53. The Statistics Act guarantees the confidentiality of your census information. Only if you mark "YES" to this question will your personal information be made public, 92 years after the 2006 Census. If you mark "NO" or leave the answer blank, your personal information will never be made publicly available.Much of what we know about 19th century Canada comes out of census returns. Most of it is fairly impersonal stuff, like age, place of birth, occupation. Until recently nobody could see how the release of century-old data would hurt anyone, but there has been a controversy over the release of early 20th-century data. Thus this question.
Does this person agree to make his/her 2006 Census information available for public release in 2098 (92 years after the census)?
If you answer "no" you will be contributing to the historical blindness of future generations. A systematic source compiled at great expense will be unavailable, unless legal doctrines change.
This idea of confidentiality forever strikes me as absurd. Think how much credit bureaus know about you right now. Or Google. Yes, especially Google.
Steve et All
ReplyDeleteRemember the LAST census? I was one of the randomly chosen few who got the long form - and appearently one of the roughly 15 % plus who promtly broke the law.
The law says you have to fill out the census, completely and return it. Defacing it carries a penalty.
Some place about question 10 on the long form - at the bottom of page one, there was a question on 'ethnic background' - or something like that. Pick from list of possible national ethnic types. Many choices - not CANADIAN as a choice.
You know my history. Admittedly Immigrant grand parents - who all DIED when my own parents were four and five years old respectively. ABSOLUTELY NO cultural influances from the 'old country. My ethnic background is CANADIAN - Hockey Night in Canada, Kraft miniature marshmellows, Wayne and Shuster, CBC...
So I took the black magic marker and defaced the document by writing Canadian in bold letters across the front.
When the data was announced some months later - from the talking heads: 'surprised to find so many (roughly 15%) respondants indicated Canadian as nation of origin..'
I guess I was not the only one...
Darrell
I wonder if my ethnic background is on this form -- American?
ReplyDelete