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I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 85 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Government Operations and Estimates, which I like to call—and apparently Mr. Johns disagrees—“the mighty OGGO”.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted by the committee on Monday, October 17, 2022, the committee is meeting on the study of the ArriveCAN application.
As usual, please keep your earpieces away from the microphones, as it causes feedback and potential injury.
I'll give you a quick update on some documents that have been ordered.
Mr. Firth from GC Strategies has contacted the committee regarding bank records related to GC Strategies. We are expecting them to arrive today. Of course, they will then go out for translation.
Before we start, I am going to use the chair's prerogative. It is my wife's birthday.
Voices: Oh, oh!
The Chair: I know she's watching on CPAC.
Voices: Happy birthday to you.
The Chair: I want to wish my wife Sasha a happy birthday. Related, of course, to OGGO, I am cheap. This is her birthday gift. I'll be bringing home a gift-wrapped copy of supplementary estimates (B).
A voice: You are definitely cheap. How about a nice bottle of wine for your wife?
Voices: Oh, oh!
The Chair: I know.
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Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and committee members.
Thank you for the opportunity to appear before you today to describe Public Services and Procurement Canada's role in supporting the Canada Border Services Agency on the ArriveCAN work.
I am joined today by three members of my team working under our professional services procurement directorate: Ms. Angela Durigan, manager, Silvana Mansour, team leader, and Anita Chan, procurement specialist.
[English]
I would highlight that it is extraordinary for frontline operational procurement officers to be called to testify in front of parliamentarians. I would like to thank them for joining me here today to support the committee’s study by providing more insight into procurement and the roles of procurement professionals.
Before we begin, I would like to acknowledge that the land on which we gather today is the traditional, unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishinabe people.
In the earliest days of the pandemic, when the Government of Canada, like all other governments, was working flat out to respond to the pandemic, the procurement professionals at PSPC worked tirelessly to support departments and agencies to source supplies and suppliers in support of its response. To put things in perspective, this was in the early days of the pandemic, when there were lockdowns across the country, hospitals were operating beyond capacity and people were sick and dying. It was also a time when supply chains broke down. It was very difficult to source supplies and find service providers.
At this time, the Canada Border Services Agency analyzed their internal capacity. They did not have the capacity to develop an app with their staffing resources. As a result, CBSA contacted our department for an urgent requirement for professional services to support the development, integration and maintenance of an urgently needed tool to support the implementation of border measures in order to reduce the risk of importation and transmission of COVID-19. This would become the tool we now know as ArriveCAN.
CBSA looked at various options to deliver the application, including leveraging internal staff. However, this option was discarded, as they did not have the capacity or the technical know-how to develop an app of this complexity with the staff available. To find the IT support they needed, PSPC helped CBSA access resources under several PSPC-managed professional services methods of supply and put in place new contracts to fulfill the requirements, some of which were issued under emergency contracting authorities.
Based on information received from CBSA to date, a total of 46 contracts were used, in whole or in part, by CBSA to procure professional services and software licences to support, develop and maintain the ArriveCAN app. Thirty-one of these contracts were awarded by my department. Out of these 31 contracts, 19 were competitively awarded under pre-established supply arrangements; eight were to procure software licences where it was necessary to use sole-sourced contracts due to intellectual property rights or urgent need; and four were sole-sourced contracts for IT consulting services due to the pressing emergency.
To be clear, the government contracts regulations and the associated policy framework allow PSPC and departments to enter into sole-sourced contracts when there is a pressing emergency. The pandemic was such an emergency. Further, in order to support the execution of an effective and rapid government response to the COVID-19 global pandemic, TBS approved time-limited increases to those emergency contracting authority limits.
For 23 contracts, the work was authorized “as and when requested” through task authorizations. Most of these task-based contracts were put in place using the government’s pre-existing methods of supply.
[Translation]
These arrangements allow Canada to solicit proposals from a pool of pre-qualified suppliers, based on a list of pre-defined criteria, and to take advantage of pre-established contract terms and conditions.
[English]
These arrangements were established to add efficiency to the procurement process and to provide clients faster services with less collective administrative cost. By design, they provide a framework for client departments to put in place their own contracts and task authorizations much more easily and to administer their own contracts.
Under these arrangements, client departments develop statements of work and evaluation criteria for the selection process. If the contract value is under $3.75 million, the department can serve as the contracting authority, run the procurement process and put in place the contract. If it is over $3.75 million, PSPC administers the selection and contract award. In both cases, it is the client department that evaluates technical proposals and conducts verifications and clarifications. PSPC, as contracting authority, undertakes the financial assessment and applies the evaluation criteria to recommend a winner. We all verify company and individual security clearances at the time of the award. We also award the contract, once approved by the client department.
These contracts allowed CBSA to move quickly to bring in the resources they needed with the specific technical skills at different points in the development of the app.
Once the contract is in place, it is administered in a shared responsibility between PSPC—
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I will wrap up very quickly.
I would just like to conclude by noting that IT contracting is a very important area also for the support of small businesses in Canada, indigenous businesses in particular. At this committee, you heard from Dalian, which is an indigenous business. Under the procurement strategy for indigenous businesses, federal departments and agencies can set aside contracts when there is known capacity among indigenous businesses. Dalian is such a business.
What is important to understand is that under the procurement strategy for indigenous businesses, 33% of contracted or subcontracted resources must be indigenous, not for a particular task authorization but for the overall value of the contract. Therefore, indigenous businesses can subcontract with non-indigenous businesses.
Again I'd like to thank the committee for the opportunity to be here. We are happy to take your questions.
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Thank you very much, Chair.
Thank you to the witnesses for being here today.
Mr. Mills, you started off by saying it is extraordinary that we would generally have here, if I may say so, the middle managers, not the top officials. That absolutely is extraordinary, but what's also extraordinary is that Canadians paid $54 million for the ArriveCAN app. What is even more extraordinary than that is the RCMP investigation we have now, which has allegations of forged résumés, identity theft, collusion and fraudulent contracting. That's really extraordinary.
What's also extraordinary, Mr. Mills, is that the government has a history of not listening to women, for letting the men speak for women. You can talk to Jane Philpott if you want to know about that. You can talk to Jody Wilson-Raybould about that. You could also talk to Celina Caesar-Chavannes. We originally invited these three women, understanding that they would be perfectly capable of responding for themselves.
Finally, Mr. Mills, if you don't mind my saying so, this committee actually has a history, unfortunately, of senior executives within the government not necessarily telling us the truth in this committee. Unfortunately, I think it's a result of their political masters, but that's certainly a deeper conversation.
With all of that, Mr. Mills, I do believe I, as well as my colleagues, will be communicating mostly with the three other individuals we have brought here today, whom we originally asked for today, and as such—
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That leaves me with four minutes and 30 seconds. Thank you so much.
What I was saying and what I was trying to explain to the two witnesses whom we originally had not invited was that unfortunately, as you well know, Mr. Johns, we have a history in this committee of senior government executives not being forthright with us and not necessarily telling us the truth.
I guess in this room I can frankly say that they were lying to us, as was evidenced by the recent story by Bill Curry in The Globe and Mail. You will then forgive us, please, if we direct our questions to the three other individuals—Ms. Durigan, Ms. Chan and Ms. Mansour—who are here today.
I'll start now.
Ms. Chan, why did you determine Botler's contract to be between Botler and the subcontractor?
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That would have started off with an investigation on our part, once we received the first complaint from Ms. Dutt alleging that her name and that of Mr. Mora were used in a TA, a task authorization, without their consent, and work was being conducted. The work was paid to the contractor on file, which was Dalian and Coradix in a joint venture.
When we inquired further with representatives of Coradix, they informed us that in fact the work provided from the resources was provided by a third party, which was GC Strategies.
From our perspective, because Dalian and Coradix did comply with what we asked for, we determined there was nothing out of the ordinary from our audit. They did not actually breach any contract or any terms of the contract. From then on, it was a dispute between the resources, GC Strategies and the contractor. Canada had no purview in this dispute.
Your co-operation here is greatly appreciated. After several meetings, we're still trying to unpack and piece together what has taken place here.
What we as a committee have learned, from my understanding, is that ArriveCAN isn't under investigation, but allegations from Botler about a tender to build a sexual harassment app are now being reviewed. While the total $55 million cost of ArriveCAN and its 70 updates reflect development, updates, information security, data management, cloud services, the app also saves three dollars per traveller when compared to the old paper system. We learned that it was actually cheaper and it was done in record time under the circumstances.
Botler's principal issue here is a contract between themselves and Coradix and Dalian. Botler was to conduct a six-month proof of concept for their software at the CBSA, with the potential for broader government use. Payment issues arose. Botler claims to have received only two installments, totalling $112,000, of the promised $336,000 for their software configuration work.
We've heard numerous allegations of individuals misleading this committee, from public servants to Botler themselves. This is where we're at right now.
My first question is to Mr. Mills.
At the heart of this situation is a dispute between a subcontractor and a federal government supplier, which began with claims of non-payment. How often would you say that PSPC hears from subcontractors in similar situations or in a dispute with contract holders? Is this common or rare? Can you expand on this?
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Is this with respect to this dispute?
Mr. Parm Bains: That's correct.
Ms. Angela Durigan: In cases where we seek subject-matter experts.... In this particular instance, we consulted with the justice department. From there, we made a determination on how we would proceed. Again, in this instance, as directed by Ms. Chan, we found—based on information provided to us by both Coradix and Dalian in joint venture, as well as by CBSA.... We took that information and determined it was a dispute between the subcontractor and, in this case, the sub-subcontractor.
In recent weeks, an anomaly was brought to the public's and the committee's attention concerning the awarding of a contract to Dalian Enterprises and Coradix Technology Consulting, which also involves GC Strategies and Botler. As you know, it was the latter company that leaked the information. All this happened around the same time that the three companies, GC Strategies, Dalian Enterprises and Coradix Technology Consulting, were working on the ArriveCAN application.
Ms. Chan, as part of these three companies' work on the ArriveCAN application, were any subcontractors not paid on time?
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Well, it's no surprise why outsourcing has gone up fourfold under this government and double under the previous government. This is out of control.
Ms. Durigan, with regard to the task authorizations that GC Strategies provided to this committee last year, you signed for two task authorizations, 2022000080 and 2022016142, which were for a total of $10.2 million. However, the prime contract that was issued was for an estimated cost of only $2.35 million.
My first problem is that the task authorizations can't exceed the value of a prime contract, yet these tasks are more than four times the value of their contract. The second problem is that the contract they were issued under does not exist. GC Strategies didn't provide it to this committee, and it doesn't exist on the CanadaBuys database. There's no record of it existing.
How were task authorizations that were more than four times the value of their contract even permitted to be issued?
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I previously told this committee how much I value the procurement strategy for indigenous business—I think we all should—and how critical it is to have indigenous leadership and involvement in procurement. It's something New Democrats have been fighting hard for, especially in procurement opportunities that directly affect indigenous communities.
I want to make sure of what's happening with these set-asides, but from what I've heard, it doesn't seem like it is how it's supposed to be. PSPC's roles for the program are, rightly, set up to make sure that work doesn't simply get subcontracted to non-indigenous entities, but when I asked Dalian about how they subcontract indigenous set-aside contracts, I was appalled by their answers. They did not acknowledge the requirements for subcontractors to be indigenous.
In fact, Mr. Yeo said the rules allow them to “hire pretty much whoever we want”. He also told us that the indigenous set-aside requirements are audited on every joint venture Dalian and Coradix do. Is it true that this is being audited on every joint venture they do? Is it true that Indigenous Services Canada has audited the Botler work in particular, as Mr. Yeo claimed?
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There is a reason I asked you that. I want to go through a thread of emails between you and Ritika Dutt.
She brought to your attention on May 10, 2023, a number of concerns: that Coradix and Dalian were using their names as resources without their knowledge and consent; that they received payments from the government under the TA; that during the bidding process, they falsely claimed that they had been in contact with Botler and sought their input; that an ATIP from CBSA confirmed that there was no affixation of status of personnel on file; that they, in fact, filed legal notice to the contractor to produce the document, and they failed to comply; and that they sought your help to compel the contractor to produce the document.
There are elements of criminality in that email. There is not only a potential breach of contract and regulations with respect to the TA, but we have elements of fraud and forgery.
Did you get the sense that there was a red flag in this? I'd like to know whether or not you passed this on to the DOJ for consultation. Answer yes or no.
You sent an email to Julie Prud'Homme on May 26 requesting information on the contract with regard to the allegations. On May 26, you received a further email from Botler saying that they were never contracted by Coradix to provide any feedback on the TA, that they did not provide recommendations on any resources, and that the mandatory requirements tabled for herself, which were submitted with the TA, significantly inflated her work experience and were not reflective of her actual work experience. She did not agree or consent to be named on the TA or for the work to be implemented.
Again there's a spectre of criminality. Now we have the spectre of a forged résumé. That's another red flag.
Did you send that particular email to the DOJ for consultation?
We already know what the evidence is. Kristian Firth has testified, and his illogical fantasy of simply making a mistake could have been believed if there had been just one modification to Ritika Dutt's résumé. However, if memory serves me correctly without my looking at the transcript, he attempted on at least five occasions, if not six, to deliberately manipulate the work experience so that when they input the data on the required forms, they would qualify for funding. That is not only forgery but also fraud.
My question to you is this: Why did you not shut this operation down immediately—among GC Strategies, Coradix and Dalian—against this spectre of criminality? It's obvious. Was it not obvious to you?
I'm not asking Mr. Mills. I'm asking Ms. Chan.
Mr. Mills, I'll come back to my previous question.
Why does a recruitment company that lands a contract have to subcontract it to another recruitment company, which will then recruit staff, whether they are individuals who form a company or any other company? Why hire the initial company in the first place if it can't do the job and muster the resources to fulfill the contract? I honestly can't understand that.
We saw it in the Botler AI case, but I'm also thinking of what happened with the ArriveCAN application and all the other situations where someone was able to subcontract to another recruitment company. I find this abhorrent. Why don't we go straight to the company with the required resources?
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Thank you, Mr. Chair, for the question.
In certain cases, as in this one, there are two types of task-based contracts—deliverables-based and individual-based.
In the case of a deliverables-based contract, it is a requirement of the company to figure out how best to bring the resources to meet the requirement that the government puts forward. Sometimes in those cases, you have a recruitment company, as you call them, that has access to a wide variety of resources, but there may be some specific technical resource that they don't have relationships with. In this industry they may partner with another company which itself has access to other resources to bring those people in to deliver a deliverable such as this.
In most cases, at the beginning, if we're looking at the task base in terms of professionals, the professionals and the skill sets are identified, and we are picking firms that already have relationships, have subcontractors and employees who have those skill sets.
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The government is of the position that this is fair value. It was $11 million to a two-person staffing firm that did no work on this app, and we're to be told that the contracting system is fair.
A previous member said, “They can't inflate the price”. Obviously, the price is inflated when there's the ability for ghost contractors and middlemen to make millions of dollars by subbing out the work and never doing a keystroke themselves.
The relationship between this Liberal government, senior government officials and insiders, consultants and lobbyists is.... It's incredibly frustrating for me, but the message I'm hearing from Canadians is that they find it disgusting.
We have Canadians who are struggling. Over the last eight years, rents have doubled. Mortgage payments are up by 151%. There are more than two million monthly users of food banks, and a third of those are children. Everything that has happened with the ArriveCAN app and the responses that we're getting that this is fair value for Canadians' money is why Canadians have lost faith in the head of government, the . This is why they are losing faith in their institutions.
I don't find it reasonable or credible that we hear, “It's fair value. There's no room for the contractors to bid up higher commissions.” The project shouldn't have cost $54 million when a couple of yo-yos in a basement using Google are able to collect $11 million.
If you need specialists on how to find some savings, I'm sure there are people who are a lot smarter than I am who can find ways other than that big red circle I just drew around the $11 million.
I don't have any more questions.
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I have a lot of questions.
I have to admit that I came into this book at chapter 12, so I'm still trying to figure this out.
There's been the allegation that the résumés of a couple of Botler employees were doctored to make them look better than they were, to make it appear that they had 10 years of experience when they didn't have that experience.
Am I right, Mr. Mills? You said that the departments, not PSPC, have the task of ensuring that subcontractors have the ability to do the tasks they're entrusted with. In this case, would CBSA be the one responsible for looking at the résumés, or would it be you?
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The prime contractor has the obligation to attest to it. Okay.
The second thing is that we've heard several members of the committee questioning what value, if any, companies like Dalian and Coradix provide for the charges and the government money they receive. I wonder if I could ask you about this, because I would have thought that you might question spending a lot of money on these sorts of intermediaries, but I would have thought that they performed some valuable tasks that take time.
The question was, why don't you deal with subcontractors directly? Do they not do a fair bit of the administrative things that are required in order to get something done for the government? Is that not the value that they add?
Fundamentally, your PSPC department is responsible for assessing value for money in the context of procurement. I understand that to be part of your responsibilities.
I've been able to find a list of apps that were developed under the Harper Conservative government. These apps are complex in nature: the CRA Business Tax Reminders app, CBSA's eDeclaration app, the Canadian Armed Forces app, etc. All of these apps were developed, in most cases, for well under half a million dollars. In one case, it was closer to $3 million.
This particular app was developed at costs that were dramatically out of proportion with the costs of other apps developed under the previous government. Doesn't this suggest that your department failed to do its job in terms of achieving value for money?
Ms. Durigan, did you want to intervene on that?
I'll start off by saying thank you so very much, Ms. Durigan, Ms. Chan and Ms. Mansour, for the many years of service that you've provided to this government, to procurement and to IT. Thank you for taking the time to share some of your expertise here.
I have a question to Mr. Mills.
If PSPC came across evidence of CV embellishment of the kind we heard about, allegedly in order for companies to help them win bids, what are some of the steps and repercussions that PSPC would take?
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Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Mr. Ozmutlu, Coradix Technology Consulting and Dalian Enterprises were awarded two contracts for work on the ArriveCAN application, contracts that were set aside under the procurement strategy for indigenous businesses. However, only Mr. Yeo, the president and founder of Dalian Enterprises, is a member of the first nations. Mr. Yeo told us that some of his subcontractors were also members, but was unable to specify how many.
The purpose of the strategy is not only to give more control to first nations, but also to encourage their members to acquire specialization and expertise in fields that are useful to them and also useful to the Government of Canada, as well as to the overall economy.
If only one person in a company is first nations and that person is a contractor, does the contract automatically meet the objectives of the procurement strategy for indigenous business?
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The public has every right to know the answer to that question.
I agree with my colleague, Mr. Kusmierczyk, about the value and appreciation we have for the work that you've done and the commitment all of you have made to Canada. It's really hard to be in a committee setting and be pressing you like this, but people are struggling and they're not getting the answers they need.
I have to say that I've heard that it isn't good for the morale of public servants when they hear a company is taking a $10-million slice of $55 million in contracts when they're not even experts in that field.
Are you looking at fixing it to bring in-house the capacity to replace these subcontractors that don't have the expertise to do that work on behalf of Canadians in-house themselves? Are you looking at doing that?
Ms. Chan, I'm looking at the email from Ritika Dutt on Friday, May 26, in which she states: “While work was done for the implementation of Botler's solution in the CBSA, we did not agree or consent to be named on this TA or for the work to be implemented under this specific TA. Since our personal information has been used by Coradix to implement this Task Authorization, we are requesting that Coradix produce any documentation claiming to contain our consent to be named as resources in this TA. We also request documentation of alleged correspondence and feedback between Botler and Coradix during the implementation of this TA, including naming Patrick van Abbema as a resource based on “Botler's feedback””.
I then look at your response, Ms. Chan, on Monday, June 5, 2023, in an email back to Ms. Dutt, which states, “In light of the facts presented to us, Canada has determined this matter is an issue between the three parties, yourself, the Contractor Dalian Enterprises and Coradix Technology Consulting in joint venture, and the third party GC Strategies. No further action is required on our part.”
When you had that initial email from Ms. Dutt, whom did you consult with?
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Who made the final decision? Ms. Chan, there must have been one person who said, “Do you know what? We're not going to deal with this. We're not going to get involved. This is the way it is in the Government of Canada. People get paid outlandish amounts. This is the way contracting is. We just sign the sections.”
I was very fortunate to be with Global Affairs Canada for close to 15 years. I was a management consular officer there. I've been through procurement strategies. Certainly I'll admit that I haven't received the extent of training you have, but the outlines for what classifies as a sole proprietorship are very clear, and what it is when these conditions are not met when there is a contract you are drawing from with a preferred supplier.
It is astounding that these contracts were four times over the amount. The rules are very clear, very precise, but at the same time we have our own judgments as individuals and as teams as to where we go. This doesn't make sense. This is an outlandish amount. At some place, the buck has to stop. Somewhere, someone has to take responsibility.
Who made the final decision that it was not for you to decide, that your organization could wash their hands of it and you could just write that note to Ms. Dutt and say that Canada is not involved and they have to work it out with these other three shady companies?
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Okay. You're taking personal responsibility for that.
I have some more news for the committee. In that June 5 email, it does say, “Canada has determined”. Well, as outlined on the Government of Canada buyandsell.gc website, Canada is defined as “His Majesty the King in right of Canada as represented by”—wait for it—“the Minister of Public Works and Government Services”, so Canada is someone. It is a minister, and they are ultimately responsible for what has happened here today, Mr. Chair.
Mr. Chair, with my remaining time, I would please just like to check in on the situation with Mr. Doan, who of course appeared before this committee previously. We had discussed, based upon the outcome of his initial appearance, that we would be interested in having a further conversation with him.
Where are we at, please, with his appearance?
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My last line of questions can be answered by anybody.
The Globe and Mail on November 7 reported that on November 3 President Erin O'Gorman of the CBSA “asked PSPC, and they agreed, to temporarily suspend all CBSA contracts with GCStrategies, CORADIX Technology Consulting Ltd., and DALIAN Enterprises Inc.”
The suspension could last up to 180 days.
The article continued, “Although these allegations and investigations are not about ArriveCAN”, she said, “'I recognize the ongoing audits and investigations may yield findings relevant to that procurement.'”
All of Canada found out on October 4, 2023, through another Globe and Mail story that the RCMP was investigating GC Strategies as the sole-source contract with the CBSA and Botler based on the evidence heard regarding the offences of forgery and fraud that were under consideration, yet 20 days later, on October 24, PSPC invited GC Strategies to tender on a temporary help service request.
Why? You knew they were under RCMP investigation and you invited them to tender yet again. This is for—get this—computer support on a temporary basis. You were asking a two-person company that works out of their basement, that doesn't provide any service, that was under criminal investigation, to tender on this. Why?
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Excellent. Excellent. Great.
When you look at the fact that $54 million was spent on this app and, as I outlined earlier, that various comparable apps prepared under the previous Conservative government were done for much lower costs—generally under half a million dollars, or, in one case, going up to $3 million—you see that we are talking about orders of magnitude more money.
Did you look at this contract and say, “This isn't value for money”, or did you look at it and say, “Yes, it sounds fine” and stamp it?
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That is our time, Mr. Kusmierczyk.
Witnesses, thanks for being with us.
Mr. Mills, I just want to follow up on a couple of things. My colleague Mr. Brock asked a question regarding the bonus. I assume that you will just write back to us with an answer. I think I know the response, but you will respond to us.
With regard to the NDA, will you just provide it? You mentioned that you weren't sure that you had it. Would you just simply provide it to us if you have it?
Mr. Michael Mills: We'll provide what we have.
The Chair: That's perfect. Thanks very much.
Thanks to everyone for being with us today. If there's nothing else, we are adjourned.