Evaluation of the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada’s Information Management Program – March 2025

About FCAC

The Financial Consumer Agency of Canada (FCAC), established in 2001, protects consumers of financial products and services. It ensures compliance with federal consumer protection measures, promotes financial literacy, and informs consumers of their rights and responsibilities.

Information Management supports the efficient handling of organizational information—from planning and system development to disposal or long-term preservation.

About the evaluation

The evaluation was conducted by Goss Gilroy and focused on the following guidelines:

Methodology

Information was collected via:

Recommendations and Financial Consumer Agency of Canada's response

Recommendation

Extend IM Governance Framework across all data repositories.

FCAC's response

Agree 

  1. Document the disposition process for paper records.
  2. Document the disposition process for records held in Gcdocs.
  3. Establish and document the disposition process for transitory records.
  4. Publish quick reference documentation for end users to better understand retention and disposition activities at FCAC.
  5. Conduct a gap analysis on GCdocs.

Recommendation

Implement support from management and appropriate guidance from the Data Management and Adoption team for Data Stewards in ensuring the application of sound IM practices across the Agency.

FCAC's response

Agree

  1. Develop and distribute a kit outlining best practices, quick references guides, and key activities for Data Stewards.
  2. Schedule regular meetings between the Data Management and Digital Adoption Services team and the Data Stewards.
  3. Establish a formal mechanism for following up on recommendations from data stewards to IM-IT.

Recommendation

Strengthen oversight across data repositories by establishing targets, developing and implementing monitoring mechanisms to measure and report on information management activities.

FCAC's response

Agree

  1. Develop a dashboard for IM and data health, to monitor adherence to the Directive on Service and Digital, with monthly and quarterly metrics.
  2. Report annually on IM health to DCOM.

Recommendation

Develop and implement information management lifecycle tools by platform according to their business value, including guidance on classification, access and security/confidentiality requirements, (e.g., email and OneDrive transitory records limited by size and age).

FCAC's response

Agree

  1. Implement a dashboard to monitor the number, type, and age of records in SharePoint.
  2. Centralize the creation of new SharePoint sites and Teams under the Data Management and Digital Adoption Services team.
  3. Implement disposition practices in GCDocs.
  4. Create additional IM-related guidance for employees by platform, including training for Team owners.

Recommendation

Implement file plans and retention schedules for all corporate repositories other than GCdocs, including SharePoint and case management systems.

FCAC's response

Agree

  1. Implement retention and disposition identifiers for all end user SharePoint sites, OneDrive, Exchange and case management systems.

Recommendation

Establish quality assurance and monitoring mechanisms to oversee the completeness, accuracy, correct classification and labelling of information.

FCAC's response

Agree

  1. Develop a framework that includes regular audits of data quality and conduct annual reviews of the effectiveness of data and IM processes.

Recommendation

Establishing an IM adoption plan based on a training efficacy and needs analysis.

FCAC's response

Agree

  1. Use the Digital Competency Self-Assessment to establish employees' knowledge and skills related to IM practices.
  2. Develop a personalized adoption framework for digital, data and information related skills.

Recommendation

Consider developing and implementing a generic change management process to support IM adoption Agency-wide.

FCAC's response

Agree

  1. Develop a change management framework that includes clear steps for implementing new IM practices and tools.
  2. Establish a communication to keep employees informed about IM best practices, upcoming changes, and how end users are affected.

Page details

From:

2026-03-23