Government of Alberta regional data dashboard for provincial public-data context.
Last evidence check means this project’s automated public-repository check; it is not a government audit, regulator audit, external audit, or assurance engagement.
Source statusGovernment of Alberta source record checked 2026-05-07
Review trailSource usage is tied to public topics and claim records in the repository.
Source typeofficial
Topics using source1
Claims referenced4
Why this source matters
Baseline source for what would happen to census, statistics, and public data systems? This record currently supports 1 topic and 4 claims in the public repository.
Evidence details
This source row records the publisher, source type, reliability label, access date, original URL, and any archive copy available to this project.
001statistics-census-public-dataCurrent public records show federal statistical and census systems alongside Alberta public-data products, but they do not establish how a new statistical agency, census authority, privacy rules, data sharing, historical comparability, or official indicators would operate after independence.002statistics-census-public-dataThe strongest pro-independence case is that Alberta could build a statistical system focused on provincial priorities, faster regional data products, open-data usability, and metrics designed around Alberta policy decisions if independence, comparability, and privacy safeguards were protected.003statistics-census-public-dataThe strongest anti-independence caution is that governments, businesses, researchers, municipalities, and residents could lose comparability or reliability if census authority, data sharing, survey capacity, privacy rules, historical series, or official indicators were not continuous.004statistics-census-public-dataThis topic remains medium-uncertainty because current official data baselines do not answer future statistical-agency design, census operations, privacy governance, data-sharing, or historical-comparability questions.