Training the public in general to be more politically active and take intrest in things that affect them would take a great deal of effort and resources.
The edcuation would have to start at the school level. Possibly adopting a system of youth voting under the guidance of the teachers that have been trained to present the concepts. I am not talking here about left/right policies or issue specifics but rather presenting an overall idea of public responsibility towards civic duty and the need for involvment in things political.
We have become so passive here in Canada and our governments of the past and present have not done much to inspire us to get active. It has spawned the "what does it matter" attitude in many Canadians. The only time we see much activity is when the old "common enemy" theme comes around in some form or another and some folks manage to take notice.
If we wanted to bring about a change in political apathy one needs a place to start. Education from the get go is part of it. The other is putting in place a mechanism for continuous public awareness of political activities and a method to do somthing about it that is substantially more immidiate that voting every five years or whenever civic, provincial or federal elections come around.
One way to do this is to use electronic polling. Now many of you will throw up your hands and do the "oh sure that'll work" thing, but hear me out.
So far electronic polling/voting has been close to a failure in most places it has been used, Why? It is because the technology is flawed and it subject to manuplition by unscrupulous political factions. These shortcomings can be easly overcome. How? The old video arcade boys have taught this lesson already and if the systems followed that que it could be made to work. I can actually go into the hard technolgy behind it if required but let us say it is far superior to anything that has been developed so far. Reliable, robust, permanent installations in malls, corner stores, bars anywhere that you would see a V.L.T., Banking machine, or video entertainment terminal.
Voting and polling takes place 24/7/365 in this scheme, not as we have now with the paper ballot done whenever. Canada's big advantage over other countries in this regard is that we have a nationally standardized voting system in place already and people are used to it. Step A solved with that one.
Having said that, what comes next is developing the interest to show up to use a polling/voting machine in the first place. We would think that with television, radio, and the internet that the information flood would simply cause everyone to have political and policy savvy, but we know this is not the case. Our current generations are passive, we only need to look at the turn out rates for elections to know that and some form of inforced edcuation may be the way to improve that situation.
It would be a long term effort but for us to construct a better Canada an increase of political awarness is essential in my view.