:
Good morning, everyone.
[Translation]
I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 149 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Public Accounts.
[English]
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format pursuant to the Standing Orders. Members are attending in person in the room and remotely using the Zoom application.
Before we begin, I'd like to ask all in-person participants to read the guidelines written on the updated cards on the tables. These measures are in place to help prevent audio and feedback incidents and to protect the health and safety of all participants, with special emphasis on our hard-working interpreters.
As a reminder to all those in person and online, for the safety of our interpreters, it is very important that your microphone is muted when you are not speaking. I know that can be a bit of a challenge when you're part of a debate, or, I should say, when there is questioning back and forth. We don't debate here; we question witnesses and hear their answers. Just remain aware of that, please.
[Translation]
Thank you all for your co-operation.
[English]
I'll remind you again that all comments should be addressed through the chair.
[Translation]
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(3)(g), the committee is resuming consideration of report 6, Sustainable Development Technology Canada, of the 2024 reports 5 to 7 of the Auditor General of Canada.
[English]
I would now like to welcome all our witnesses.
From the Office of the Auditor General, we have Karen Hogan, Auditor General of Canada.
It's nice to have you back. It's been a while since you and your team have been in.
We also have Andrew Hayes, deputy auditor general, and Mathieu Lequain, principal.
Thank you all for coming in again.
Joining us virtually, from Sustainable Development Technology Canada, we have Ziyad Rahme, chief operating officer.
Before we begin, I just want to note that while this is a two-hour panel, we'll be taking a health break at approximately the one-hour mark for 15 minutes. We'll suspend at that time.
Ms. Hogan, because you've appeared here previously for this study, I'm going to begin with Mr. Rahme.
Sir, you have the floor for up to five minutes, please.
It's over to you.
[Translation]
Good morning to all.
[English]
My name is Ziyad Rahme. I'm here as the chief operating officer of Sustainable Development Technology Canada.
I'm speaking to you today from the traditional lands of the Anishinabe Algonquin nation.
Firstly, thank you, Mr. Chair, and all committee members, for your accommodation and flexibility in scheduling this appearance. I underwent a planned surgery in August. Recovery continues, so I may need to walk around or stand periodically at some points during our time together. Thank you in advance for your understanding.
I joined SDTC eight years ago. I primarily served as the vice-president of investments, reporting to the CEO.
I am an engineer by background and a former entrepreneur, and spent most of my career working for a clean tech start-up.
As VP of investments, I worked with SDTC experts who reviewed and recommended projects to the board and its committees for funding. We gave advice. Following a defined process, the board made decisions and we monitored progress.
[Translation]
I also served as the acting chief executive officer for SDTC from November 2023 to June 2024. In this capacity, I was responsible for finalizing and implementing the detailed management action and response plan submitted to the Department of Industry in December 2023.
[English]
As the committee knows, on June 4, 2024, a new board of directors was appointed. At that time, I transitioned to the role of chief operating officer to support the new board in its mandate to implement the recommendations of the Auditor General, restart funding for Canadian clean technology companies, both those previously approved for funding and new applicants, and transition SDTC programming and staff to the National Research Council.
The new board's work is informed by the extensive and comprehensive reviews completed over the past year, including the Auditor General's report, the McCarthy Tétrault report and the Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner's reports.
In my role as chief operating officer, I am responsible for implementing the direction of the new board of directors, supporting the transition to the NRC and providing leadership support and continuity for the employees to help retain their critical expertise and skills. I am focused on supporting the new board's decisions, guiding our employees through the present situation and preparing them for the future.
[Translation]
I am here today to support this committee in its study of the Auditor General's report into Sustainable Development Technology Canada. I understand and respect Parliament's role and your work. I'm also keenly aware of my obligations as a public sector leader.
[English]
I want to take this opportunity to respond to a specific finding that was highlighted in the Auditor General's report related to a conflict of interest I had disclosed to the former CEO. As I told the Auditor General and her team, I declared to the former CEO a perceived conflict related to the firm at which my spouse is employed, as required by our policy, and recused myself from any and all involvement in procurement processes related to said HR and associated recruitment.
I want to reconfirm that my spouse had no role in the search for former board directors, nor have I had any role in the awarding of any contract at the firm at which she is employed.
I also want to confirm that I have had no involvement in the recruitment of any board directors.
I am pleased to support the new board in reviewing and implementing the recommendations of the Auditor General and others. These reviews will make our support of Canada's innovative clean-tech sector even stronger.
Since its inception, SDTC has supported hundreds of companies. Through this programming, these companies have created over 26,000 jobs, leveraged seven dollars for every dollar of SDTC support, and delivered strong environmental benefits in Canada and around the world. As we transition employees from SDTC to the NRC and evolve our approach to supporting clean-tech innovation, the conclusions of the Auditor General, McCarthy Tétrault, and the Conflict of Interest Commissioner provide clear guidance on the road ahead. The new board is focused on that. My colleagues and I are supporting them in implementing their decisions, and we are committed to delivering results for clean-tech companies and all Canadians.
With that, I'm happy to answer the committee's questions.
[Translation]
Thank you.
:
Thank you very much for your time.
Mr. Rahme, should you need to take a brief pause, just let me know. It's probably best that you don't, just given some of the questions. There's a flow to them often, so if you do need to take a break before I suspend for 15 minutes, just let me know. We'll certainly accommodate you.
Thank you.
Now turning to Ms. Hogan, you have the floor, please.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you, witnesses.
Auditor General, I like that opening statement.
My opening round will be questions for Mr. Rahme.
Your previous capacity primarily as VP of investments is the context of my questions in this round.
The Verschuren Centre, which is a centre that Annette Verschuren set up at Cape Breton University, applied while Annette Verschuren was chair for, I believe, almost a total of $6.8 million through various SDTC funds. That consideration went to the investment committee, I believe, which you oversaw. Is that correct?
I will start by saying that I am not questioning the privilege of the House of Commons to order the production of documents, and my office, as I stated in my letter, will produce the documents. We have already started to produce some of those.
Fundamentally, the documents being sought belong to the departments or to the foundation. They belong to a third party. They need to decide whether they will produce those documents before I can produce them. It's kind of like being the caboose on a train. Because they are the owners of the information, I need to see what they will do with that information.
There is an ongoing dispute between the government and Parliament over documents, and I should not become a mechanism by which Parliament receives government information. I believe my independence would be compromised if I become that vehicle. There is also the unintended consequence that this could have a chilling effect on departments and agencies sharing free and unfettered information with my office. I have very broad access to information, and I need to preserve that broad access.
:
Most of the information in my file belongs to either ISED or the foundation. They are the holders and owners, so they should decide who gets that information. Parliament should receive all of that information from the government directly, not through me. They should provide that information to the law clerk.
We have had many conversations with ISED since June—a good dozen or so—about understanding what security they will apply to that information, because I am required to respect the confidentiality or security level they place on their information. You would have seen this in other situations, such as the vaccine audit. While we were able to see all of the vaccine contracts, we needed to respect the policies inside those contracts, and the terms and conditions. We also had to respect whatever security classification government departments might put on them.
It's the same situation. We went back to the department, asking them to help us understand what, if any, redactions they have applied, because I am not the owner of that information. They are.
:
I think my concerns stem again from this, that I should not be the vehicle through which Parliament receives information from the government. They should go directly to the government.
Fundamentally, when I look at the order, I believe it's to get information to the RCMP. As I have stated previously, we have a well-established mechanism with the RCMP. In fact, my office has communicated with them quite often over this.
I think Andrew has been having those conversations and can provide more information.
We have told them that we are ready to comply. If they would like to send us a production order, we would be happy to provide them with information. When doing so, it goes to the RCMP in an unredacted fashion, so it is the best way for the RCMP to have access to the information they need to do their job.
I quoted from your report. You talked about the spouse of an executive who was with a company that was part of the loop. Indeed, there was nothing in their policy other than the financial aspect. We've already seen the 90 cases of conflicts of interest that you named, which were financial conflicts of interest. You noted this case, which is not financial in nature, although we can see that there is still something financial in the loop.
Thank you for those clarifications.
Mr. Rahme, can you confirm that your wife's name is Kathy Rahme and that she works at Boyden as a partner?
Since you recused yourself, you therefore had no say in the fact that Boyden was involved in the appointment process or the introduction of the members.
However, the conflict of interest doesn't disappear when you leave the room. Conflict of interest is a significant issue. This is your wife working as a partner at a firm that will appoint board members; those members will then set your own compensation. You can't confirm it right now, which is unfortunate, but it seems that Boyden received sole-source contracts. From what I understand, there wasn't even a competitive framework. You're telling me that the process was competitive, but that you don't know.
Do you know or not? Was it competitive, Mr. Rahme?
To our witnesses here, in 2012, the budgetary allotment of the Auditor General's office was cut by more than 5% by the Stephen Harper government. Later on, criticized the Auditor General's office for not doing the number of audits that it did in the past. Notably, in one of his media scrums, he mentioned that it does 14 of 28 per year—at that time in 2020.
Is there any connection between your capability in this file and doing audits? I'm just curious as to what capacity or amount your office is spending on this and what are the repercussions of that across the board. There have been other auditors general who have asked for significant increases in their budgetary allotments. The criticism that was levied against you by was related to the fact that your budget doubled whereas the number of audits was reduced by half. I'm wondering whether or not there's any connection whatsoever with your capabilities in your office, or whether or not this effort here is going to compromise your capability in other audits in terms of staffing and commitment time.
:
I can tell you that my predecessor, Mike Ferguson, was definitely looking for additional funding and only received a fraction of what he had requested. After my nomination in June 2020, I resubmitted budget requests and I did receive the $25 million in additional funding.
The goal was to invest in our IT systems—because we had for many years prioritized audits over that—and also to return to levels of performance audits that Parliament would expect from us. Our goal is to try to hit at least 25. While we're always skirting a little close to that, I would argue that some were very large, such as all of the work that we did on Bill or the COVID payments, and we also do work in the territories.
When it comes to this audit, we definitely did a very thorough audit, in my opinion, and we completed it very quickly. We mobilized an incredibly strong team so that we could respond quickly and provide information to Parliament in a very timely way, so our budget did not impact this audit.
Andrew, I can see that you want to add something.
:
Yes, indeed. When the whistle-blowers were engaging with our audit team, we were monitoring what was happening. We were engaging with the department, ISED. From our perspective, at that point in time, there needed to be some management action. An audit can only take you so far. Given the fact that some of the allegations related to Governor in Council appointees, we also engaged with the Privy Council Office, because it was responsible for those appointees.
However, we were monitoring all the way through what was happening. That is why, in October 2023, we decided to launch this audit. This wasn't an audit that was requested; it was an audit we decided to do.
While we are always concerned about the experiences of whistle-blowers—in particular, as you mentioned, the human resources sides of that—with a foundation that's more than arm's length away from the government, we are constrained in our ability to look at an audit in the same way we would in a department. Put simply, we wouldn't be able to go in and look at HR practices. We were limited to the four corners of the funding agreement.
:
You indicated in your opening statement that part of your role as COO is to implement recommendations of the AG report. One of those recommendations of the AG report is to recover monies that were inappropriately taken from taxpayers. We have approximately $400 million identified as misused taxpayer funds that went to Liberal insiders.
A couple of months ago, we heard from one of the current acting directors, Cassie Doyle. I put to her several questions, as did other members, as to when taxpayers would receive their money back, and she refused to give us a straight answer.
It is something that I know the Auditor General is quite concerned about. When she testified back in June of this year, there was no clear indication from the government as to what the timetable was.
I'm asking you, sir, as the COO, what is the plan, what is the process and when can Canadians expect to receive their hard-earned tax dollars back?
:
Yes. Mr. Rahme, the question that was put forward kind of breaks down into two parts.
If you would provide to this committee, as Mr. Brock recommended, the name of the officials who provided briefings to you, it would be appreciated. I don't think there's anything too out of sorts with that request.
As for your notes, would you provide us the notes that you're prepared to provide us and, as well, make very clear the parts that you are not? I would urge you to be as forthcoming as possible. Again, we're not there yet, but I'll just remind you that the committee does have the ability to order the production of documents, so I would urge you to be as forthcoming as possible. We look for that information in the next three weeks.
Could I leave that with you? I realize those notes were prepared for you, but they could well be relevant.
There's a point of order from Mr. Drouin.
I'm going to turn to your recommendations quickly.
We heard from the current transition board that they've implemented 11 out of 12 of your recommendations, which I think is pretty good news. They're currently implementing your final recommendation, which is a project review.
Can you speak about the rationale behind this recommendation? Couldn't the board have just worked from your findings, rather than doing their own review? What do you think is the purpose of such a project review?
:
I want to highlight that this was the one recommendation with which the foundation only partially agreed. However, based on the testimony of some of the current board members—and I believe the audit team has also been having conversations with some of the board members—they intend to fully carry out the recommendation.
This is important because we did statistical sampling of a few of the funding streams. We looked at a sample and found that there were clearly some organizations that were ineligible. With statistical sampling, you can sort of extrapolate that to the whole population. As we mentioned in the report, we believe there are approximately 16 other funding organizations that might have been ineligible. It is up to management to do that level of detailed work, file by file, in order to determine eligibility. That is why we made that recommendation and feel it's important.
If an organization has received funding that it wasn't eligible for, I expect the government to recover those funds. If they do not have plans to do it, they should be transparent and open with Canadians about that.
:
Mr. Rahme, if you don't mind, I'd like to come back to the Verschuren Centre and its treatment.
I have in my possession a letter signed by you, which was sent to the Verschuren Centre's president and CEO, Beth Mason. The letter begins with “Dear Beth”, which is quite familiar. In the letter, you say that your team will take all the necessary steps to find funding for the project in question. You even say that someone from SDTC, Jonathan Kaida, will ensure proper follow-up so that SDTC can support the Verschuren Centre in its efforts. You are allocating SDTC resources to a project at the Verschuren Centre, where Ms. Verschuren sits on the board of directors.
Is it common practice to assign employees to projects that are not eligible for funding from SDTC and to find funding elsewhere?
I'm going to move to the witnesses online.
That's been one of my points all along in this: we create these outside agencies so they don't even get the same whistle-blower protection legislation. Even in this place, here on the Hill, people don't have the same rights because of the legislation here on the Hill that protects the employers and so forth. That's a point that's very relevant to this—creating these agencies so they don't have the accountability.
Mr. Rahme, can you tell me if any of the SDTC managers or those making the decisions are getting severances or bonuses? Are they all moving over to NRC, or is the board providing packages for them not to move to NRC?
Mr. Rahme, on January 18, 2022, you wrote to the Verschuren Centre and stated that SDTC would “give best efforts” to help the Verschuren Centre secure funding. The whistle-blower stated in his testimony that “unprecedented” efforts were made by employees using SDTC's reputation to help secure funding for the Verschuren Centre, and we know that not long afterwards, you indicated that SDTC would undertake its best efforts to assist and that the Verschuren Centre received nearly $10 million in funding from ISED and ACOA.
How is it possible that you thought it was appropriate to use taxpayer-funded resources at SDTC to help secure funding for the chair's personal vanity project?
:
I was appointed acting CEO, as I just said in my opening remarks, in November 2023. I had two top priorities at the time. One was to support staff in ensuring that they had a very safe and healthy work environment.
We were very focused on implementing all of the recommendations that were provided to us by ISED in the management response and action plan, many of which are now implemented and running in terms of enhanced processes, etc. Of course, the third priority was ensuring that the organization fully co-operated with the examinations and reviews that were under way through that period of time.
Otherwise, we did not make any substantial changes to the organization other than, again, implementing all of those recommendations that came through. Since June, in addition to all of that, we have been supporting the new board in implementing their mandate as well as all of the recommendations provided by the Auditor General.
Many of the changes to the contribution agreement would have revolved around enhancing a lot of the oversight provisions. You mentioned, for example, conflict of interest. There would have been enhanced reporting mechanisms from SDTC to ISED regarding all aspects of the contribution agreement, better clarity on ISED's role at board meetings and enhanced oversight of the auditing functions.
Many of these would have flowed from the management response and action plan. For example, on conflict of interest reporting, we have enhanced all of our processes and we've worked very closely with an ethics adviser we brought on board in October 2023 to enhance and upgrade all of our processes around conflicts of interest and the reporting of those conflicts over to the ministry. That's one example.
Again, we have a series of reporting we've put in place for all aspects of our operation that we report back to ISED.
:
I will give Andrew the option to jump in on this, if he wants.
When I received a request from this committee to hand over additional information about the 90 cases of conflicts of interest, I actually had a conversation with the Privacy Commissioner about paragraph 8(2)(m), I think, in the Privacy Act. It is not in the Auditor General Act. I explored with him what it meant and the will of Parliament. Then it is up to me, as the head of the organization, to weigh whether the will of Parliament supersedes an individual's right to privacy. That's basically what paragraph 8(2)(m) is asking for.
When I looked at most of the information I provided, it was information that you could find in the public domain. Hence, I provided that table to the committee and cited that letter, but I also felt it important—
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
For your information, we agree with the chair's decision. We'll send it to the Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs. We can deal with this and get on with the business of Parliament.
Thank you very much, Auditor General, for joining us.
I often hear the expression “recovery of funding”. When I talk to my constituents, I want to know how realistic that is.
Here's what I'm getting at.
In one of your recommendations, you suggested reviewing the eligibility criteria to determine whether or not a business truly met the requirements to receive funding. Regardless of what happened before, I see that Sustainable Development Technology Canada, or SDTC, still decided to sign a contribution agreement with the companies in question.
If this matter were to end up in court, I don't see how the judge could tell people at SDTC that they did indeed err by signing a contribution agreement with the company. If the company falsified documents or its purpose, and so on, then it could be said that the company did not properly portray themselves to Sustainable Development Technology Canada.
How do you think the government will recoup those funds? Have you seen what means SDTC has at its disposal?
:
This is money we are supposed to have, but it hasn't been received yet. I'm not sure how the average person is going to perceive this. I don't know if they would call it a recovery of funds. Rather, it would be a budget cut because the expected objectives weren't achieved or because there would have been abuse in this matter.
I'd like to come back to the recommendation you made to the foundation, which was to review the eligibility criteria. As part of your audit, you established samples on the recovery of funds. That's why you recommended reviewing all possible contracts signed with the companies, because it was suspected that if a certain number of recoveries had taken place, there would most likely be others.
Did the foundation accept that recommendation, at least partially? I know that other witnesses subsequently said they agreed with the recommendation and that they were in the process of conducting this review.
I want to continue with Mr. Hayes.
You have a current situation in the House where it's been involved.... I spoke about two things. There's Crown copyright. This goes back to the Afghan detainee documents—there's so much of a correlation here—that were not provided at that time. Crown copyright is one of the potential solutions for release of information and public documents that is done differently for other countries.
If the department has now moved to NRC, does that give you and your office the ability to do the same type of auditing practices as it would be in house, if it was industry Canada? These are some of the solutions I'm seeking so that we don't end up back here again.
One of my concerns is the NRC doesn't have a union under PSAC. It has an association, I think, or an affiliation. I can't remember. It's a different type of a professional association. My concern here is what we do going forward.
Will you have the same capabilities to audit this program in the future, if necessary, if it's in NRC versus audit if it was directly part of a branch of industry Canada?
I want to start with Ms. Hogan.
We had the Ethics Commissioner before this committee. He went into some detail about his findings in the Verschuren report. He was very clear that he didn't see anything criminal. He didn't see any corruption such that he would, as he described it, per his legal obligation, refer the matter to the RCMP. This committee has been marked, though, by accusations of corruption and criminality. I would love to get to the bottom of whether that existed. I've not seen a single piece of evidence to suggest that kind of criminality.
Maybe you can provide that. You did a deep dive. You have seen documents I haven't seen. You issued a damning report, certainly, on poor record-keeping and ridiculous conflicts of interest that shouldn't have existed and that should have been better managed.
However, did you come across any evidence such that you were concerned there was criminality that should be referred to the RCMP?
:
Yes. There's been no production order from the RCMP, so obviously they're not pursuing this as the Conservatives would like, despite the politics of that for them.
I just want to be crystal clear on this, because we've spent unending hours where allegations of criminality and corruption have been made. Individuals have been expressly defamed by my Conservative colleagues on this front.
The Ethics Commissioner said it is his legal obligation to refer the matter to the RCMP and he did not do so because he didn't see anything.
You would have the same legal obligation. You would have referred the matter if there were, and you said there was no even "potentially" criminality in your view, based on all of the documents reviewed.
We have the witness from SDTC here today, who has said, as other witnesses have, because, by the way, we hear from them individually instead of as a group, which is mind-boggling from our time perspective, but regardless.... We have this witness attend alongside other witnesses over the course of the last number of weeks who have said that they have so far implemented and are pursuing 10 of your 11 recommendations.
When you look at the state of affairs, at where SDTC was—the poor record-keeping, the mismanagement of conflicts of interest—to the actions the government has taken subsequently—ultimately winding down SDTC to move it over to the NRC, the actions to adopt your recommendations—are you satisfied with the action that the government and SDTC are taking or do you think it's delayed? Do you think it's inadequate?
Do you think it's frustrating to your recommendations or do you think it's consistent with your recommendations?
I didn't think I would have to use some of my five minutes to educate some Liberal members on your particular role as an Auditor General. You're not a criminal investigator. You've never been set up as a criminal investigator. Your ability to detect potential fraud, or other acts of criminality, in relation to what has transpired under the SDTC is not your mandate, just like the Ethics Commissioner. If it's blatant, if there's an abundance of evidence, as you have indicated, you can make that referral.
The fact of the matter remains, despite the best efforts of Mr. Erskine-Smith, that the RCMP have confirmed that there is an ongoing investigation. Whether or not they ask for a production order from your office remains to be seen, but the fact that they haven't doesn't necessarily mean that they won't. I think that's the message that needs to come through to Canadians watching this. It's an ongoing investigation.
They have also confirmed that they have received documents from the House of Commons in relation to the House order, but they have been heavily redacted, which is precisely why the government and the House of Commons have come to this gridlock. It's because of the government's failure to produce all unredacted documents to the House, which can then be used by the RCMP as they see fit. Whether they look at it or not, that's entirely up to them.
In relation to the potential criminality here, Madam Auditor General, I want to remind Canadians that we're talking about potential fraud and breach of trust. Fraud is defined in the Criminal Code under section 380 as follows:
Every one who, by deceit, falsehood or other fraudulent means, whether or not it is a false pretence...defrauds the public or any person...of any property, money or valuable security....
They are guilty of an indictable offence, depending on the value.
Redirecting taxpayer funds to the tune of almost $400 million outside of contribution agreements, outside of the law, is in its very nature a fraudulent act. Whether or not the Crown can produce and establish intent remains to be seen, but the police will investigate at a lower standard than the Crown prosecutor who prosecutes potential fraudulent actors in relation to this scam.
Let's not forget that the Assistant Deputy Minister McConnachie equated this to simply giving away free money. It was the equivalent of a sponsorship-type scandal. That is how massive this scam, this fraud, this crisis, this issue is that is now bogging down the government operations in the House. To ask you one final question, all of this could go away if the government simply complies with the order of the House and releases all the documents pursuant to that order.
Would you agree with that, Madam Auditor General?
Continuing along MP Brock's line of questions, I'd like to read from a letter from Commissioner Duheme to Michel Bédard, the Law Clerk and Parliamentary Counsel, dated July 25:
Subsequent to the Motion, the RCMP undertook a review and examination of the Office of the Auditor General of Canada...tabled report on SDTC, along with additional administrative reports by Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada and publicly available information. The RCMP has concluded that the available reports do not identify any criminal offences or evidence of criminal wrongdoing at this time, whether in relation to any specific individual or organization.
He does go on to say:
There is significant risk that the Motion could be interpreted as a circumvention of normal investigative processes and Charter protections.
He concludes:
[I'd] like to emphasize as well that the RCMP is operationally independent and strictly adheres to the principle of police independence. In a free and democratic society, this ensures that the government cannot direct or influence the actions of law enforcement and that law enforcement decisions remain based on the information and evidence available to police.
Ms. Hogan, the RCMP can request documents and get warrants for the documents it's seeking if it feels that's appropriate. Why, in your view, is there a need for Parliament to be paralyzed until the government and the OAG release documentation? Is the RCMP not capable of doing the investigations without the need for political intrusion? Do you have any thoughts on this?
:
There have been multiple legal experts and even former legal counsel from the House of Commons who have raised alarms over the motion. In a recent op-ed for The Hill Times, Steven Chaplin, a former senior legal counsel in the office of the House law clerk from 2002 to 2017, deemed the House order unconstitutional.
He said that “MPs have the power to order documents when it's relevant to parliamentary work, or needed to carry out parliamentary duties”, but that “ordering documents to hand over to a third party, like the RCMP, is out of scope since the purpose would be to serve an RCMP investigation, and not a parliamentary proceeding.”
I'm wondering if you have any views on this, Ms. Hogan.
I have to tell you that somewhat conflicts with what we heard from a board member, who said that all the projects would be reviewed, whether or not the Auditor General had found them to be eligible.
There's another question we didn't get an answer to before, so I'm hoping you can answer it.
What will happen if a project the Auditor General found to be ineligible is deemed eligible by the consultants?
Will you follow the decision the Auditor General's office came to or the one made by the consulting firms you hired?
:
Thank you so much, Mr. Chair. It's always good to be back.
It's very nice to see you, Ms. Hogan. Usually we're talking about veterans, but I'm really excited to be here with you today.
My question is about the role your office plays. We know, with the current situation, that there's a lot of tension and a lot of things happening.
If there is an increased request for information for documents, will that have an impact on your office and the work you do?
:
That's helpful to me. Thank you for that.
My next question just flows from that, which is that we know that when these kinds of events happen, there are more and more times that you are requested to come forward to things like this committee and have these discussions.
I'm wondering as we hit this crisis point if there is any need for your office to have more resources to deal with the day-to-day other activities that you need to do. I'm trying to better understand what happens to the Auditor General's office when a crisis comes out and these kinds of requests are coming forward. Are you still able, with the resources you have, to do your work, or does the amount of time that your office is having to put into getting information and having discussions take away from the other things you must do? I'm just curious about that.
:
The $38.5 million went improperly out the door, and your answer is that up until now nothing has been done to recover those funds. That is $38.5 million.
What about the $220,000 that went to Annette Verschuren's company, for which she was found guilty by the Ethics Commissioner? I asked a month ago, when two interim board members appeared here, what steps had been taken to recover those monies, and they couldn't answer.
Has anything happened since, or has the board continued to be AWOL when it comes to making taxpayers whole?
:
Thank you, and again, I apologize, Ms. Khalid.
I think that concludes everyone.
Thank you, Ms. Hogan, and your officials from the Office of the Auditor General, for being here today.
Thank you, Mr. Rahme, for coming in today as well. I know it was under some difficult circumstances, so I do appreciate your making time for us.
Several bits of information have been requested.
[Translation]
You can provide additional information to the clerk. You can also refer to the clerk should you have any questions.
[English]
I'm now going to suspend for two minutes, but before I do that, I'll just say a note. There's a bit of a new system here in the Commons with requesting time. I know that it's quite lengthy on the notice. I'm hoping it's not going to take as long as I have, but I suppose we'll find that out upon our return.
I'll suspend for two minutes to allow our witnesses to exit, and then come back right away.
This meeting is suspended.
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I might need the clerk's assistance. I'm going to send out a schedule right after this meeting, depending on what happens with the motion today.
There are between six and eight witnesses remaining. The clerk will double-check that.
What I'm preparing for, Mr. Drouin, is really the high likelihood.... Hold on for one second: I'm going to keep this somewhat vague because I don't want to.... The Auditor General is expected to table a new round of audits in the fall before Christmas. The Auditor General doesn't generally drop those right before Christmas, so I'm expecting those sooner rather than later, at which point the committee is going to look at those reports and likely prioritize some of them.
That's not as precise as I would like because I think the Auditor General needs to announce when the tabling is going to happen.
The motion also listed a number of witnesses. I'm trying to prioritize those whom I think are of most interest. Some we might get to and some we might not.
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That's a good question.
The motions jump the subcommittee process where we do have that rule in place of witnesses being balanced.
If this is something you would like to see here, I would encourage and suggest to the committee that, in the willingness not to belabour this and not to create a situation where you feel there are names that you would like to present but haven't, if you signal that you'd like to add two witnesses to be determined, we would accept that. That's my recommendation.
In the normal course of matters, the subcommittee looks at things. I do look for witnesses from all parties.
Respectfully, I really take what Mr. Drouin has outlined. I think it's really important for us to be able to make informed decisions. Also, I know that this is not the first time that I have made requests to at least see what the work plan is. What are we looking to do here? Where are we going?
With the amount of time you had scheduled for the committee, I was under the impression today that we were going to walk in and have drafting instructions. I thought it would be amazing that we would actually get somewhere with what we're doing.
Also, I just want to highlight that we don't always know who is coming to the committee. Yes, we've all had opportunities to present the witnesses we have. Right now, I don't know how many witnesses are left on that list. It would be really helpful for me, as well as all of our colleagues at this table, to understand who is left, what our work plan looks like, what that schedule looks like, how long we going to continue this and what the end game is here.
I was just looking at all the meetings that we've had so far. We've had 14 meetings on this. Based on my nine years in Parliament, the average time is usually about four to six meetings per study, and we're hitting our 14th meeting.
We've seen the same witnesses coming in again and again at different committees, depending on the angle that the opposition wants to take, which is absolutely fine. This is an important issue. I'm happy to discuss it, and I'm happy to move forward with it. However, I feel right now that we're just going round and round in circles without really getting to where it is that the committee as a whole wants to get to.
We've had 31 witnesses so far. I don't know what the total number of witnesses on that list is. I don't know how many are remaining. Out of those 31 witnesses, we've heard from SDTC four times. We've heard from the Office of the Auditor General three times. We've heard from Navdeep Bains twice. We've heard from the Privy Council Office twice. Going back, we can see all of the meetings with all of the people who have been invited to come either as individuals or as part of organizations—the NRC, the Office of the Auditor General, the Department of Industry, the Privy Council Office, and then even people as individuals.
What I don't see is why there is a continual effort to add more and more names to this. I don't have an objection to that, but what I do want to know is where we are on that witness list. Are we going to be just producing witnesses and asking people to come in without ever getting to a report stage? I mean, what is the ultimate goal here?
Also, Mr. Chair, I would like to know what other committees are doing on this. I know that a lot of the Conservative members ask similar or the same questions to other committees as well on this topic, and I'm wondering if there's any committee that has gone to or moved forward on report stage. Otherwise, are we just going to be stuck, continuing to go down a path of saying that we need this witness or that we didn't find anything from this witness and so now need this one and now need that one, etc., without actually getting to the crux of what it is we're trying to get to?
I really take note of what the Auditor General said today: that, based on her report and her 12 recommendations, 11 have already been implemented and that the one remaining, which is the project review, is in the process of being implemented. She spoke at length about it.
We've also heard from many witnesses over these past 14 meetings with regard to the amount of work that has been done in that transition process from SDTC into the NRC and what that transition has looked like. I think members all across this table here have had opportunities to ask a really diverse group of witnesses ample questions into these technical challenges as to where it is that we're going with this.
Therefore, Mr. Chair, I just want to, again, agree with Mr. Drouin and say that it doesn't make sense for us to continually move more motions when we haven't seen what the work plan looks like and when we have no idea which witnesses are left on the list.
I think it is really prudent for us to have a look-see as to what exactly the vision is—your vision, Chair, because all of these witnesses do get called at your discretion—and then to see where we are going to go from that point onwards.
I'm not sure if any of my colleagues have their hands raised, but I will park my comments there, Chair. I look forward to hearing what my colleagues have to say on this, and especially what you have to say on this as well, Chair.
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I will say a few points before we get back to the debate on the Bloc amendment to the motion.
This is, I think, partially a reminder. When the committee passes a motion like this to call witnesses, that's very much information that all committee members know, and so we all have the ability to certainly make ourselves aware of where we are at on that list. I say that because it's important. The committee has deemed it a priority that I only call witnesses who have been approved by the committee.
Ms. Khalid, you went through all the witnesses that we have heard of. One of two options...you're certainly welcome to contact the clerk for the full list or to just go back to the motions that were passed by this committee. That's available, and it's available anytime. Just do what I do: I just go through and tick it off.
Next, you asked a question about what other committees are doing. That is definitely not up for this committee to answer. That would be a question for the Library of Parliament.
I want to address those, because those I think are beyond the question of what this committee could and should answer. We're looking at these witnesses.
I do see your hand, Ms. Khalid, and I see yours, Mr. Perkins.
I just wanted to kind of round that out. This is something that the committee has begun to do, which is to push motions here calling forward witnesses. I do my best to bundle them in a way that is relevant to members.
I'll return to the debate.
Mr. Perkins, you have the floor.
Ms. Iqra Khalid: Chair—
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Just on some of the points that have been raised, obviously the committee is in charge of its own destiny. We have gone through a few witnesses, but one of the reasons why committees add witnesses during the study, as we know, is that we get testimony that prompts new evidence or other questions, which has certainly been the case when it comes to what we had from former Liberal minister Bains and the contradictions between some of his testimony. It was hard for him really to contradict a lot of things because he didn't answer a lot of things, but the few things he did answer proved to be different from other witness testimony we had.
This committee has not heard from the witnesses, both the one we put forward, I believe, as well as the ones the Bloc put forward for consideration. I'm always confident, Mr. Chair, that the clerk is always able to figure out the appropriate timing and the number of witnesses to have at the table to fit in a reasonable structure so that we can get to these issues. Personally, I don't think it's necessary to wait for some work plan. I don't think there are a lot of outstanding witnesses other than these ones from the original motion.
I would think that we are able to walk and chew gum at the same time and put forward more witnesses. If that takes a couple of meetings more, I think a $400-million question of what happened to taxpayer money is worth the time and effort.
It always surprises me that folks don't want to get to the bottom of what's happened with regard to the 82% of the conflicts of interest and, quite frankly, contradictory testimony on what happened, the management practices at the place and the relationship between the board members who were appointed, handpicked by the , and put on this board, and the cultural change that happened when the chair, who didn't apply but was asked to take over, sat there, and who has said some things that seem to be very different from what we're hearing from other witnesses.
I'll leave it at that, Mr. Chair, and just say that I think we can go forward with this, put these witnesses on the list and let the clerk sort out the timing.
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We saw, with the assistance of Mr. Drouin and Ms. Khalid, their running interference to protect the minister from answering questions. The first time he appeared before this committee, he did not really answer any questions that were put to him. So blatant and so consistent was his obstruction throughout that hearing that we had a very long debate in which former Liberal minister Bains came close to being found in contempt by this committee.
Now, in the end, after the Liberals filibustered for hours and hours and hours, taking us until, I think, 9:00 or 9:30 to protect former Liberal minister Bains, we agreed to allow him an opportunity to come back. He came back. He continued, in many instances, to not answer questions. In other instances, he gave testimony that contradicted what this committee had heard from other witnesses.
To end the debate on a positive note, I propose that we just adopt the motion and invite the witnesses listed in the amendment and in the motion. Then, I propose that the subcommittee meet so that each party can discuss its priorities for the next group of witnesses to be invited. Those discussions will be informed by the schedule the chair sent out during question period. We also know that the Auditor General will be tabling another report in early December, and that report will probably take precedence over the SDTC study.
It would be nice, then, if all the parties could come to an agreement in subcommittee. That way, they could discuss their respective priorities, and the committee could move forward. I propose the meeting take place on Thursday or Friday of this week. To do this, though, we would have to wrap up this debate and adopt the motion first.