Resignation of chief statistician was months in the making: documents
OTTAWA — Canada’s chief statistician was warned three months before his surprising resignation last week that a showdown with the federal government was inevitable as the agency pushed for more independence, documents show.
Wayne Smith quit on Friday afternoon, and his resignation letters accused the federal government of hobbling his agency’s independence by forcing Statistics Canada to use the government’s central information technology system.
Behind the scenes, the National Statistics Council — an independent body of experts that advises the chief statistician —warned of future problems unless the government agreed with Statistics Canada’s request that it no longer use the IT system overseen by Shared Services Canada.
In a June report obtained by The Canadian Press through the Access to Information Act, the council wrote that the Liberals’ push for the agency to find new ways to collect, analyse and distribute data was at odds with the government’s insistence that the agency use the new central information platform.


