Yes I would echo Ms. Nadeau's comments.
I actually don't think the issue is us stepping on each other's toes, it's more an issue of us not sharing enough. The opportunity to actively share data and in an open way means that we can be consuming each other's data much more seamlessly and repurposing those things for the things we need within our own respective context.
The opportunity for us to be able to take federal data, bring it together with provincial data and municipal data to run different kinds of analyses, and create policy options or service improvements as a result of that kind of measurement is really important. And it gets so much easier when the process doesn't involve the creation of a data sharing license agreement or having to negotiate terms between different levels of government and create that kind of red tape around just the sheer access to data that exists in a lot of circumstances right now.
This is why the point about open data by default is an important one. It's because if we assume and we define and we design our data in a way that we anticipate it will be shared, it means it will be consumable by everyone and it will essentially just reduce red tape across the federation.