available. I'm going to be pushing the management policy on this to make this more and more available. When we say that this is a pilot, it doesn't mean we're trying something to see if it works. This is a policy commitment being worked broadly in ten departments right now, but all departments are being served notice that this is going to be the expectation. I don't want to say that it's the way of the future, but it's the way of the present. We are developing a longer-term Government of Canada open data strategy along with the milestones. We have already fulfilled our commitment to build the portal, but we want to move it along.
Just as an example of what we mean by raw data and what happens to it, Environment Canada accumulates untold volumes of information on everything you could possibly imagine related to climate and weather and everything else. I won't even start to go down the list. More and more we are going to require that departments do their data in a way that people can access and use. If people go online, they will see the type of information that Environment Canada makes available. From that people can do something with it in a way that is helpful to individuals. I'm not advertising for them, but the Weather Network was able to take this information and develop an application, also known as an app, related to current weather observations, sophisticated modelling data, and the result is a cross-country continuous feed of weather data.
As a government, we haven't said that this is what has to happen, but by making the data available people can take it individually and they can use it for research and academic purposes. Frankly, it's information that was gathered for public use, so if people want to make an application out of it, they certainly can. We're finding that people have used this for commercial purposes, and there is no issue with that.
Natural Resources Canada uses geospatial data of every type imaginable. Here's a Toronto company that is able to take this data, whether we're talking about information related to congestion in cities, power supplies, emissions, whatever it might be, and come up with an everyday life assessment. This is a Toronto company that has done this. Again, I'm not advertising, just using it as an example. ESRI Canada is able to take this raw data and use it in a way that's helpful for them and also available and helpful to others.
So whether we're talking about entrepreneurs, researchers, academics, or voluntary organizations, this raw data in large numbers--there are now 261,000 different data sets--we're number two in the world with what we've now been able to have online through one portal. We're going to continue to develop this over the next 12 months. We expect to be able to double the amount of available data. It needs to be perfected. It is out there now and people can turn to it, but we want to continue to see it evolve. So this is open data, which can be taken and used in almost any way imaginable.
The second aspect--and I'm trying to really move quickly here--is open information. We are requiring departments to be proactive about everything they do and to make that available in terms of their activities, again, through one portal under open information. Of course the public has a right to know, but they also need the ability to access it.
Government departments, as you know, are always commissioning reports, gathering information, and we want to make the reports that are done, the activities of departments, available and accessible so people can see exactly what is going on. So let me use that in a way that's relevant to some of the discussions we've been having in the last couple of weeks related to access to information.
We are now requiring departments--the ones involved in the pilot, but this will be required of all departments--to summarize the access to information requests they get. We're obviously not putting the individual's name out there--that's something that needs to be protected--but the public broadly needs to see the types of things that government's being asked for and whether government is coming out with the information or not, and if they're not, what the restrictions are.
So we're posting summaries of completed access to information requests online. Also, this moves to allowing access to information requests and payments to be made online to greatly speed up the process. As you know, if you've ever had to struggle with an access to information request, sometimes the delay is because it has to go through numerous departments. This accelerates that process and forces departments to move it through quickly and not to allow that to be a source of any kind of inordinate delay.
The final aspect is that every department literally does all kinds of reports and studies, and these should be made available to the public and to individuals. So we're working with the Commissioner of Official Languages right now. We want to pilot the posting of these reports that are commissioned by the government into what we call a virtual library. There are issues here with translation.
If a department gets a report commissioned for its own use right now, that report may be in either of the two official languages. If we make this available, the cost of publishing every single report in two languages when they're not being asked for would be prohibitive. So we are working with the Commissioner of Official Languages to see about this virtual library being developed and how people can access all the reports, all the various analyses that government does.
Finally, and I'll close with this one, the third portal is open dialogue. This is the “Consulting with Canadians” portal.
As you know, governments consult. They have consultative processes that they engage in publicly, and it's important that they do this, whoever the government is, going out from coast to coast, from town to city, highways and byways, to be available to the public. Obviously, not all Canadians can get to these meetings, and open dialogue means that all Canadians will be able to access all consultation processes that are going on. By requiring the departments to post that online and to post the mechanism so that they can receive input.... And the person having the input, as if they were actually at the public meeting, will also be able to get a response, and they'll be able to track whether their response was listened to, acknowledged, and how it's going to help the process to move along.
As you know, we've got the red tape reduction commission that is going on, so people would be able to look at this list and they can see the public consultations that are going on right now. They click into the one they want and that will pop right up. There it is. Here we are, open government, the red tape reduction commission. Individuals can have their input into that online, expect a response, and expect their input to be evaluated.
What we are requiring of departments is all consultations now would be available to individual citizens online, even if it's an MP, a committee, or whatever it is doing a tour of the country to get valuable input. I could go on, but I don't want to deprive you of some quick questions. This is the direction in which we're going. This is already a fait accompli. Citizens can go on to these portals right now and access this information. We're learning as we go, so I'm not going to apologize if there are imperfections. We do want to see it improve. We do want to see it increase. Open government means open portals on data, on information, and on dialogue.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.