#GOOD26
Common Ground: Building Canada’s Open Digital Foundation
Conference Agenda
Wednesday May 6, 2026
Mississauga City Hall, 12th Floor, C Banquet Hall
Morning sessions
In-person registration from 8:00 am onwards.
Pastries, coffee, and tea.
Registration, Breakfast
8:00 AM - 9:00 AM
Conference opening
9:00 AM - 9:30 AM
Master of Ceremonies (MC)
Keith McDonald, the literacy AI Project Toronto
Indigenous Welcome
Mississaugas of the Credit First NationGOOD26 Conference Chair introduction
Kevin Farrugia, Conference Chair, Board Chair, GO Open Data AssociationWelcome and Land Acknowledgement
Welcome from the City of Mississauga
Ryan Lim, Director of Information Technology and Chief Information Officer, City of Mississauga
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Ryan Lim
Director of IT and CIO, City of Mississauga
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Kevin Farrugia
Board Chair, GO Open Data Association
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Keith McDonald
the literacy AI Project Toronto
Keynote: From democratization to corporatization of open data: Open spatial data as an ingredient in the creation of corporate base maps
9:30 AM - 10:00 AM
Open data, whether from government or crowdsourced projects, is of significant interest for private sector companies, particularly those providing digital mapping products that require constantly updated base maps of an ever-changing world. I trace the shift in the open data movement from one of enthusiasm around the democratization of open data assets, to a more cautious perspective on the corporatization of open data. Join me in discussing the recent history of open data and where that path may lead in the future.
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Dr. Peter A. Johnson
Associate Professor,
Faculty of Environment,
University of Waterloo
Building a human-enriched AI ecosystem for land development
10:00 AM - 10:30 AM
How to build an human-enriched AI ecosystem to drive transformation within a complex, evolving development landscape and equally complex municipal environment. Inventing a wheel for the 21st century.
Presenters
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Anthony Andreana
Manager, Information Systems & Operations for Land Development
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Arash Shahi
CEO, LandLogic
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Azam Khan
Co-founder/CEO, Trax
Coffee break - 15 minutes
10:30 AM - 10:45 AM
Digital Twins: Weaving the Tale of Two Cities Together
10:45 AM - 11:15AM
A digital twin blends the fast lane of daily operations—work orders, inspections, utilities, emergencies—with the slow lane of cultural heritage memory—drawings, specs, heritage, and long‑term asset history. Like weaving, the warp carries provenance and continuity, while the woof brings real‑time conditions into focus, creating a practical tool for good decisions today and solid planning tomorrow.
Kyle Browness, Director, Digital Collections Operations at Library and Archives Canada | Bibliothèque et Archives Canada, will show how national stewardship of born‑digital materials depends on embedding archival principles—readability, provenance, and context—into digital‑twin workflows from the start, ensuring that everything from social‑media reports to planning files, inspections, and environmental data becomes a trustworthy foundation for physical‑AI systems.
Walter Borchenko, Cultural Heritage Digitization Specialist and Co‑Founder, will demonstrate how preservation begins at capture, using RAW, repeatable, colour‑accurate workflows so heritage and community‑generated media remain reliable, interpretable, and usable for decades.
Presenter:
Kyle Browness
Director, Digital Collections Operations
Library and Archives CanadaWalter Borchenko
The Art of Photography | Co-Founder B3K Digital
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Kyle Browness
Director, Digital Collections Operations, Library and Archives Canada
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Walter Borchenko
Photographic Artist, Published Author, Educator, International Speaker, Cultural Heritage Digitization Specialist, Consultant
Panel:
How the city is transforming its operations with AI
Responsible AI & Compliance
11:15 AM - 12:00 PM
Rohit will be speaking to two topics: Responsible AI & compliance - navigating the ethical guardrails and regulatory requirements and practical use cases - real-world applications for leveraging AI alongside open data.
Presenter:
Fartash Haghani,
Director, Enterprise Data & AI
City of TorontoRohit Kasbekar,
Manager, Business Intelligence
North York General Hospital
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Fartash Haghani
Director, Enterprise Data & AI,
City of Toronto -

Rohit Kasbekar
Manager, Business Intelligence
North York General Hospital
Lunch break
- 75 minutes
12:00 PM - 1:15 PM
Lightning talks
1:15 PM - 1:30 PM
Moderator:
Presenters
CivicTech Brampton
Ushnish Sengupta, Algoma UniversityOpen Data Professional Certification Update
Jamie Leitch, Board Member, GOOD & Paul Connors, Executive Director, CODSFrom Ideation to Implementation: Coding agents have collapsed development effort.
Mike Wilcox, Account Executive, Ontario Public Sector, Canada
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Ushnish Sengupta
CivicTech Brampton
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Jamie Leitch
Board Member,
GOOD -

Mike Wilcox
Account Executive, Ontario Public Service
Snowflake
Toronto Public Library AI Upskill Project
1:30 PM - 2:00 PM
We’re entering a period where entire sectors can shrink overnight. The question isn’t whether AI will change jobs - it’s whether people have a trusted place to learn how to use it well. This session reframes digital twins not as a technical toolset, but as a public‑sector knowledge ecosystem - one where libraries, archives, municipalities, and Indigenous innovation hubs become trusted stewards of the data that powers community, democratic decision‑making.
If we want AI‑ready workforces, and resilient communities, we need to build human citizen infrastructure first. That means investing in the institutions people already trust: the library that teaches foundational digital skills.
Drawing on lessons from the Toronto Public Library’s Google AI Upskilling initiative, this panel explores how public institutions can become on‑ramps to AI literacy, local innovation, and equitable participation in emerging data ecosystems that protect and preserve our democratic institutions. Speakers will examine practical models - learning circles, tool‑lending programs, community data governance - everything necessary to build and sustain residents move from passive users of technology to active shapers of their digital futures in a liberal democracy.
Presenter:
Yoojin Kwon,
Senior Services Specialist, Toronto Public LibraryFiona O’Connor
Senior Services Specialist, Toronto Public Library
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Yoojin Kwon
Senior Services Specialist, Toronto Public Library
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Fiona O'Connor
Senior Services Specialist, Toronto Public Library
Approach to Data Governance
2:00 PM - 2:30 PM
Updates from the Ministry of Public & Business Service Delivery and Procurement at the Government of Ontario on the approach the Ontario Public Service is taking with data governance.
Presenter:
Tarun Rihal
Director of Enterprise Analytics and Insights,
Ministry of Public and Business Service Delivery and Procurement,
Government of Ontario
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Tarun Rihal
Director Enterprise Analytics and Insights,
Ministry of Public and Business Service Delivery and Procurement,
Government of Ontario
Coffee break - 15 minutes
2:30 PM - 2:45 PM
The Governance of Open Digital Twins
2:45 PM - 3:15 PM
Digital twin are large complex social and technical systems, that, in addition to being created and used in the architecture, engineering, construction and owner operated (AECOO) sectors to construct, operate and manage physical assets, digital twins are also used as immersive media in virtual reality environments accessible with virtual reality peripherals. City officials also use digital twins to pre-empt, predict, and prevent the potential harms caused by natural calamities such as floods related to climate change, to model scenarios for urban planning, and as place to conduct public consultations. Further, they augment knowledge about infrastructure, they are a spatial data infrastructure, and they are records. As fledgling systems, it is argued, that digital twin creators construct them in such a way that these be open, considered a public goods and their data lifecycle can be managed.
Without consideration for governance - data & technical, digital strategies, public policy and legalities, and public engagement, digital twins risk gaining the same negative public attention as smart cities and the Sidewalk Labs Quayside Toronto Project did, including META. There is much public good that can be derived from digital twins, especially if those involved in their creation, become more public facing and engage the public and governors in their creation and use, build them as open interoperable systems and incorporate them into existing spatial data infrastructures, and conceptualize them as shared public spaces where we can imagine, plan and model the future together. Since digital twin will become an infrastructure of infrastructures, ought we not build them now as public goods for mutual wellbeing and benefit?
Presenter:
Dr. Tracey Lauriault,
Associate Professor, Carleton University
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Tracey Lauriault
Associate Professor, Carleton University
GOODHack26 Design Challenge - Call to Action Pitch
3:15 PM - 3:45 PM
How you can digital twins leverage the present and archived past to design better and faster now and into the future.
Presenters:
Mike Carter
Guide, Mapmaker, Actor, and PhotographerKian Nabavi Larijani
Medical Sciences Student, University of Western OntarioKiran Duwadi
Civil Engineering Student & GIS Specialist
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Mike Carter
Guide • Mapmaker • Actor • Photographer
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Kian Nabavi Larijani
Medical Sciences Student,
University of Western Ontario -
Kiran Duwadi
Civil Engineering Graduate & GIS Specialist
Closing Remarks
3:45 PM - 4:00 PM
Closing remarks for this year’s conference.
Presenter:
Trevor Twining,
Vice Chair, GO Open Data
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Trevor Twining
Vice Chair, GO Open Data