:
I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 83 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Government Operations and Estimates.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted by the committee on Monday, October 17, 2022, the committee is resuming its the study of the ArriveCAN application.
I'll remind you not to have your earpieces near your microphone, as it causes feedback and potential injury. In accordance with our routine motion, I'm letting everyone in the committee know the witnesses appearing by video conference have completed the required connection test in advance of the meeting.
Mr. Firth, we will turn things over to you, for five minutes.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair, and good afternoon.
I am grateful to finally have the opportunity to correct the mistakes, omissions and falsehoods that have been voiced at and by this committee, and in the newspapers, over the past number of weeks.
The first one is with respect to my summons. I readily accepted the committee's invitation to appear, as I did last year, when I was the first to show up and testified for over two hours. I told the committee that because of parenting responsibilities this week, I could be available for one hour, but the committee preferred the two hours I'd be available the following week. I was portrayed as a reluctant witness who was playing hard to get. This is actually far from the truth.
Without this opportunity to appear here today, GC Strategies would continue to be bound to the confidentiality agreement with Botler that was conveniently presented to me for signature right before it started feeding the media with information. It wasn't out of choice that GC Strategies remained silent after learning of the numerous allegations made by Botler, especially being on the other side with contradicting information.
I welcome the opportunity to again explain my business and the contracting processes for government departments that have existed for several decades. The system has outsourced many contracting functions to the private sector. I was not around when this practice was established, but presumably the belief was that a competitive private sector could operate better than an increased bureaucracy.
The system provides that only qualified private sector vendors can bid on and receive government contracts. Becoming a qualified private sector vendor is not easy or quick. Many checks for security and reliability are required. GC Strategies has been a qualified vendor since 2015. There are between 600-700 such qualified vendors in Canada, competing on a daily basis to provide services to government departments and agencies.
These vendors range from very large companies that do work in-house to smaller vendors, such as ours, that put teams together on a case-by-case basis. This competitive system forces qualified vendors to continually deliver quality services at competitive rates, or they would simply not be able to secure work.
Because we rely on teams on a case-by-case basis, it is imperative that we cultivate relationships with service providers and advance their interests. However, we also need to maintain connections with departments to understand their needs and understand where the market is heading.
That is my business, and I'm proud of it, as I'm sure all other vendors in Canada are proud of theirs. You may not like the system that is in place. You might think the government can do the job better itself. You may not respect our work, and that is your right.
I, like all people running a business, make mistakes. We try to learn from our mistakes, but, in all honesty, we'll likely make more. GC Strategies made a mistake by sending the wrong version of the resumé, which ended up being submitted to the Government of Canada for the task authorization; however, this regrettable mistake was not intentional, and it in no way determined the awarding of the contract.
In short, the CBSA had pre-qualified the owners of Botler to do the work, as they were the only two resources with knowledge of their software. Botler was approved before any resumé was submitted or a task authorization created. This is all relevant to the specific events surrounding Botler.
Botler was a client I recruited because I thought it could fill an important need for the government's compliance with Bill . I thought its specific product would be useful for many departments. I spent the better part of two years working with Botler and introducing it to various departments. The CBSA was one of them, but there were many more. I was even working with Botler to get it qualified as a vendor, so it could fulfill contracts directly, eliminating the need for vendors like GC Strategies.
The Botler pilot was delivery based, so Botler would get paid only when it delivered. It delivered the first two deliverables and was then paid everything it was owed. At no time did GC Strategies ever receive money for those deliverables that we did not immediately pass on to Botler.
Botler stopped delivering what was required of it, and the CBSA terminated the contract. I was asked to gather from Botler all new work that was done prior to termination and submit that to the CBSA for a review and payment. Nearly two months passed. At that point, Botler submitted the remaining four deliverables, along with an invoice. The deliverables were then submitted to the CBSA, and they were not approved. The documents were unreadable, and once a version came through that could be evaluated, the CBSA determined the work to be substandard, and it refused to pay.
That leads us here today.
Let me be clear. The Botler pilot project was in no way connected to ArriveCAN. GC Strategies made no money whatsoever after working with Botler for two years, including the pilot. GC Strategies, Dalian and Coradix each had their own individual contracts to complete work on ArriveCAN. At no point did GC Strategies work with or act as a subcontractor on Dalian or Coradix's contract for ArriveCAN. All work done for the ArriveCAN app by GC Strategies was done using our own contract.
Thank you.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Mr. Firth, as my colleague said, there may have been some conflating of the contract with Botler AI on harassment and the one on ArriveCan. Despite this, we need all the information to understand what links you to this, and above all, what your role was.
I'd like to know, for ArriveCan, whether you worked directly with Dalian Enterprises and Coradix Technology Consulting.
:
You win some, you lose some.
Up to that point, having represented them for 12 months, I had made zero dollars. I got the pilot. I didn't get any money off this one. In sales, sometimes you win some and sometimes you lose some.
I was looking out for the next one. It was not to recover money, but my understanding was.... I thought we had something. Again, I continued to work with them—even after I got zero dollars—to try to get new meetings, to understand that I would get money eventually, on one of these contracts.
Mr. Firth, there are a few things I want to remind you about before I ask you some questions.
With respect to parliamentary privilege—which every member enjoys in this committee—it's a contempt of Parliament, sir, to mislead this committee by giving a false statement or false evidence; to refuse, unless related to cabinet confidence, to answer any questions; or to fail to produce documents that this committee might require someone to produce.
Although you have not sworn on a holy book, this parliamentary privilege binds your conscience and binds your responses to always provide us with the truth.
Do you understand that, sir?
One area that you have been presented with, sir, which gives me great discomfort as a parliamentarian, is the issue regarding résumés. Quite frankly, sir, whether you call it a mistake, whether you call it a lack of intent or whether you refer to it as an embellishment, in my respectful submission, that is a lie. No one believes you. No one in this room believes you. We have national reporters in this room, and I doubt very much that they believe you, because your story is so fantastic, it's simply unworthy of belief.
You, sir, at all material times, received only one version of the CV from both Ritika Dutt and Amir Morv. There was one CV. There was one résumé. That was not ambiguous. That was not confusing. You took it upon yourself to manipulate both of those résumés to ensure that Botler qualified for government funding. You did that without the express permission or consent of either of Botler's executives. In doing so, sir, you have committed a serious criminal offence.
Do you have anything to say about that, or are you going to continue on this line of “I made a mistake”?
When you appeared before this committee on October 20, 2022, you stated that you had billed $9 million for time, material and engagement on the ArriveCan app, over two years.
If I average the amount you give us earlier, which you say is between $90 and $120 an hour, that comes to $105. If I divide $9 million by $105 and then divide that by two, that's almost 43,000 hours of work per year. Those hours were billed by GCstrategies.
Did that cover only your own work, or did it also include that of your subcontractors?
:
Let me jump in, because there are some things you're saying that make sense, but there are some things that don't.
I would understand if you got a résumé that was too long, that contained errors or that didn't contain important information, and you said, “Hey, we need to get more background on your educational experience. You missed identifying specific skills.” If that's what you mean by “fit the matrix”, maybe that's a conversation you had with them.
What seems to have happened here, though, is that, in order to make it compliant with the specifications they were asking for, you changed some numbers. Asking someone to provide further information is one thing. Massively inflating a number associated with a particular field or taking someone with a bachelor's degree and editing that to say “Ph.D.” is not just making it systematically compliant. That's making substantive data changes.
How did it happen that you made substantive changes to the data on a résumé and, in this case, didn't consult with the resource?
It was a fixed price, and there seems to be a discrepancy between the $350,000 as a fixed price and $336,000, with Dalian and Coradix charging $14,000 on top for whatever, but that's really understood. At least we know the number, and we know how to reconcile.
Can you talk abut the relationship between you, Dalian and Coradix as it relates to the Botler AI pilot?
:
The government had the relationship with Dalian and Coradix, and you had the relationship with Botler.
Mr. Kristian Firth: That's correct.
Mr. Majid Jowhari: Why, in this case, did they need to go through you as an intermediary? Although you're claiming there was zero cost, because there was anticipation that in future business dealings you may be compensated, why would that intermediary be needed? Why couldn't Dalian and Coradix go directly to Botler rather than having three subcontractors coming under you, and then going to CBSA, doing the work, and then getting paid by the CBSA, to Botler, to you...?
This is where I—
Mr. Firth, I'm sure the millions of Canadians who either are watching this or will learn about this in the press or seek out the transcript of this particular meeting will be very, very grateful that the RCMP has access to this particular evidence.
I can understand why you would take active steps in misleading this committee, and Canadians, with respect to your role as it relates to fraud and forgery with respect to modifying without permission and consent these résumés to the government.
What I can't understand is why you would deliberately lie to this committee on a very innocent question that was put to you by my colleague, Mr. Barrett, when he asked if you knew whether or not Mr. Cameron MacDonald from the CBSA had a cottage, and you said, “No.”
Do you want to reflect on that answer?
:
It's obviously a problem that you change the numbers, then go back and ask for permission. It's great that Botler did the right thing here and blew the whistle. However, in many cases, if you're routinely changing the numbers, people may shrug and say it's okay, based on you telling them that it's okay when, obviously, it's not.
I have some additional questions, though, sir, that I want to ask you.
You said, in response to a previous question.... You were asked whether you'd ever met Marc Brouillard, former CTO of Canada, in a hotel. You said no, at the time.
Do you have any interest in correcting that answer?
I think there will be some follow-up on that point, sir. It feels a bit like we're on The Maury Show here.
Going back to October 20—your appearance before the committee last year—you said, “We are not in any conversations for budgeting or cost controls. We have quality control. If a resource isn't performing, we will then work with the government to replace that.” You're not involved in conversations on budgeting or cost control. You told the committee that a year ago.
Sir, was it true, what you told the committee at that time?
The Globe and Mail was able to get access to an email you sent, though, on January 26, 2021. In that email, you talked explicitly about budgeting. You said:
CBSA were pissed at the overall pricing and threatened to pull the contract.
You also said:
Your cost, plus 15% for me and 20% for Coradix etc, it rose to close to $500k! I was not prepared to slow the process down and stop our first client from purchasing so I removed myself from the equation completely and gave them a 15% discount.
Attached is a contract that shows...
You're sending emails that provide explicit budgeting information. Given that we have now put that email on the record, would you be prepared to admit that what you told the committee on October 20 regarding budgeting was, in fact, also a lie?
:
You didn't come here with information that GC Strategies didn't do work on ArriveCAN but billed the taxpayers for it. Got it.
The answer is October 2023.
I'm going to read you a transcript of a leaked audio file. It's of you. You said, “We did the ArriveCAN app, which is one that everybody has to use to come across the border, in two months. And that has like 27 pages, 15 workflows, e-declarations, facial recognition, NFC capability of the passport.” If it took you two months to do the work, why are you still billing taxpayers in October of this year?
:
The problem we have here today is that for all of my questions, we have to assume that you've lied about absolutely everything.
Sir, I've never said to a witness in my parliamentary career that they have lied to a committee, but you just did. I'm not sure if you thought you were clever, pulling at the source off your shelf. “It's not a cottage; it's a chalet.” It's embarrassing. What you're doing is disrespectful to members of this committee and it's disrespectful, frankly, to the Government of Canada, which is paying your rent.
Taxpayers should be very concerned that a dollar has flowed from the Government of Canada to your organization, because everything you've said here today is absolutely unacceptable for a contractor for the Government of Canada—
:
What is your interpretation of a cottage versus a chalet?
We have records of you meeting at a hotel with the CIO for the Government of Canada, and now you're telling this committee, “I don't have any recollection of that.” I have to tell you, if I meet with the top person from an organization, I'm going to remember that meeting, particularly if I've had to comply with an access to information request concerning that, and then furnished that request.
Sir, you're being dishonest and disingenuous in all of your answers to our questions. I appreciate that you're embarrassed about the work that you've done and about the things that you've said, but you are required to be honest when you come before a parliamentary committee, and this clever act that you're trying to put on is not fooling anyone.
I'm going to ask you some of these questions again.
Have you ever met with government officials or anyone employed by the government in a private residence, yes or no?
:
Well, your answer changes. I have about a minute left in my time and I'm interested in what precision we can get on any of that.
You've had so many meetings with government officials in their private residences outside of working hours that you can't even remember. You can't remember how much money you were paid to work on the ArriveCAN app. You can't remember meetings that you had in hotels with chief officials for information technology for the Government of Canada. I'm not sure what confidence your clients can have in you if you can't remember these very basic details.
Sir, I'm going to ask that you table for this parliamentary committee all bank records related to your business and the Government of Canada: GC Strategies, the Government of Canada and Botler. For anywhere that nexus exists, this committee and I would like you to table the bank records.
Are you willing to do that? Answer yes or no, sir.
Obviously, we've heard a lot of things today. Some really interesting testimony and information have been established.
I want to provide you the opportunity to explain to us the actions of Botler AI from your vantage point.
We see, for example, Botler AI has tape-recorded you. They have asked you to sign an NDA. They've reported on misconduct and potential fraud to the CBSA, in fact presented a detailed report on that. They've also gone directly to the media and they have brought their allegations here to this committee.
Help us explain those actions from your vantage point, and how we should be viewing those actions.