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The way government learn someone has died is getting a digital overhaul

Governments in Canada turned to private consultants 2 years ago to offer blueprint
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The path Canadians must take to inform their governments about a death in the family is getting a digital overhaul to avoid delays that have led to wrongful or missed benefit payments.

Federal, provincial and territorial governments turned to private consultants two years ago to offer a blueprint for a system where everything is handled electronically and family members don鈥檛 need to contact multiple government departments in an effort that can seem repetitive and unnecessary.

An 85-page consultants鈥 report from October 2016 called for the end of 鈥漨ultiple layers of administration鈥 in provinces and territories, inconsistent sharing of information between jurisdictions, and paper-based processes that result in forms that aren鈥檛 legible or are incomplete.

The lack of electronic collection and sharing of information is 鈥渢he greatest constraint鈥 facing governments that need timely registration and notification of a death, the report said.

鈥淚f a jurisdiction intends to advance upon the proposed blueprint, it must first undertake an aggressive plan to transition to digital modes of information collection and dissemination, thereby replacing all manual processes and paper forms with digital processes.鈥

The consultants also called on governments to make more information easily available for citizens because many don鈥檛 know what they need to do when a loved one dies.

A briefing note to the chief operating officer at Service Canada a few months after the consultants鈥 report landed noted the 鈥済reat disparity鈥 in the 鈥渁vailable resource capacity鈥 in provinces and territories to meet the digital nirvana envisioned.

Officials said some provinces and territories would reach the finish line sooner than others, partly due to resources, partly due to unique issues facing different jurisdictions.

In Ontario, for instance, municipalities play a role in the process, steps which the consultants noted 鈥渄o not necessarily add value.鈥

In the Northwest Territories and Nunavut, the consultants said there were challenges validating the identity of a deceased because it is common for people to use aliases and have different addresses for different situations.

As well, the spelling of surnames can vary within Inuit communities and families because some Inuit citizens didn鈥檛 agree with how their names were originally registered with the government, the consultants wrote.

The Canadian Press obtained a copy of the briefing note and a final draft of the consultants鈥 report under the Access to Information Act.

Yves Berthiaume, president of the Funeral Services Association of Canada, said a uniform, nationwide notification system would make life easier for families and funeral directors who often act as a key point of contact between the family and governments.

Provinces and territories are responsible for collecting the information about a person鈥檚 death and they pass on details to Service Canada, which notifies federal benefits programs to stop payments to the deceased and start payments to surviving partners.

Hiccups in the process can lead 鈥 and have led 鈥 to mistakes in benefits payments, followed by uncomfortable collection calls from Service Canada officials that the federal government would rather avoid happening in the first place.

鈥淚f we don鈥檛 receive the information in a timely manner, then it results in difficult situations for Canadians,鈥 said Anik Dupont, director general with Service Canada.

鈥淪o either you get overpaid because the benefits continue to be dispersed to the people, or we don鈥檛 start benefits for people who should be in receipt of benefits from allowances or other payments that stem from a death.鈥

Ontario is running a pilot program in Thunder Bay that lets funeral directors submit a part of the death registration electronically. A Service Ontario spokesman said the pilot is part of provincial plans to make the process 鈥渁s electronic as possible.鈥

Dupont said many of the technological changes will take time. In the meantime, she said federal officials have started asking for feedback from citizens who have gone through the process to see what can be done in the interim to make things simpler.

Jordan Press, The Canadian Press

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