Face of Nation : The chair of the House of Commons public safety and national security committee says it will hold an emergency meeting to discuss the massive personal data breach at the Desjardins Group, but concedes there’s “no magic fix.”
Last month, the Quebec-based bank revealed that an employee with “ill-intention” collected information about almost three million people and businesses and shared it with others. Desjardins flagged a suspicious transaction to Laval police in December, but officials said it took several months for them to understand the scope of the scheme.
Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer issued a statement Monday urging the committee to look into whether issuing new social insurance numbers is feasible, along with looking at ways to prevent future data breaches.
Liberal MP and committee chair John McKay told CBC News Network: “I don’t know what the solutions are. There will be no magic fix, that I can see, anyways.
“We will certainly be listening to all witnesses, and certainly if there’s a solution out there, we will be recommending it to the government.”
The leaked information includes names, addresses, birth dates, social insurance numbers, email addresses and information about transaction habits.
Tens of thousands of people already have signed a petition asking for new social insurance numbers in the wake of the breach.
“I don’t know what the mechanics are involved in that, but I can’t imagine that it is a simple task,” said McKay, who represents the Toronto riding of Scarborough–Guildwood.
He said the committee will meet “in the next week or so,” adding that even members of the committee were swept up in the breach.
“So this is up front and personal, and you can be darn sure that MPs are extremely concerned about what happens not only to their own data, but to constituents’ data,” he said.
Just as the Desjardins breach news was breaking on June 20, the committee put out a 51-page report looking into cybersecurity and Canada’s financial sector. It found that Canada’s small- and medium-sized financial firms could be vulnerable to the constant barrage of cyberattacks.
“From a security standpoint, this is the new terrorism,” said McKay.
The House of Commons has risen for the summer break, so a meeting will require some MPs to return to Ottawa.