Showing posts with label CBC Ombudsman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CBC Ombudsman. Show all posts

Past, Present, or Future? CBC Ombudsman finds "It would have been wrong to state categorically that Canada has already seen an increase in extreme rainfall events" - So What is Causing Flooding?

Fort McMurray Ice Jam Historical Flood Events
Fort McMurray Historical Ice Jam Events
Flooding caused by extreme weather has unfortunately been a significant threat to Canadians for decades.

Recent flooding in Fort McMurray, Alberta highlights how devastating flooding can be, causing widespread damage and even loss of life.  Often flood risks are long-standing and challenging to address.  For example, Fort McMurray flooding has been affected by ice jams since 1875, based on Review of flood stage frequency estimates for the City of Fort McMurray: Final report by
Alberta Environmental Protection, Technical Services and Monitoring Division (https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/f6f26d4e-005d-462b-8d7c-0428db8f7d27).

In order to effectively manage flood risks, it is important to understand the causes.  Understanding if flood risks are increasing and if current management practices are working to prevent or mitigate risks is important.

Often journalists focus on changes in weather and climate as the primary cause of flooding, or increased flood damages.  In fact, historical land use practices and development that began in high risk areas a century before modern flood hazard mapping explains baseline flooding in many parts of Canada.  Redevelopment and intensification in these hazard areas can lead to increasing damages over time. Stay tuned for a future post with some examples.

Recently the CBC Ombudsman reviewed how CBC journalists report on past, present and future changes in extreme weather related to flooding in its In Our Backyard series, initiated last summer.  The full review is here: https://cbc.radio-canada.ca/en/ombudsman/reviews/Past-Present-or-Future.

What did the Ombudsman find?  Well, that "It would have been wrong to state categorically that Canada has already seen an increase in extreme rainfall events", recognizing that has already been reviewed in detail by CBC Radio-Canada Ombudsman Guy Gendron: https://site-cbc.radio-canada.ca/documents/ombuds/reviews/Review%20Robert%20Muir.pdf

The Ombudsman also found that "journalists could have been clearer with their choice of tenses". He
pointed to CBC reporting showing that changes in extreme precipitation are predicted in the future, but have not occurred already from past to present:

"The key stories make no direct claims, for instance, that more severe storms have been observed in Canada. What I saw was often a real effort made to lay out the issues with broad strokes, and avoid getting bogged down in details. Take this excerpt, for example, from the Harrison column:

According to the federal government's recent assessment, Canada's Changing Climate Report, there is "high confidence" that:

  • Canada is warming at twice the global rate, and our north is warming at three times that rate.
  • We can expect more extreme heat, warmer winters, earlier springs and rising sea levels.
  • Precipitation will increase in much of the country.
  • Weather extremes will intensify.

The last two bullet points are careful to use the future tense. If, as it appears, Mr. Harrison was the architect of this series, there’s no sense of an attempt to mislead, change facts or distort reality. There are appropriate distinctions made between observed phenomena and predicted phenomena."

So this is positive that CBC recognized the difference between observed phenomena and predicted ones.

While the Ombudsman got it right - more severe storms have not been observed - recent "In Our Backyard" reporting at CBC has already mixed up observations and predictions on this topic.  The Flooding tab in this report https://www.cbc.ca/news2/interactives/inourbackyard/ presents the following:



CBC states that extreme rainfall that had a 50 year recurrence time is now happening every 35 years., implying an observed phenomena. What report is CBC referring to? It is Canada's Changing Climate Report: https://changingclimate.ca/CCCR2019/chapter/4-0/

Specifically, Section 4.3.2.2 Projected changes and uncertainties includes a chart Figure 4.20 b) with simulation model projections.  Here it is:


The red line representing extreme 50-year storm events has model simulations from past to present to future, showing a predicted decreasing recurrence time (often called a "return period", the inverse of the storm's annual  probability of being exceeded).

Obviously the CBC can do better in terms of getting some basic details right - it may even be worthwhile getting "bogged down" in important details like the difference between observed and predicted changes in the factors affecting flooding.  As the Ombudsman wrote, there is a need to avoid 'shortcuts' that create 'ambiguity':

"I am not prepared to conclude that this was a violation of policy, but rather as a reminder that there cannot be shortcuts in language if they create ambiguity. This is a particular challenge in broadcast, where being concise is so critical, but editors and reporters should not leave out any word if it is necessary to sharpen the clarity of the reporting. When CBC is referring to the future, it would be better to say so. That way viewers won’t be left guessing."

Mixing up past, present and future continues to create ambiguity, leaving CBC viewers misinformed about actual extreme storm trends.  Unfortunately, this can divert attention from the other factors that affect flooding and that should be given our attention when managing long-standing risks.

Assessing the Damage. CBC Ombudsman Finds Wrong Flood Damage Values Reported, Notes "broader concern that there is a pattern of imprecision in CBC’s coverage relating to flood events"

The CBC Ombudsman has found violations in the CBC’s Journalistic Standards and Practices related to an April 11, 2019 article entitled "Canada's building code is getting a climate change rewrite. Is your home ready?" (link).

The violations relate to publishing the wrong value for flood damages resulting from a Toronto August 2018 storm, and failing to note corrections to an article.

The CBC has always been very responsive to feedback on extreme weather reporting, including on the frequency of extreme events.  In January 2019, the Ombudsman also found violations related to reporting of more frequent extreme rainfall events (i.e., 100-year storms) - corrections to a couple stories were required.  Those Ombudsman's findings are noted in a previous post.  Other CBC story corrections have been made since 2015, again relating to storm frequency and the causes of flooding, and are noted in this previous post.

The new Ombudsman findings are described here.

While the complaint surrounding the April 11, 2019 article is related to a single storm, the Ombudsman noted that there is a broader issue stating:

"I have a broader concern that there is a pattern of imprecision in CBC’s coverage relating to flood events."

This comment is based on the fact that the cited average flooded basement claim or payout was $43,000 was really based on an extreme 2013 flood event in Toronto - not an average at all - yet it has been repeated over and over by the media including CBC.

A previous post shows how this value started (as $40,000 back in 2017) and how it has been expanded to cover the whole country.  It has been used in Intact Centre on Climate Adaptation's infographics as well:


Intact Financial Corporation's website refers to the $43,000 value too:


Global News. The Globe and Mail. Canadian Underwriter. TVO's The Agenda. All repeat the incorrect $43,000 value. Only CBC has been keen enough to entertain a review and make corrections to the record.

The full review is noted below for reference

***
Assessing the Damage
  • Sep 20, 2019
    CBC reported that concerns about climate change are causing government to re-think the rules for construction of buildings and infrastructure. Complainant Robert Muir took exception to several details in the online article. Among them was an estimate of damage caused by one particular storm, which led to this review about expert sources, and the importance of precision in journalism.

    COMPLAINT

    You listed four deficiencies in the original version of a story headlined Canada's building code is getting a climate change rewrite. Is your home ready? which was published on April 11, 2019.
    The article concerned various proposals to create tougher standards for the construction of buildings and infrastructure projects in Canada. It explained to readers that governments are considering these changes in order to mitigate the expected impact of a changing climate.
    Two of your points prompted CBC News to make amendments to the article. One concerned wording that implied that predicted changes in extreme rainfall events had already been demonstrated. The other concerned the use of incorrect terminology to describe a backwater valve. Many homeowners will recognize this device which can decrease the risk of a sewage backup in their home.
    Your third point suggested the article should have more fully addressed the cost effectiveness of the various proposals.  In response, CBC News explained that this was outside of the scope of this particular article. 
    You were satisfied that those three points were properly addressed. However, on your fourth point, you requested a review. The remaining dispute relates to a section of the article which included an interview with Natalia Moudrak, Director of Climate Resilience at the University of Waterloo's Intact Centre. At one point she discussed the amount of damage caused to homes by flooding in Toronto.
    Here is the relevant excerpt of the article:
    While architects and construction workers grapple with reducing emissions from large buildings, average Canadians will face other problems. 
    "Flooding is the biggest challenge" linked to climate change for most homeowners, said Natalia Moudrak, director of climate resilience at the University of Waterloo's Intact Centre. 
    And there are measures homeowners can take now to safe address flooding.
    If a homeowner has a pump to get water out of a basement, "it's important to install a backup generator," she said. Widespread flooding often leads to power outages, leaving regular pumps useless when they're most needed.
    Homeowners can also take simple steps to elevate valuables, like expensive electronics, off their basement floor or put items in plastic or steel containers in case water does creep in, Moudrak said. 
    To prevent sewage from flowing into your home during a flood, David Foster, a spokesperson for the Canadian Home Builders' Association, recommends installing a backwater valve, a mechanical backflow prevention device linked to the plumbing and designed to allow water from sewer drains to only flow away from the home.
    "There is not a lot of cost involved in that, it just involves changing the way things are done," said Foster, who has consulted with the government on the new code. 
    When constructing a new home, installing a backwater valve costs roughly $400, Moudrak said. When retrofitting an existing home, it usually costs about $3,000. But municipalities often offer subsidies to help offset that expense.
    The problem, she said, is most people don't know about them.
    Only six per cent of Toronto homeowners took advantage of the city's flood resilience subsidy program, she said. When floods hit the city last year, she said the average cost to affected homeowners was $43,000.
    The sentence at the heart of your complaint is the very final one. You wrote that the $43,000 figure was “misstated”. It reflected the Intact Centre’s Toronto 2013 Flood Report, not the 2018 one (i.e. - the article states “last year”). You also suspected that the calculations of the estimate are based on studies done in the United States by the National Flood Insurance Program.
    You said more accurate numbers could be obtained from the CatIQ database, which you describe as “the definitive source for compiled flood damages from Canada’s insurance companies.” Based on the number of claims and total value of payouts from the 2018 storm, you suggested that a more accurate number was $18,509 rather than $43,000. You wrote:
    I believe that it is important to clarify given the fact that urban flooding is a significant issue, the costs of risk reduction are immense, and sound economic data and analysis is required to make evidence-based decisions on damage reduction management strategies. Flood damage data is a key piece of this economic data and many municipalities have cited the $43,000 value in federal infrastructure grant applications, which may not reflect actual damages, and could therefore adversely affect how scarce resources are allocated to address an important infrastructure challenge. 

    MANAGEMENT RESPONSE

    Paul Hambleton, the Director of Journalistic Standards and Practices, responded on behalf of CBC News:
    To be clear, the story quoted Natalia Moudrak, director of climate resilience at the University of Waterloo’s Intact Centre on Climate Adaptation: “When floods hit [Toronto] last year, she said the average cost to affected home owners was $43,000”. That information is also included in Weathering the Storm: Developing a Canadian Standard for Flood-Resilience in Existing Communities, a report published in January and co-authored by Ms. Moudrak.
    In a footnote, the report attributes that estimate to the Insurance Bureau of Canada (IBC) “based on Toronto flooding in 2013”. However, you wrote, the actual source is FEMA’s National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) cited in a July, 2012 story in Forbes. The story cites the interactive “Cost of Flooding” found on the NFIP page as estimating nearly $40,000 damage to a 2,000 sq. ft. home after a 6-inch flood.   
    It’s interesting to note that in looking at it now, almost seven years later, “Cost of Flooding” estimates damage of a little over $20,000 for a 1,000 sq. ft. home and about $52,000 to a 2,500 sq. ft. one-storey home. (There was no estimate for 2,000 sq. ft. home).
    It’s pretty clear that there is a range of estimates and, it seems, little public information about how those numbers were reached. But you have touched on an interesting issue here.
    On one level, while reporters can tell us what they see and hear, there are many things that they don’t witness or can’t know. In those instances they attribute the information. That way, readers know the source and can make their own judgment about its reliability. In this instance, we attributed the information to Ms. Moudrak, identifying her position and the organization she works for.

    REVIEW

    In a perfect world journalists would have expertise in every subject they cover. In the real world, many reporters, along with their editors, are generalists who strive to learn as much as they can in a short time so they can report faithfully and accurately on the subject at hand. 
    This means that there are times where they reasonably rely on subject experts to explain how something works, why something happens, or what might happen next. It might be a doctor, a realtor, or a marketing executive. In each case, the reporter looks to use their expertise as a way to improve the story with informed insights. 
    In such situations reporters willingly put themselves at the mercy of the expert’s knowledge. If an expert were to give bad information, CBC’s Journalistic Standards and Practices doesn’t let either of them off the hook. There is a section called “Responsibility and Accountability Related to Interviews” which reads as follows:
    CBC takes responsibility for the consequences of its decision to publish a person’s statements in the context it chooses. When we present a person’s statements in support of our reporting of facts, we ensure that the statements have been diligently checked. In the case of comments made by a person expressing an honest opinion, we ensure that the opinion is grounded in facts bearing on a matter of public interest.
    The interviewee also takes responsibility for his or her statement. As a general rule, we offer the interviewee no immunity or protection from the consequences of publication of the statements we gather.
    Sometimes the experts provide a recitation of facts, but not always. Often they are called on to analyze a situation or express an opinion related to their field. It is sensible that there is wide latitude in these cases for what constitutes reasonable comment. Realtors may disagree on which way the housing market is going. Marketers may clash over whether that new trend will fizzle. Doctors may have varying levels of enthusiasm for a prospective new drug.  
    The estimate of how much damage the average affected homeowner experienced during Toronto’s big summer storm of 2018 falls into this category of commentary and professional judgment. There is no single demonstrable number that has universal support, so the reporter went looking for someone to estimate the total.
    You disagreed with the Intact Centre’s methodology. Instead, you pointed to the CatIQ database, which is an excellent starting point. However, as you know, that database represents only the payouts insurance companies made to people who put in a claim. Others might think you should add in property damage not covered by the insurance policy, or people who opted not to file a claim. There are other expenses that could be considered as well. Should you include the value of time homeowners missed from work as a result? What about the cost of infrastructure repairs absorbed by government, or the cost of policing, firefighters and ambulance drivers? Should they be included or costed separately?
    Looked at through a different kind of prism, how much of the damage was caused by flooding, and how much was caused by wind, or by lightning? 
    Now, I recognize that you know a great deal about all these subjects. You have your own expertise, and you have told me about work you are doing that seeks to consider both direct and indirect costs to come up with a ratio of overall losses to insured losses. However, it is apparent that determining an estimate has at least some degree of subjectivity. 
    With all that in mind, it was acceptable journalistic practice for the CBC reporter to use the Intact Centre as its expert source and ask them to estimate the damage from a big storm. The Intact Centre is an applied research centre affiliated with the University of Waterloo. That may not bring it reputational immunity, but it does come with an inherent base level of credibility. The reporter was entitled to use Ms. Moudrak as an expert, so long as he attributed the estimate to her. I disagree with you that the JSP standard of “diligent checking” of her statement meant the reporter should have done extensive research to test that estimate. It is more reasonable to believe that diligent checking refers to facts that can be categorically confirmed or refuted, not to a matter of professional judgment such as this. 
    Nonetheless, you are correct that the number in the story WAS the wrong number, regardless of the quality of the estimate. The $43,000 figure did not represent the Intact Centre’s estimate for the 2018 Toronto storm, but instead was their estimate for the 2013 Toronto storm - something raised by you in your complaint, acknowledged by Mr. Hambleton in his response, and confirmed in my own communication with Ms. Moudrak.
    That this was wrong is, naturally, a violation of policy. That it has not been corrected means it continues to be so. It does not matter whether the original misunderstanding was caused by the source or by the journalist. It ought to be clarified for the record, and for the readers. 
    Further, I noted while reviewing the story that there is no note on the web page acknowledging the two other corrections prompted by your initial complaint. This is a second violation of policy.   
    I have a broader concern that there is a pattern of imprecision in CBC’s coverage relating to flood events. You provided me with a list of other recent CBC stories which make reference to the $43,000 damage estimate. Several confuse the matter by not indicating this is a specific estimate for the 2013 Toronto floods. One said, “The average basement flood in Ontario costs the homeowner $43,000.” Another said, “The average payout for a flooded basement is $43,000 and rising.”  These types of references take a single (and unusual) event in 2013 and treat it as if it is now a generic standard.
    Reporters and editors need to ensure they understand what's included (and what's not) in any estimates provided, and they need to ensure that they associate that estimate with the correct event - or events, as the case may be. Based on my review, that is not happening consistently enough. 
    All of this needs to be distinguished from your belief that the Intact Centre’s $43,000 estimate to be incorrect, even when attributed to the 2013 storm. I would encourage CBC News to take your perspective into account, but that is as far as I will go. It is not my intention to take sides on the quality of the Intact Centre’s estimate. If journalists continue to find the Intact Centre credible, they continue to be free to consult them for stories.
    Sincerely,
    Jack Nagler
    CBC Ombudsman

    John Robson of Climate Discussion Nexus Share Causes of Urban Flooding - Highlights CBC Ombudsman Findings on 100-Year Storms

    This blog has examined causes of urban flooding and non-causes of flooding too. A new video by the Climate Discussion Nexus examines causes of urban flooding and references the recent CBC Ombudsman review of 100-year storm trends (i.e., no changes in extreme rainfall).

    https://climatediscussionnexus.com/videos/urban-flooding-its-not-about-climate/


    The video notes that we have always had flooding which is correct - that is something we have noted as well, like in this presentation to the WEAO / OWWA joint climate change committee: https://www.slideshare.net/RobertMuir3/infrastructure-resiliency-and-adaptation-for-climate-change-and-todays-extremes

    The presentation noted how GO Train flooding, Toronto Island flooding and Toronto basement flooding area note new phenomena as shown in these images:






    A review of the inquiry for Premier Davis on Toronto Don River flooding noted flooding since the 1800's as noted in this post: https://www.cityfloodmap.com/2015/07/go-train-flooding-not-new-1981-inquiry.html - an Environmental Assessment in 1983 noted this:


    This Acres Consulting report noted the influence of hydrologic changes on peak flows and flood damages. We have described these changes as well such as in this JWMM paper: https://www.chijournal.org/C449

    GTA watershed urbanization changes were summarized as follows:


    Here is a wider perspective:
    And here are urbanization trends in other southern Ontario municipalities: https://www.cityfloodmap.com/2016/08/land-use-change-drives-urban-flood-risk.html

    We have assessed the trends in extreme rainfall which supported the CBC Ombudsman decision - here are the english-version findings: https://www.cityfloodmap.com/2019/06/office-of-ombudsman-french-services.html

    Even Minister McKenna has reinforced comments made in Canada's Changing Climate Report stating in a June 2019 letter "the observational record has not yet shown evidence of consistent changes in short-duration precipitation extremes across the country":
    https://www.cityfloodmap.com/2019/06/canadas-minister-of-environment-and.html

    Other CBC story corrections about extreme rainfall are summarized here: https://www.cityfloodmap.com/2019/06/cbc-correcting-claims-on-extreme.html

    As the Climate Discussion Nexus video notes, the insurance industry has claimed that there is an increase in extreme rainfall caused by climate change - this has been reiterated by senior executives as in this op-ed in the Globe and Mail by Charles Brindamour and Dean Connor "Climate resilience must be part of every government’s agenda" (The Globe and Mail. September 25, 2018. https://www.theglobeandmail.com/business/commentary/article-climate-resilience-must-be-part-of-every-governments-agenda/), or as in this op-ed in the Financial Post by Craig Stewart "Counterpoint: Insurance claim costs are rising because severe weather is making flooding worse" (Financial Post. February 7, 2019. https://business.financialpost.com/opinion/counterpoint-insurance-claim-costs-are-rising-because-severe-weather-is-making-flooding-worse).

    Unfortunately, the insurance industry has not ever offered any data on increasing extreme weather trends to counter Minister McKenna's recent statement or the CBC Ombudsman findings since 2015. The insurance industry has in the past mixed up future predicted extreme rain trends with past observations as in the "Telling the Weather Story" report:



    As noted in our Financial Post op-ed, the insurance industry has claimed a correlation and causation between extreme weather and flood damages. Unfortunately, there is no rain trend to correlate to making any causation discussion moot. As Dr. Dickinson explains in the video, warmer winters mean lower spring flood potential, and urbanization drives urban flood stresses, not changes in rainfall. More on this University of Guelph analysis is here:



    Our rebuttal to the insurance industry's suggested correlation / causation was in the Financial Post: https://business.financialpost.com/opinion/hyped-up-misleading-insurance-myths-about-severe-weather-flooding-distract-us-from-real-problems

    Well done John Robson and Climate Discussion Nexus for sharing information on this topic.

    ***

    More reading? - what do engineering studies in southern Ontario say about extreme rainfall trends? typically no past change - see compiled reports / analysis here: https://www.cityfloodmap.com/2018/03/extreme-rainfall-and-climate-change-in.html

    The Ombudsman has also recently noted in a new review that "It would have been wrong to state categorically that Canada has already seen an increase in extreme rainfall events" and that its reporting should be unambiguous about the past, present and future, with "distinctions made between observed phenomena and predicted phenomena" (https://www.cityfloodmap.com/2020/05/past-present-or-future-cbc-ombudsman.html).  The Ombudsman notes that CBC reporting describes future changes in extreme weather saying:
    • Canada is warming at twice the global rate, and our north is warming at three times that rate.
    • We can expect more extreme heat, warmer winters, earlier springs and rising sea levels.
    • Precipitation will increase in much of the country.
    • Weather extremes will intensify.

    • The last two bullet points are careful to use the future tense.

    CBC Ombudsman Decision Finds Lack of Journalistic Integrity in Reporting on Extreme Storm Trends and Climate Change

    Excerpt: The journalist, Marc Montgomery, frankly admitted that he had decided from the start that he would “not give an inch” to the complainant. That attitude, unfortunately, violates the JSP, specifically the section that calls on CBC/Radio-Canada employees to “act responsibly and to be accountable,” which goes on to say “we [. . .] are honest [and we] do not hesitate to correct any mistake [. . .] .” 

    CONCLUSION

    The two articles by journalist Marc Montgomery entitled How to mitigate the effects of flood damage from climate change and Response to a climate change story, posted online on 
    September 19 and November 19, 2018, respectively by Radio Canada international (RCI), failed to comply with the CBC/Radio-Canada Journalistic Standards and Practices (JSP) regarding accuracy and impartiality. The corrections eventually made to the two articles were not compliant with best practices, and violated the JSP principles on correction of errors and honesty. As a result of the multiple shortcomings noted in my examination of this matter, I am recommending that Radio-Canada review the RCI complaints processing procedure; provide training on the JSP to RCI staff; make the necessary corrections to the two articles in question so
    as to restore the accuracy and balance that are lacking; clearly indicate in the two articles that they were the subject of a review by the Office of the Ombudsman and include a link to that review; and, lastly, publish a notice of correction in the Mises au point (Erratum) section of the Radio-Canada website.

    Guy Gendron
    Ombudsman, French Services, CBC/Radio-Canada
    January 28, 2019

    Kudos to the CBC Ombudsman for recognizing failed journalistic integrity in their reporting on extreme storm trends and climate change, and in dealing with my complaint. The extensive review and decision below is in response to CBC reporting on publication by Insurance Bureau of Canada, Intact Centre of Climate Adaptation and International Institute on Sustainable Development on natural infrastructure entitled "Combatting Canada’s Rising Flood Costs: Natural infrastructure is an underutilized option, September, 2018". This blog's review of that report is here in several posts including i) Wetlands and Natural Infrastructure for Flood Mitigation - Ontario Feasibility Assessment Suggests Limited Potential - Studies Note Conflict Between Preserving Biodiversity and Flood Attenuation and ii)  Storm Warts, The Floods Awaken, A New Hope for Cost-Effective Investment in Flood Management Infrastructure, #NWWC2018 Robert Muir.

    You can look for the original CBC article here: http://www.rcinet.ca/en/2018/09/19/how-to-mitigate-the-effects-and-flood-damage-from-climate-change/

    But this is what you will find:


    But if you want to read the original article, check out this web archive of the article that said "So-called “100 year events” are now occurring sometimes only a few years apart":


    The CBC reporter Marc Montgomery offered me an interview in response to data gaps on storm trends I noted on in his article - I thank him for that. But that interview was posted along with his attempts to discount the information I shared (his attempt to "not give and inch" in responding to real data). Again the original interview is not available as the CBC endeavours to correct the failings in journalistic standards of practice. My original interview "Response to a Climate Change Story" web page site is here, and it shows the Oops! as well. But a web archive also shows this interview page at this link (November 20, 2018 archive) and here at this link (November 20, 2018 archive) which shows my comments to the article as of November 19, 2018.

    Thankfully, CBC has corrected the original article and my interview article to address violations in journalistic standards of practice. Here is the original article with a clear explanation of the violation - link. And my interview article is corrected here at this link.

    Below is the CBC Ombudsman's full review and decision (sorry, unformatted for now), also available at this link as an easier to read pdf.

    ***

    Review by the Office of the Ombudsman, French Services, CBC/RadioCanada of two complaints asserting that the articles by journalist Marc
    Montgomery entitled How to mitigate the effects of flood damage from
    climate change and Response to a climate change story, posted on
    September 19 and November 19, 2018, respectively by Radio Canada
    international (RCI), failed to comply with the CBC/Radio-Canada
    Journalistic Standards and Practices regarding accuracy and impartiality.

    FOREWORD

    This case involves English-language news articles and interviews posted to the Radio Canada
    international (RCI) website under the titles How to mitigate the effects of flood damage from
    climate change and Response to a climate change story.


    http://www.rcinet.ca/en/2018/09/19/how-to-mitigate-the-effects-and-flood-damage-from-climatechange/

    http://www.rcinet.ca/en/2018/11/19/response-to-a-climate-change-story/

    The complaints, the responses by
    RCI, and the many supporting documents submitted by each party were also written in English.
    Complaints concerning RCI, regardless of broadcast language, are the purview of the
    CBC/Radio-Canada French Services Ombudsman; that is why I have reviewed them. This review
    was initially written in French before being translated into English.

    COMPLAINT

    The complainant, Mr. Robert Muir, is an Ontario engineer with a long career in flood risk
    mitigation as a consultant and municipal engineer. On October 7, 2018, he wrote to the Office of
    the Ombudsman to report what he believed to be errors in the article posted on the RCI site on
    September 19, 2018. The article was condensed from an interview with Mr. Blair Feltmate, head
    of the Intact Centre on Climate Adaptation at the University of Waterloo and the lead investigator
    for a study commissioned by the Insurance Bureau of Canada (IBC).

    In Mr. Muir’s view, the interview and the article contained erroneous data on trends in
    precipitation in Canada – specifically regarding episodes of extreme rainfall so intense that they
    are considered to occur at 100-year intervals. In addition, Mr. Muir complained that the article
    cited no sources to corroborate Dr. Feltmate’s theory, which holds that climate change is the
    reason why extreme rainfall events have become more frequent in Canada. The complainant
    further alleged that another of Dr. Feltmate’s claims was incorrect, namely that preservation and
    creation of wetlands (ponds, marshes, etc.) in urban and near-urban areas are economically
    advantageous and easy-to-implement measures for reducing flood risk. Mr. Muir added that the
    Ontario Society of Professional Engineers, of which he is a member, had previously voiced its
    disagreement on this issue to Natalia Moudrak, co-author of a report produced last year by
    Dr. Feltmate on the value of natural infrastructure.

    Citing several expert studies and national data from Environment Canada, the complainant
    asserted that “there has been no change in extreme rainfall statistics in southern Ontario, and in
    fact many decreasing trends.” This, he wrote, contradicted Dr. Feltmate’s theory that there is a
    correlation between climate change and increased flood damage. Mr. Muir therefore asked that
    the article be amended to reflect this.

    To further substantiate his position, the complainant noted that he had been successful in a
    similar complaint filed with the CBC English Services Ombudsman in 2015, and four complaints
    against three insurance companies (Intact Financial, Aviva Canada and RSA) before Advertising
    Standards Canada, which had forced the insurers to amend their claims regarding the frequency
    of storms. He added that the media should be wary of statements by insurance companies as
    well as claims by researchers such as Dr. Feltmate, who is not a climatologist, and whose
    research is funded by an insurance provider.

    As the procedure dictates, I began by asking RCI management to respond to the complainant.

    RESPONSE FROM NEWS DEPARTMENT

    On October 24, 2018, Mr. Soleïman Mellali, Web Editor-in-Chief, RCI, replied to Mr. Muir in a very
    long message containing some twenty citations and links to many news articles and reports from
    various bodies, covering multiple aspects relating to climate change as well as precipitation.

    The response from RCI began with an acknowledgement that the key assertion of the article in
    question – that 100-year extreme rainfall events are now happening just a few years apart – was
    “neither entirely true, nor entirely wrong.” As a result, Mr. Mellali wrote, the article had been
    amended to read as follows:

    “Scientists consulted on this question generally concluded that while actual rainfall
    amounts in Canada have not varied much, when, where and how they occur have.”

    RCI added that other weather anomalies, like sudden episodes of warm temperatures resulting in
    early snow melting, have combined to cause record flooding in recent years.

    I see no use in listing here the majority of the points in the response, as they consist mainly of a
    list of excerpts from reports and news articles that establish a link between global warming and
    weather phenomena around the world – e.g., hurricanes, rising temperatures, heat waves –
    which was not the subject of the complaint.

    The other references deal with the impacts of such phenomena: drought, forest fires, coastal
    erosion, destruction of crops, and increases in damage claims to insurance companies. Many of
    the studies cited are forward-looking; that is, they predict future changes. While interesting, this
    information is not germane to the issue raised in the complaint: the assertion that climate change
    has led to increased extreme rainfall in Canada, which in turn is allegedly the main reason for
    increased property damage from flooding.

    Only one other point in the response is truly relevant to my review of the issue raised, and that is
    a statement attributed to Xuebin Zhang, a Senior Research Scientist with Environment Canada.
    This was not mentioned, but it was drawn from email correspondence between journalist
    Marc Montgomery, the author of the article in question, and this Canadian climate expert.

    Dr. Zhang wrote:
    “Annual mean precipitation has increased, on average, in Canada, with a larger percent
    increase in northern Canada. For Canada as a whole, observational evidence of changes
    in extreme precipitation is lacking. However, in the future, extreme precipitation is
    projected to increase in a warmer climate.”

    Later, the RCI response quotes Dr. Feltmate, who was asked to provide counter-arguments to the
    Mr. Muir’s complaint that no evidence was provided for the claim that extreme precipitation is
    increasing in Canada. According to Dr. Feltmate, a decrease in the number of Environment
    Canada recording stations is the reason why many local climatological events go undetected.

    Dr. Feltmate wrote:
    “Thus, it can be misleading to depend singularly on Environment Canada recording
    stations to document precipitation events that lead to flooding.”

    Lastly, Mr. Mellali concluded his response by inviting the complainant to be interviewed by RCI, to
    give him the opportunity to have his point of view heard.

    REPONSE FROM MR. MUIR

    On the same day RCI’s response was received, October 24, 2018, the complainant responded
    that he was not satisfied with it. He noted that the correction made to the article did not address
    his complaint regarding the inaccuracy of the original statement that 100-year extreme
    precipitation events are now more frequent in Canada. Mr. Muir persisted in asking RCI to
    produce data to prove this.

    Mr. Muir added that climate change has resulted in less snow accumulation during the winter,
    which in turn has limited spring flooding. He therefore wondered what data RCI was using in
    support of its reply that melting snow now leads to record levels of flooding.

    The complainant wrote that the latest Engineering Climate Datasets show a slight decrease (of
    0.2%) in the overall intensity of rainfall and in no change as concerns 100-year extreme rainfall
    events. Storms of more modest intensity – classified as events with return periods of between 2
    and 25 years – are those that have seen the most marked decrease, he added. It is these data
    that engineers use to design municipal infrastructures, Mr. Muir wrote, asking that RCI disclose
    what data it used to support the new claim added to the article: that “while actual rainfall amounts
    in Canada have not varied much, when, where and how they occur have.” In the absence of
    concrete data on “when,” “where” and “how” rainfall is changing, Mr. Muir requested that the
    article be amended once more to acknowledge that the RCI interviewee (Dr. Feltmate) had no
    evidence to support his claim, and that it was mere speculation on his part.

    As to Dr. Feltmate’s statement, included in RCI’s response, that the absence of data is
    attributable to an insufficient number of Environment Canada recording stations, the complainant
    asked the following questions:

    “Are you suggesting that there is not enough data to prove decreasing trends in rainfall
    but there is enough to prove increasing trends? How can you have it one way?”

    Lastly, Mr. Muir disputed the accuracy of a sentence in the article, which begins “As costs mount
    to deal with the huge financial burden and loss due to floods [. . .] .” In his opinion, the increase in
    damage claims made to insurers is attributable to all instances of bad weather, as well as fires,
    while those resulting solely from flooding have not seen any marked increase, if one excludes
    one “anomaly” in 2013.

    In conclusion, the complainant accepted RCI’s invitation to be interviewed so that he could outline
    his concerns in more detail and explain why he found the response from RCI unsatisfactory.

    INTERVIEW WITH MR. MUIR AND ACCOMPANYING ARTICLE

    On November 2, 2018, Mr. Mellali formally repeated his invitation to Mr. Muir to be interviewed by
    journalist Marc Montgomery. The interview was recorded on November 15 and posted online on
    November 19, along with an article entitled Response to a climate change story.

    SECOND COMPLAINT BY MR. MUIR

    Two days later, on November 21, 2018, as well as the following day, Mr. Muir again wrote to
    Mr. Mellali, asking that multiple corrections be made to the article accompanying his interview.
    The complainant began by stating that the interview had mainly concerned extreme rainfall
    intensity data, but that the article was illustrated with a graphic of annual precipitation, which is a
    different subject.

    Mr. Muir went on to say that the text of the story implied that his remarks on the lack of any trend
    toward increased extreme precipitation had to do with “one local region only” (southern Ontario).
    In fact, he wrote, this is not that case, as proved by the matters that he had brought to the
    attention of Advertising Standards Canada regarding three insurance companies. In that regard,
    he reiterated that, in spite of his repeated entreaties, RCI had still not provided national data on
    extreme precipitation that would support the idea that they are increasing across Canada. He
    added that he had nevertheless quoted, during his interview, an excerpt from an Environment
    Canada paper confirming no increase in extreme precipitation across the entire country. He
    attached to his complaint a link to the study report in question, which dates from 2014.
    Mr. Muir also asked that the article include a reference to an open letter in which the Ontario
    Society of Professional Engineers discounted the lBC / Intact Centre report on wetlands for urban
    flood mitigation.

    His request was based on the fact that the article accompanying his interview “cherry-picks” from
    that IBC report – written, he points out, by a University of Waterloo biologist.

    The report, he
    added, was not peer-reviewed, is therefore “not a professional document,” and is “not the type of
    material CBC should be referring to for advice on infrastructure, or advice on flood mitigation.”
    Moreover, he wrote, page 2 of the report includes a disclaimer whereby the Intact Centre makes
    no warranty as to the accuracy of the information contained in its report.

    In a second message, on November 22, 2018, Mr. Muir expressed doubt about the truthfulness of
    the second paragraph of the article accompanying his interview. It reads:
    “Here in Canada, the Insurance Bureau of Canada in a commissioned report said its
    payouts from natural disasters have doubled every five years since 1980, and the
    majority of those claims are from flooding due in large part to climate change.”

    In the complainant’s opinion, that claim is false. He maintained that the IBC data show that fewer
    than a third of claims since the early 1980s have been for flooding due to rainstorms, electrical
    storms or hurricanes. In addition, he wrote, “[t]he data also shows that the proportion of water
    damage as a percentage of total catastrophic losses is decreasing over the past 10 years.”
    Mr. Muir therefore wondered how a “majority of claims” could possibly be from flooding if less
    than a total of the claims were for water damage, and how the increase in claims could be
    attributable to climate change if Environment Canada data show no significant increase in
    extreme precipitation. In his opinion, other factors besides increased heavy rainfall explain the
    increasing trends in flood-related damages, and those factors are related not to meteorology
    (storm extremes) but to hydrology (land-use planning). In his opinion, the RCI article perpetuates
    the “disproved . . . theory/concept” of the insurance industry, which is “not based on any real
    data.”

    As required by the procedure, and because this was a new complaint concerning a different
    article, although related to the first, I asked RCI to respond.

    SECOND RESPONSE FROM RCI

    On December 4, 2018, Mr. Soleïman Mellali, Web Editor-in-Chief, RCI, wrote to the complainant
    acknowledging that the graphic of annual rainfall used to illustrate the article about the interview
    with Mr. Muir “[did] not fully relate to the interview” and that it would therefore be removed.
    Regarding the other matters raised in the complaint, RCI confined its response to one of them
    only, defending Dr. Blair Feltmate’s qualifications. Mr. Mellali began by forwarding an explanation
    by Dr. Feltmate regarding the disclaimer in the report he authored about using wetlands for urban
    flood mitigation. The researcher wrote:

    “Scores of scientists, engineers, conservation authorities, insurers, etc., review and sign
    off on every paper published by the Intact Centre. The legal disclaimer we add is a legal
    requirement by the University of Waterloo.”

    In its response, RCI added that Dr. Feltmate, “a recognised world expert on climate adaptation,”
    had been invited to Europe to give a presentation at the Global Commission on Adaptation,
    chaired by Ban Ki-moon; asked by the Government of Canada to chair the Pan-Canadian
    Framework on Clean Growth and Climate Change – Expert Panel on Adaptation; and invited by
    the Ontario Society of Professional Engineers to give a presentation at a 2019 working meeting.
    RCI also noted that it had submitted the initial article and the interview with Dr. Feltmate to
    Dr. Neil Comer, a well-known climatologist and adjunct professor at the University of Toronto, for
    review. Dr. Comer wrote:

    “I certainly did not read, nor hear from Blair [Feltmate] in this link, anything approaching
    unreasonable from a purely climatological aspect.”

    REQUEST FOR REVIEW

    On the same day RCI’s response was received, December 4, 2018, Mr. Muir wrote to the Office
    of the Ombudsman to request a review of the matter.

    He began by referring again to the Insurance Bureau of Canada and Intact Centre report on
    wetlands for urban flood mitigation mentioned in the article accompanying the interview with him.
    In his opinion, by referring to that report, RCI was “promoting positions on matters that [the
    report’s authors] are not licensed to formally advance.” “Real engineering studies,” he wrote, “do
    not have disclaimers saying they are not professional advice.”

    Mr. Muir then took the opportunity to ask for clarifications regarding Dr. Feltmate’s claim that the
    Intact Centre’s reports are reviewed and approved by experts. In Mr. Muir’s opinion, there is no
    “formal sign-off” procedure, but rather a list of persons consulted in preparing the reports, and this
    is not to be confused with “formal peer review.”

    Two days later, on December 6, Mr. Muir wrote the Office of the Ombudsman again to reiterate
    that there is no formal process of approval for Intact Centre reports, and to emphasize that in the
    two study reports that are the subject of this matter (2017 and 2018), there are not even any lists
    acknowledging who may have been consulted. He added that there was no “general consultation”
    involved in the preparation of the two reports. “Unfortunately,” he concluded, “CBC is taking
    insurance industry-funded ‘glossy’ reports to be equivalent to formal technical information but
    they are not.”

    REVIEW

    This case is needlessly complicated. The two parties have taken it in directions that they ought
    not to have, and as a result, reviewing it has become tremendously tedious.

    At its core, the matter is relatively simple. Examination of the complaints invokes the accuracy
    and balance principles of the CBC/Radio-Canada Journalistic Standards and Practices (JSP6
    ):

    “Accuracy
    We seek out the truth in all matters of public interest. We invest our time and our skills to
    learn, understand and clearly explain the facts to our audience. The production
    techniques we use serve to present the content in a clear and accessible manner.”

    “Balance
    We contribute to informed debate on issues that matter to Canadians by reflecting a
    diversity of opinion. Our content on all platforms presents a wide range of subject matter
    and views.

    On issues of controversy, we ensure that divergent views are reflected respectfully, taking
    into account their relevance to the debate and how widely held these views are. We also
    ensure that they are represented over a reasonable period of time.”

    My review of the complaints will also refer to part of the CBC/Radio-Canada mission statement7
    quoted in the introduction to the JSP, which calls upon the public broadcaster to “act responsibly
    and to be accountable”:

    “To act responsibly and to be accountable
    We are aware of the impact of our work and are honest with our audiences. We do not
    hesitate to correct any mistake when necessary nor to follow up a story when a situation
    changes significantly. We do not plagiarize. (…)”

    Study of the complaint

    Mr. Muir’s initial complaint concerned, essentially, the accuracy of two pieces of information in the
    article that accompanied the interview with Dr. Feltmate. First, that episodes of extreme rainfall,
    those considered to occur once every 100 years, are now sometimes occurring only a few years
    apart; second, the researcher’s claim that preserving and creating wetlands (e.g., ponds,
    marshes, etc.) in urban and near-urban areas are economically advantageous measures for
    reducing flood risk.

    The complainant also lamented the article’s lack of sources that would corroborate the main point
    made by Dr. Feltmate in his interview: that climate change has led to extreme rainfall events
    becoming more frequent in Canada. The quote is as follows:

    “We are experiencing storms of greater magnitude, more volume of rain coming down
    over short periods of time these days due to climate change. That is causing massive
    flooding.”

    Mr. Muir stated that Environment Canada data show that “there has been no change in extreme
    rainfall statistics in southern Ontario, and in fact many decreasing trends.” He also cited the
    response to a complaint that he made to CBC on a similar topic in November 2015, in which the
    public broadcaster acknowledged, after checking with Environment Canada, that “[t]here has
    been no significant change in rainfall events over several decades.”

    Regarding the second part of his complaint, Mr. Muir noted that the Ontario Society of
    Professional Engineers has publicly presented its opposition to Dr. Feltmate’s opinion, which is
    stated in a 2017 report on flood risk mitigation measures.

    The response to these criticisms could – and should – have been a simple one.

    Let us first examine the contentious sentence in question. It reads:

    “So called ‘100 year events’ are now occurring sometimes only a few years apart.”

    That would be an accurate statement if the article was considering all climate-related events –
    including tornadoes, droughts, heat waves, and forest fires – but that is clearly not the case here.
    First of all, the article is about flooding, as can be seen from the many photographs illustrating it;
    furthermore, the sentence immediately preceding the contentious sentence reads:
    “In recent years, the news has been full of stories of bigger and more violent storms, and
    massive rainfall and flooding.”

    Thus, when the article goes on to mention “so-called ‘100 year events,’” it is clear that the events
    being referred to are episodes of extreme rainfall.

    One only had to examine the official Environment Canada data for Ontario as well as for the
    entire country to acknowledge that the claim made in the article was inaccurate. Such
    acknowledgement would at the same time have addressed the complainant’s criticism regarding
    the lack of data to corroborate Dr. Feltmate’s claim about the increased frequency of extreme
    rainfall events in Canada. To make that correction, and for it to be meaningful, the writer would no
    doubt have had to change more than just the sentence in question – which, I admit, would have
    contradicted, in part, the theory described in the article and the accompanying interview with
    Dr. Feltmate. Thus the first two sentences in the article, after being amended transparently, per
    best practices, would have been replaced by something along these lines:

    “Although in recent years the news has been full of stories of bigger and more violent
    storms, and massive rainfall and flooding, there is nothing to prove that this type of
    precipitation event has been on the rise in Canada. Data compiled by Environment
    Canada since the 1950s show that there has been no significant change in their
    frequency.”

    An insert should then have been added, explaining that the previous version of the article, as well
    as part of the interview with Dr. Feltmate, contained inaccuracies in that respect, and that this
    prompted RCI to publish the clarification.

    In addition, the date of the most recent update (in this case, the correction) should have been
    added at the head of the article, next to the original posting date. Of course, all of this would have
    affected the article’s overall credibility. That is not the intended aim; rather, it is a consequence of
    the inaccuracy pivotal to the article and the accompanying interview.

    Admitting that an error has been found in an article is no cause for shame, and is not tantamount
    to an admission of professional misconduct. It is possible for an interviewee to make a false
    claim, whether inadvertently or otherwise, and for it to escape the notice of a journalist or host.
    Dr. Feltmate has a PhD, is the head of the Intact Centre on Climate Adaptation at the University
    of Waterloo, where he teaches in the Faculty of Environment, and is the lead author of a study
    commissioned by the Insurance Bureau of Canada, which was the subject of the interview by
    journalist Marc Montgomery. It was not unreasonable for the latter to quote the interviewee’s
    remarks in the brief article accompanying the interview, even if in the process he involuntarily
    conveyed incorrect information from the interviewee. I remind the reader that this was not a story
    contrasting differing views on an issue, let along an investigative piece: it was an interview in
    which the author of a study report outlined its main conclusions.

    Rather that rectify the error by clearly acknowledging it through an explicit note in the text of the
    online article, as best practices dictate, RCI chose to work around the problem. It wrote to the
    complainant that the sentence at issue was “neither entirely true, nor entirely wrong,” removed it
    from the text of the online article without providing any explanation to readers, and replaced it
    with a sentence that had no real connection to the complaint:

    “Scientists consulted on this question generally concluded that while actual rainfall
    amounts in Canada have not varied much, when, where and how they occur have.”

    The matter at hand here, however, is not increased total annual precipitation; as it is not total
    rainfall in one year that can cause infrastructure overflow problems, and therefore flooding, but
    episodes of extreme rainfall, or exceptional spring floods. (I will refrain from commenting here on
    all of the other factors related to land-use planning that may in large part explain increased
    flooding.) Once again, what should have been acknowledged was that the original text said that
    extreme rainfall events were increasing – a claim refuted by Environment Canada data.
    A study published by the Environment Canada Climate Research Division, which examined data
    from 1953 to 2012, found that “[n]o consistent changes were found in heavy rainfall events.”
    In my view, the response provided by RCI did not amount to a correction, but a substitution,
    which does not comply with the values of transparency and accuracy articulated in the JSP,
    specifically in the section that calls on CBC/Radio-Canada to “act responsibly and to be
    accountable.” All the more so given that the amendment to the article was not accompanied by
    any real explanation; only a note at the very end, which reads as follows and does not at all
    appear to constitute acknowledgement that the original text contained a significant inaccuracy:

    “[T]his article has been modified to include citations from experts (Zhang, Mann,
    Flannigan) regarding the intensity and frequency of warming and extreme climate related
    events.”

    Moreover, whereas RCI informed the complainant, in its response, that the article had been
    amended such that the sentence he had complained about had been replaced with another, in
    fact five new paragraphs were added to the text. They deal with climate change around the world
    and its effect on droughts, heat spells, wildfires, hurricanes in the United States, and the increase
    in extreme rainfall events that is predicted to accompany warmer global temperatures. Here
    again, this failed to address the complaint made by Mr. Muir, who had not questioned the
    existence of climate change; he had merely asserted that there is no proof that climate change
    has led to increased extreme rainfall episodes in Canada, as Dr. Feltmate claimed.
    The admission that rising global temperatures have not had that effect in Canada is not a denial
    that those temperature increases are happening. The response by RCI to Mr. Muir’s complaint,
    however, gives the impression that this is how the complaint was construed – hence the
    abundance of file attachments and links to articles and studies attesting to the reality of global
    warming, and still others predicting that it will in the future result in increased extreme rainfall. I
    note the inclusion, buried in the middle of the lengthy response from RCI, of an excerpt from
    email correspondence with Xuebin Zhang, Senior Research Scientist, Environment Canada. He
    is, incidentally, one of the authors of the Environment Canada study cited above. Dr. Zhang wrote
    to journalist Marc Montgomery, while the latter was preparing his draft response to the complaint,
    that:

    “For Canada as a whole, observational evidence of changes in extreme precipitation is
    lacking.”

    I must take RCI to task for not having drawn the obvious conclusion regarding the truthfulness of
    the sentence that Mr. Muir complained about.

    As regards Mr. Muir’s second grievance, I do not believe it is up to RCI to arbitrate a dispute
    between the Ontario Society of Professional Engineers and a university research centre about
    whether it is appropriate to mitigate flooding by rehabilitating wetlands in urban and near-urban
    areas. Dr. Feltmate – a biologist – advocates that solution; Mr. Muir and the Ontario Society of
    Professional Engineers do not share his opinion. RCI cited excerpts from the reports by the Intact
    Centre accurately, without endorsing those conclusions. Furthermore, Mr. Muir had the
    opportunity – two opportunities, in fact – to speak out and restate the facts as he sees them. First,
    RCI published four comments by him below the initial article. Then, RCI invited him to be
    interviewed to react to Dr. Feltmate’s claims.

    Further considerations

    In his reply to the first response from RCI, the complainant disputed some of its contents; for
    example, the assertion that spring floods are now more severe because of climate change.

    I will refrain from commenting on these secondary issues, as they do not concern the contents of
    either of the RCI articles, but rather the correspondence between RCI and Mr. Muir. I feel the
    case is already complex enough and there is no need to make it more so.
    Second complaint
    I note first of all that Mr. Muir did not complain about the interview per se, nor about its tone or the
    nature of the questions asked of him by Mr. Montgomery. His comments were limited to the
    contents of the accompanying article,9
    entitled Response to a climate change story, posted on
    November 19, 2018.

    Mr. Muir complained that the article contained a graphic illustrating increases in annual rainfall in
    Canada, which he deemed irrelevant because the interview (and indeed his complaint about the
    first article) was about data on extreme rainfall events: this was the fundamental objection, the
    reason for his dispute with RCI. I note with satisfaction that RCI acknowledged the merits of that
    complaint and consequently removed the graphic. Unfortunately, in removing it RCI did not follow
    best practices with regard to transparency. First, no date was provided to show when the article
    had been updated; more important still, the note added at the foot of the article to explain the
    change appears to me to be unduly insincere. It states: “the story has been modified to remove a
    graphic from Environment Canada deemed not entirely relevant to the interview.” Acknowledging
    an error in this manner (saying “not entirely” merely pays lip service to the issue) is counter to the
    requirements of the JSP. The graphic was irrelevant, period.

    Next, Mr. Muir complained that the article implied that his statement about the lack of any trend
    toward increased extreme rainfall concerned only one region, southern Ontario. Two sentences
    are at issue here. The first stated: Mr. Muir “maintains that in his region of southern Ontario,
    rainfall levels are decreasing [. . .] .” Later, the article adds:

    “It is entirely possible that small localised areas may experience different situations from
    the global trend which points to human activity causing substantial climatic changes in
    weather patterns and increasing damage to infrastructure.”

    Considering the complainant’s repeated requests that RCI acknowledge that it was false to claim
    that extreme rainfall episodes are on the rise, whether in southern Ontario or across Canada;
    considering the multiple documentation he provided to RCI in support of that position; and
    considering RCI’s clear and repeated refusals to acknowledge the error, I must conclude that
    Mr. Muir was justified in interpreting those two sentences as a further attempt to downplay his
    point of view and even distort its meaning. First, by scaling it down to a simple regional
    perspective, and then by once again confusing the concepts of extreme rainfall events and overall
    precipitation. I sought to understand the source of this muddled situation. The journalist,
    Marc Montgomery, frankly admitted that he had decided from the start that he would “not give an
    inch” to the complainant. That attitude, unfortunately, violates the JSP, specifically the section
    that calls on CBC/Radio-Canada employees to “act responsibly and to be accountable,” which
    goes on to say “we [. . .] are honest [and we] do not hesitate to correct any mistake [. . .] .”

    A further aspect of Mr. Muir’s second complaint is his request that the article about his interview
    contain a link to a document from the Ontario Society of Professional Engineers that discounts
    the IBC and Intact Centre report on wetlands for urban flood mitigation (produced in 2017 by the
    Intact Centre and largely written by Dr. Feltmate). RCI refused to comply with that request.
    Under normal circumstances, I too would have refused. The choice of the angle and key points of
    a story is the prerogative of the editorial staff. There will always be people ready to say that a
    news story should have covered such-and-such an issue, should have mentioned an aspect that
    was not, or should have provided another perspective. Regardless of the merits of such
    criticisms, they would – if accommodated – deny one of the core elements of freedom of the
    press: the freedom to choose the topic of a story and in turn to determine what aspects are worth
    including in that story.

    In the case that concerns us, however, I believe that Mr. Muir’s request was justified, considering
    once again the manner in which he was presented: as nothing more than a municipal engineer
    concerned only with data about the region he is familiar with, which may be a statistical anomaly;
    a man who nevertheless opposes the conclusions of a serious academic study supported by the
    Canadian insurance industry and those of the most recent report of the Environmental
    Commissioner of Ontario on the importance of preserving wetlands as a means of preventing
    flooding in urban areas. The document from the Ontario Society of Professional Engineers,
    however, clearly shows that Mr. Muir’s objections are not merely a matter of his opinion. The
    letter, signed by the organization’s president, states that “green infrastructure comes with high
    lifecycle costs and is not considered an effective measure for achieving flood resiliency under
    severe rainfall.”

    I wrote above that it is not within the Ombudsman’s purview to referee this technical debate
    pitting the insurance industry–funded studies of the Intact Centre on one side against Ontario’s
    civil engineers on the other. I also believe that it is not up to RCI to take a position on the issue,
    unless its opinion were the conclusion of an in-depth journalistic investigation. We are a long way
    from that. And yet, taken together, the two RCI articles and the many links accompanying them,
    all of which are to documents substantiating Dr. Feltmate’s view, give the reader the impression
    that the case has been tried and Mr. Muir is an isolated voice preaching in the desert. This is not
    consistent with the balance principle of the JSP, which states:

    “On issues of controversy, we ensure that divergent views are reflected respectfully,
    taking into account their relevance to the debate and how widely held these views are.”
    In the case that concerns us, it stands to reason that the position of engineers – those who
    design water drainage infrastructures – is entirely relevant with regard to the usefulness and
    effectiveness of the measures advocated by Dr. Feltmate. It is true that Mr. Muir had the
    opportunity to express that position in the interview that he gave to RCI. That should therefore
    have been all the more reason for the article introducing the interview to be accompanied by a
    link to the letter as a “supporting document.” Ultimately, had there been no link at the foot of the
    article, the absence of the supporting document would be understandable.

    But there are nearly ten such links, each pointing to documents that appear to be there to
    undermine Mr. Muir’s position, which compounds the overall lack of balance here.
    Speaking of missing links, I note that RCI had failed to include, in the original article, a referral to
    the second one, despite the fact that it is a follow-up. When I mentioned this omission to them as
    part of our discussions about this complaint, RCI management told me it had resulted from an
    error in communication. They had asked that the referral be included; they told me the correction
    would be made immediately, and it was. However, the link to the “follow-up” is so discreet that
    there is little chance of it being noticed. It is written as follows:

    “Counterpoint response to the IBC study- RCI: Nov 19/18.”

    Can the average reader be expected to grasp, from those few words, that they constitute a
    hyperlink to a follow-up to the RCI article they are reading? Will they understand that the main
    theory being asserted in the article they are reading has been discounted by the official body
    representing Ontario’s engineers? Will they suspect that the existence of the data on which the
    article is founded – Dr. Feltmate’s claim that extreme rainfall events are on the rise in Canada – is
    challenged in the follow-up article? I do not think so, and that is why I believe once again that this
    further correction was inconsistent with best practices and does not live up to the “honesty”
    principle of the JSP.

    The reference to the Insurance Bureau of Canada report
    Mr. Muir also challenged the accuracy of the second paragraph of the article accompanying his
    interview:

    “Here in Canada, the Insurance Bureau of Canada in a commissioned report said its
    payouts from natural disasters have doubled every five years since 1980, and the
    majority of those claims are from flooding due in large part to climate change.”
    He stated that this assertion is false, advancing several arguments that cast doubt on the
    accuracy, not of the sentence, but of the information it contains. Allow me to explain: while it is
    true that a report of the Insurance Bureau of Canada states these things, that does not mean they
    are true. Thus Mr. Muir was not questioning the journalist’s text so much as the report that it
    describes. This situation resembles the first point of his first complaint, in which he criticized the
    article accompanying the interview with Dr. Feltmate for perpetuating inaccurate information
    about an increase in episodes of extreme rainfall in Canada.

    In its response to the second complaint, RCI did not address that grievance, and merely
    defended Dr. Feltmate’s qualifications by listing the conferences at which he has been invited to
    speak. In my opinion this did not do justice to the seriousness of the arguments put forward by
    Mr. Muir, which by that time he had shared with RCI. Yes, the sentence in question is rigorously
    accurate in that it properly represents the position of the Insurance Bureau of Canada, but the
    fact that it appears in the introduction to the article about the interview with Mr. Muir, without
    noting that Mr. Muir disagrees with all of its points, appears to me to contradict the balance
    principle of the JSP.

    It seems to me that there are two possible solutions for correcting this situation: remove that
    paragraph from the text of the article and attach an explanation for the change, or retain the
    paragraph but follow it immediately with an account of the Mr. Muir’s objections to the Insurance
    Bureau of Canada’s statements.

    The scientific validity of the information reported
    Finally, the two parties in this affair debated the scientific validity of the Intact Centre’s reports.
    Were they peer reviewed or not? How many peers took part? Does the presence of a disclaimer
    of responsibility in the reports mean they have no scientific value? And if so, should RCI have
    refrained from citing them? In Mr. Muir’s opinion, RCI was promoting positions of the Insurance
    Bureau of Canada report authors, who were “not licensed to formally advance” them. In short, he
    wrote, RCI was “taking insurance industry-funded ‘glossy’ reports to be equivalent to formal
    technical information.”

    On this point, I cannot find in favour of the complainant. Information reported in the media comes
    from a wide variety of sources. It does not have to be scientifically validated by a peer-review
    process; in fact, it rarely is. Any citizen, association or interest group is entitled to speak their
    mind, defend their point of view and engage in public debate. In doing so, they are not required to
    have their positions approved beforehand by a panel of scientists. And it is a good thing they are
    not, one might well argue; otherwise citizens’ freedom of expression would be greatly
    constrained. I therefore reject Mr. Muir’s contention that RCI should report only the assertions of
    “licensed” experts.

    CONCLUSION

    The two articles by journalist Marc Montgomery entitled How to mitigate the effects of flood
    damage from climate change and Response to a climate change story, posted online on
    September 19 and November 19, 2018, respectively by Radio Canada international (RCI), failed
    to comply with the CBC/Radio-Canada Journalistic Standards and Practices (JSP) regarding
    accuracy and impartiality. The corrections eventually made to the two articles were not compliant
    with best practices, and violated the JSP principles on correction of errors and honesty.
    As a result of the multiple shortcomings noted in my examination of this matter, I am
    recommending that Radio-Canada review the RCI complaints processing procedure; provide
    training on the JSP to RCI staff; make the necessary corrections to the two articles in question so
    as to restore the accuracy and balance that are lacking; clearly indicate in the two articles that
    they were the subject of a review by the Office of the Ombudsman and include a link to that
    review; and, lastly, publish a notice of correction in the Mises au point (Erratum) section of the
    Radio-Canada website.

    Guy Gendron
    Ombudsman, French Services, CBC/Radio-Canada
    January 28, 2019