If I can add, it's difficult to get common data formats for particular topics across the levels of government simply because in many cases you're working with different types of data. There'll be a few circumstances where it's the same. It could be around transportation. If you're reporting on incidents or traffic on federal or provincial highways or municipal roads, you could do that. But in a lot of cases we're looking at topics separately, so this is difficult to do.
One of the biggest gaps is around all the cities themselves. For those using the data, one example is governance, and those that are looking at how governments are run from looking at minutes and agendas and voting records. In the federal government you have one place to look at data formats. In the provinces, you have a few, and you can work on getting that data out so it's usable, but once you get down to the municipal level, if you're trying to show what's happening at all three levels of government, you now have thousands of cities to work with in trying to get a common format.
The cities themselves have a lot that we need to do to help with using common formats. One thing is to look at what the rest of the world is doing, because everybody's tackling this and trying to solve it. In terms of interoperability some global standards have developed, and we have to look toward that.
It's still early. I think municipalities have a lot of work to do to get common data, as well as work with the other three levels to see. Even though there are different types of data on the same topic, how can we get them to work together as cleanly as possible?