Statistics Canada head quits, cites loss of independence
OTTAWA — The Liberal government’s bid to rebuild bridges with Statistics Canada came crashing down Friday with the resignation of the chief statistician over concerns that federal information-technology arrangements are hobbling the agency.
Wayne Smith’s resignation marked the second time in the last six years that the chief statistician has quit over a point of principle.
Although former chief statistician Munir Sheikh quit in 2010 over the government’s decision to make the long-form census questionnaire voluntary, a member of the National Statistics Council described the two departures as parallels, because they dealt with the independence of the agency.
Smith had raised concerns about Shared Services Canada, the government’s central IT department, having an effective veto over many of the statistical agency’s operations. He also raised concerns about privacy, with workers outside Statistics Canada being able to access data the agency collects on Canadians.


