:
I was going to explain that. I will come to that in a few minutes.
[Translation]
Welcome to meeting number 113 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.
This is a reminder that all comments should be addressed through the chair.
[Translation]
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(3)(g), the committee is resuming consideration of report 1 of the 2024 reports of the Auditor General of Canada, entitled “Report 1: ArriveCAN”, referred to the committee on Monday, February 12, 2024.
[English]
Before I welcome our witnesses, I will be happy to explain the sudden agenda change.
To be efficient, I was trying to schedule as many witnesses as possible. Over the last day, some committee members requested more time, which would have taken us beyond 5:30. Members then highlighted the motion passed by this committee that required a two-hour meeting. I felt it was getting a bit crowded, so in light of the motion that was passed calling for a full two hours with KPMG—
Without further ado, let me welcome our witnesses.
From Amazon Web Services Inc., we have Nicole Foster, director, global artificial intelligence and Canada public policy; and Nick Markou, head of professional services, Canada public sector.
Welcome, and thank you for agreeing to appear today.
From BDO Canada, we have Mike Abbott, managing partner, markets and industry.
Thank you for being here.
From Microsoft Canada Inc., we have John Weigelt, chief technology officer. Thank you for being here.
I'll flag this up front: You might have experience appearing before a parliamentary committee; if you do, that's great, but if not, that's no problem.
Members will have time to ask each of you questions. In the course of those questions, they might ask for additional information. Committees do have broad powers to summon information. We don't usually go from zero to 60 that quickly. We hope witnesses will agree to provide information. Obviously, if information is sensitive or commercially confidential, we do understand that and we will work with you.
As questions come up, if you feel you're able to assist us, just acknowledge that. If there is some give-and-take, we can look at that down the road. We generally hope witnesses will get back to us within two or three weeks, at which point the analyst will reach out. We'll also keep track of what might be asked of you, so you don't need to scribble it down here. The blues will be made available for the record here.
It's meant to be helpful to the committee, so don't be caught off guard by it. As a first step, you're not expected to reveal all. Having said that, we do hope that witnesses will lean towards accountability and transparency as much as possible.
As you can see, this committee, and indeed all of Parliament, is seized by this study on ArriveCAN. It originated from a motion passed in Parliament.
If you have any questions, feel free to ask me. I do want to be sure that everyone is treated fairly.
I understand there are opening statements of up to five minutes.
Let's begin with Amazon.
:
Thank you for the opportunity to testify today as part of your study on the Auditor General's report and to assist you in understanding Amazon Web Services' role as a contractor on ArriveCAN.
My name is Nicole Foster and I am the Canada public policy lead as well as director of global AI public policy at AWS.
I'm joined here today by my colleague, Nick Markou, who is the head of our advisory services for our public sector business in Canada.
AWS is the world's most comprehensive and broadly adopted cloud service provider. Millions of customers, including the fastest growing start-ups, the largest enterprises and leading government agencies, are using our services to lower costs, become more agile and innovate faster.
AWS is architected to offer the most secure cloud computing services available today. We support more security standards and compliance certifications than any other cloud provider, thereby helping satisfy security and compliance requirements for virtually every regulatory agency around the globe.
Here in Canada, the Canadian Centre for Cyber Security and the Department of Public Services and Procurement assess our security protocols annually. These agencies have assessed 150 of our services, which have all been deemed compliant as meeting their security requirements.
Mr. Chair, in 2020, AWS was contracted by the Government of Canada through established Shared Services Canada procurement channels to work with the Canada Border Services Agency and the Public Health Agency of Canada.
The objective was to help launch an application that would allow travellers to provide customs information electronically. Given the national emergency created by the pandemic, CBSA and PHAC chose to host the application on the cloud because of its well-known ability to quickly enable innovation at scale.
Our work was focused on the back-end architecture of the system; we did not develop the consumer-facing app. In terms of specifics, AWS's work was confined to the two following areas.
In the first component, AWS provided cloud services to the ArriveCAN program, including data storage, analytics and security services. This also included a variety of off-the-shelf services that we offer, such as translation, as well as text-to-speech technology. The benefits of using cloud for ArriveCAN was speed of innovation, the ability to meet fluctuating demands and only paying for capacity that was used.
In the second component, AWS provided expert advisory services and training to CBSA to establish the cloud environment for the ArriveCAN program. Specifically, we advised and assisted CBSA in leveraging AWS services and security architecture, including design recommendations and code to meet Canada's security requirements. Some specific examples include evidence reports for CBSA audits and compliance with Shared Services Canada guardrails and controls, as well as helping to create data storage architecture for pandemic cross-border traffic.
We also provided architecture design advice and assistance for ensuring the AWS cloud environment could integrate with other components of the project. This actually required quite a bit of complexity. For example, ArriveCAN needed to integrate with the government's firewall configurations and other related security integrations between CBSA and PHAC.
Much of this foundational work to enable digital services at CBSA is considered to be reusable assets and provides the groundwork for other highly secure workloads.
I'd like to reiterate that our commitment to privacy and security is one of the reasons customers choose AWS. Our extensive security technologies, 24-7 monitoring and alerting, and rigorous attention to all aspects of securing AWS infrastructure are designed to ensure that customers' data can be used only by them.
To be clear, AWS did not develop the ArriveCAN app itself and at no point did AWS have access to any personal data from Canadians while working on ArriveCAN.
All of the AWS employees who have worked on ArriveCAN are Canadian citizens and have the necessary security clearance, which is governed by the Treasury Board standard on security screening.
Thank you for this opportunity to speak with you today. Mr. Markou and I will endeavour to answer your questions to the best of our abilities.
Thank you.
Let me start by thanking the chair, the clerk and all committee members for the invitation to be here today.
We at BDO Canada appreciate the importance of this issue. That's why we're happy to answer any questions you may have.
My name is Mike Abbott. I'm the managing partner of markets and industry for BDO Canada. I'm a member of our firm's executive, reporting directly to our CEO.
One of my mandates is to head up our firm's industry program, including our public sector business, and all of our federal government work. We provide a variety of services and solutions to government departments, agencies and Crown corporations, in the same manner as we do for private sector organizations. Our work with the Canada Border Services Agency is provided largely through a standing professional services contract awarded to BDO in September 2020, following a competitive procurement process. Under the terms of that contract, CBSA can call upon BDO personnel to provide services in six specific resource categories. The nature of that work includes management consulting, business architecture and design, risk management, and other advisory services for business and technology projects.
This is how we were first engaged directly at BDO to support the ArriveCAN project in November 2020. Overall, our work consisted of two narrowly defined streams. Our primary stream of work, directly for CBSA, was focused on management consulting and strategic advice, contending largely with accessibility issues of ArriveCAN. The government recognized that it needed ArriveCAN to be accessible for Canadians with visual and hearing impairments and other usage challenges. This work was technically complicated, but our team worked with dedication to achieve the requested results. This stream accounted for about 85% of our work on the project.
The second stream was conducted by our Lixar division. That was done as a subcontractor through GC Strategies, which had been contracted by CBSA. This accounted for 15% of our work on the project. This work specifically consisted of getting access to our data scientists, our programming and our application builders around optical reading and reader technology.
In total, BDO's work represented a little less than 5% of the overall total attributed to the ArriveCAN project by the Auditor General. All of this was completed in compliance with applicable terms and conditions based on statements of work and supported by time sheets and other administrative details.
The Auditor General raised no questions with respect to the value for money we provided or with respect to the completeness of our administrative practices or paperwork. It is also true that this work took place under unprecedented conditions due to the pandemic, with an incredible sense of urgency. Having worked with CBSA, we appreciated the vital importance of supporting the safe movement of people and goods in the midst of this health crisis.
We felt acutely that our work for CBSA mattered. However, none of that meant it had to come at the expense of appropriate controls, and we took steps to ensure that, for our part, it did not.
Again, we recognize the importance of this committee's work in reviewing the Auditor General's study and, in that respect, would welcome any questions you might have.
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair and committee members, for the invitation to be here before this committee today.
Microsoft is one of the world's leading public cloud providers. It is also a long-standing technology partner and trusted vendor to the Government of Canada. We are very proud of our social and economic impact in Canada over the past 40 years. Microsoft is built on trust. Integrity and accountability are part of our core company values. We don't just follow and comply with global rules and regulations applicable to us as a service provider; we believe it's our responsibility to establish and model the highest ethical and reporting standards.
We believe we are here today because you are interested in understanding our role as a contractor, as referenced in the 2024 Auditor General's Report 1 on the ArriveCAN app.
Let me be clear: Microsoft Canada was not engaged in the development, deployment or maintenance of the ArriveCAN app. In May 2021, CBSA wanted to build a mobile app for their border security officers to verify vaccination information using a QR code on a mobile phone. We referred to this app as the “BSO app”. This app is separate from the ArriveCAN app. The BSO app was intended to process travellers at primary points of entry into Canada, to display and authenticate traveller data for officers, and to connect that information to the ArriveCAN app.
Think of it this way: The BSO app was intended for border services agents. That's one island. The ArriveCAN app is citizen-facing on another island. Microsoft was contracted to help CBSA build that bridge between the two islands—or apps, in this case. CBSA licensed Microsoft cloud computing services and engaged Microsoft to provide related technical advisory services to support CBSA's development of that bridge, which is a connector between the BSO app and the ArriveCAN app.
The documentation we have regarding service orders specifically attributed to the BSO app does not align with the $3.8 million reflected in the AG's report. Our thorough review of our internal documentation estimates the service orders total approximately $1.3 million. This amount is more in line with the figures reflected in the Office of the Procurement Ombudsman report—otherwise known as the OPO report—rather than the $3.8 million identified in the Auditor General's report. Microsoft has not had access to the documents reviewed by the Auditor General to understand how this overall figure was calculated.
CBSA procured the cloud computing and related cloud advisory services directly from Microsoft using a Government of Canada cloud framework agreement. No part of this work was subcontracted.
Allow me to explain this process.
Microsoft provides limited cloud computing and cloud advisory services to the Government of Canada under a Government of Canada cloud framework agreement. We are one of eight providers that qualified through a competitive procurement process to enter into one of these agreements. Shared Services Canada is the contracting and technical authority for the cloud framework agreement. Government departments and agencies can then select from a catalogue of approved cloud computing services and related advisory services available for purchase, pursuant to a cloud provider's cloud framework agreement. To execute the purchase, the department submits a service order that specifies the quantity and scope of service chosen from the Shared Services catalogue for approval. Once approved, the order is sent to the service provider. The service provider fulfills that order according to the terms and conditions of the GC cloud framework agreement.
Microsoft followed this established process with respect to the cloud computing and related advisory services required by CBSA for the BSO app.
Regarding Government of Canada procurement processes more generally, we feel there's an opportunity to better align with market offerings and evolve alongside technological advancements, in order to deliver on-demand digital services to Canadians. Industry, including Microsoft, has been working in collaboration with Government of Canada officials in Public Services and Procurement Canada, the Treasury Board Secretariat and Shared Services Canada to help modernize procurement practices, especially where they pertain to procurement of cloud services and complex IT solutions. Shared Services Canada is currently working on maturing the GC cloud framework agreement. We are encouraged that it is progressing.
Modernizing procurement isn't just a choice. It's essential for achieving the government's digital ambition securely, as well as for being competitive and interoperable globally.
Thank you, and I welcome your questions.
Thank you to the witnesses for your attendance today. It's much appreciated.
The focus on my first round of questioning will be on relationships and, in particular, relationships with the government related to BDO and Amazon Web Services.
The question first to Amazon Web representatives, in relation to the arrive scam, as we call it on this side of the House, is I understand you billed almost $4.3 million to the PSPC. I also understand that at no time were you the actual contractor, you were the subcontractor. Is that correct?
I would like to get us out of here on time or as close as possible.
Ms. Shanahan, that is not a point of order.
One of your members is up next and if there are additional questions you have for Ms. Foster....
None of us in this room think that political participation is a bad thing. In fact, I think we all encourage it.
I will note that you have dined out on a donor card that's been displayed here and I have not stopped you from doing that. So we will continue to hear from Mr. Brock and Ms. Foster, who is doing a fine job answering his questions and will continue to do that. Then it will be one of your members who will have a turn.
:
I think, from a reusable asset perspective, we built out components of the ArriveCAN program along the lines of security, data management and those types of things. When we were working with CBSA, ArriveCAN was one of the many applications and programs that we were working with them on.
The analogy that I like to use, to remove the technicality from it, is that, if you were building a condo building, for instance, you build the foundation once. You don't build a new foundation for every condo that you equip. I would say that would be an analogy for some of the reusable assets that we built.
Ultimately, for CBSA, on things like the authority to operate, they were able to gain the audits that they passed. Those were essentially reusable assets. While they may have been built as part of the ArriveCAN program, they're not necessarily for the exclusive use of the ArriveCAN program. They can, at the choice of CBSA or other parts of government, be used for other components.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair. I appreciate that introduction. I'm honoured.
Thank you all for being with us. Today, you're helping us understand what really happened and the various layers of government mismanagement.
Here's one of the biggest questions we have, not just all of us here on the committee, but also many taxpayers in Quebec and Canada: How does the subcontracting process work when businesses are very small and don't actually provide any services? I'm talking about businesses such as GC Strategies, Dalian, Coredal and Coradix, which we heard about earlier.
My first question is for you, Mr. Abbott. You said in your opening remarks that you had carried out a number of contracts and that only one of them was as a subcontractor through GC Strategies.
Is that correct?
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank the witnesses for being present with us today on what is a terrible instance, I think, of a combination of issues, some being of oversight, accountability, particularly by CBSA.
I note that some of you have read the report. Hopefully, you have all read it. It suggests there was a lack of information and documentation provided to the Auditor General, but that, just within CBSA itself, there was an inability for them to second the documents for the Auditor General to review.
In some of the testimony made in response to some of my colleagues' questions, in particular, Microsoft, for example, responded with the fact that the numbers, the financial invoices, where the money went and how they were accounting for some of those services were different from what the Auditor General found. I wouldn't dispute the Auditor General's finding, because it's obvious that she put a number associated with this work.
However, I would judge—or try to judge, at least—where those invoices came from. It may be the fact that these invoices were billed through GC Strategies, particularly with the work that you've done, and they may have failed to report to the government the true cost.
Is that a potential in any of your minds?
:
Some additional context around our engagement with Dalian is that this was before the cloud framework agreement existed. Prior to that time, the Government of Canada really did not have an ability to procure cloud services.
It is quite different from traditional IT procurement, which involves, quite often, the procurement of an actual tangible asset or hardware. In the case of procuring cloud or licensing software, they are very different ways of procuring technology.
We often work with very small companies and very large companies that may, for example, be building applications using the tools they find available to them on the cloud; and there are additional services, for example, that AWS does not provide. We don't provide staff augmentation services. We do have a number of customers that are looking for additional support beyond the advisory services we do provide, and there are a number of companies in Canada and around the world that provide those services.
There's one thing that I'm quite struck by in today's hearing. We have Amazon, Microsoft and BDO here, three very large and serious companies. It's clear that you're taking this hearing seriously and that you've done a lot of detailed preparation. That's not an endorsement of everything you said necessarily, but you're clearly taking this seriously.
There is a stark contrast between your testimony and the testimony of GC Strategies and Dalian that we've heard before Parliament, two-person companies that specialize only in getting government contracts. They were completely unprepared. They were unable to answer critical questions and badly contradicted themselves, yet the government has gone to GC Strategies to do most of this project, mostly through sole-sourcing, and government officials at one point conspired with GC Strategies to get them parts of this deal. It seems like a big demonstration of problems in our procurement system that the government has repeatedly gone to GC Strategies and Dalian in spite of the obvious problems that have been well on display before committees.
I want to ask if each of you if your company would have had the capacity to build the ArriveCAN app yourself and, if you could have built all of it or at least done more of it, why didn't you? Why do you think it ended up that it was GC Strategies and Dalian instead of some of these names that Canadians would recognize?
We'll start with Microsoft on that. Be as quick as possible.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I thank the witnesses for being here today.
With regard to that theme, I appreciate, Ms. Foster, your comments regarding the civil service and that there's clearly a lack of capacity there. It's a long-standing problem that has been exacerbated at different points by the cutting of the civil service and certainly alienating people who could contribute to the expertise in this area. I appreciate that, and I think that's probably something that this committee is going to be recommending in the future. I've seen it in other committees, but it's definitely something to be recommended.
I can say that I have a son working for Amazon, and I'd love to bring him back from Seattle to work here in Canada.
Let's go back to the questions that were being asked earlier about the AWS platform. Can you talk to us, Mr. Markou, about the cybersecurity aspects of the AWS platform?
:
I don't have much to add in terms of the work we did on ArriveCAN specifically.
I'll maybe just use the opportunity to promote a report that we worked on prior to the pandemic, in co-operation with the Public Policy Forum, and that looked at strategies the Government of Canada could be using to increase its recruiting and retention of digital talent. I would be happy to table copies of that report with this committee. It included considerations around upscaling current talent and how to actually recruit talent.
It's a highly competitive environment, and there are certainly structural challenges that the Government of Canada has in terms of language requirements, potentially, but also in how jobs are actually classified within the public service. There are some very tangible things that the Government of Canada could do sooner rather than later to start to address the talent gap that we see in terms of digital skills in the public service.
We'd also be really happy—and I know other companies share this desire—to help the Government of Canada through training. All of us offer quite a bit of additional free training that is available not just to Government of Canada employees but to the general public, and we'd love to work more closely with government to further that goal.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I do want to just summarize the seriousness of today's meeting and how important it is that Canadians get an understanding of how procurement works in Canada. One of the most shocking admissions today, I think, was by Ms. Foster and Amazon Web Services in relation to the fact that you could not be held legally liable or responsible for a contract or task authorization held by Dalian if you were in fact a customer of that company.
This is the first instance of this happening in our committee. I think this is of the utmost importance for our analysts, our study and our report to investigate, in addition to subcontractors, any customers of Dalian and GC Strategies for the production of work related to ArriveCAN. It's a serious issue that I believe requires serious accountability, considering Amazon Web Services are in the top three financial records, according to the Auditor General, at $7.9 million.
This is something that I think the government should be aware of and seized with. It is of the utmost importance that they understand that accountability mechanisms, by and large set to protect the public service and value for money, are not being met. Should a company act like Amazon look at Dalian, do no assessment of that company...which was admitted in this testimony? In addition to having no oversight of the companies they take on, with knowledge that Dalian had in fact had a responsibility to CBSA, they then agreed to continue to work as a customer, knowing that the potential for amendments to task authorizations and the cost effectiveness of those task authorizations could change, ballooning the cost.
The Auditor General makes it very clear in this report that the value for money for Canadians was not achieved, particularly by way of manipulation of the task authorization process. This is quite serious. It is one that I think will require further investigation.
Mr. Chair, I think any information that can be supplied to this committee in relation to the testimony today on the contract between Dalian and Amazon Web Services would be of great importance to this committee and our study on behalf of Canadians on value for dollar.
Would you be willing to submit the contract that you had between Dalian and your corporation, for the purpose of our study, in understanding how or what work you did on behalf of Dalian and its total? Would you be willing to submit the contract?
:
I think there's a slight misunderstanding—
Mr. Blake Desjarlais: No. Please, Ms. Foster—
Ms. Nicole Foster: —about how cloud services—
Mr. Blake Desjarlais: —it's important that—
Ms. Nicole Foster: It is important for you to understand—
Mr. Blake Desjarlais: No, let me describe—
Ms. Nicole Foster: —how cloud services are actually—
:
Thank you, Chair. It's an important question.
The task authorizations, which the Auditor General says there were amendments to, particularly the task authorizations that were amended by Dalian, may in fact implicate additional work done by Amazon Web Services that was not in the initial task authorization, which was one of the recommendations of the Auditor General.
Speaking to the Auditor General's recommendation, and understanding why amendments to task authorizations were taking place without knowledge of where Dalian came up with the need for those amendments, is important to understanding how the costs could increase. As a customer of Dalian, Amazon Web Services....
The problem is that we don't know the relationship between the work they had done, the task authorizations and Dalian. I think this is incredibly important. I think we need information related to the amendments of the task authorizations and their applicability to the work of Amazon as a customer of Dalian.
:
Ms. Foster has proven to be a candid witness today.
If we have questions, we'll get back to you and we'll see where we end up.
I do hear what you're saying about the timeline. I'd rather have a longer discussion when we're not on the clock. I have two more members to ask questions. Your concerns have been flagged. We will certainly discuss it and we'll see where it goes.
Is that all right for now, Mr. Desjarlais? Your concerns have been raised and noted.
I'll turn now to Mr. Genuis, who is the second-last member. Mr. Chen will finish up for the day.
You have the floor for five minutes, please.
What I'm trying to understand about the procurement system here is that Dalian identifies as an indigenous company. It benefits from indigenous set-asides in getting procurements.
In the case of these projects with CBSA, in the process of getting this contract they may have benefited from that set-aside. You said they hired you to do the work, and you are not an indigenous company.
It seems like a good deal for you. You were hired to do work. It seems like a good deal for Dalian in that they don't have internal IT capacity. They presumably didn't add value to the project. They made money; you made money. However, because of their involvement, taxpayers paid more, and this seems like a pretty significant manipulation of the indigenous set-aside rule.
Do you have a sense of why Amazon didn't just get this contract directly to move those files to the cloud? Is it because of a requirement around indigenous procurement, or is there some other reason why you didn't get that contract directly?
:
I think you are pointing to some of the elements of why having really good procurement policies in place is really important.
Having appropriate practices and policies in place to buy the technology that you need is an extremely important element in thinking about any digital transformation initiative, whether you're a government or a private sector enterprise. There are elements you have to have in place in order to do things well.
The first one of those, which I mentioned earlier, is the appropriate kind of talent and workforce to actually lead the project.
The second really important element is the ability to actually procure what you need, and have the right rules around the procurement of that technology.
The third is an extremely important element for the people in this room, and that is leadership. These are change management projects. They require leadership in order to drive and ensure that they're able to be executed. Change management is extremely difficult in any organization, and it's especially difficult in a public sector one.
The fourth is understanding how to actually budget for operational expenses in an IT environment. Traditional IT procurement is for capital assets, and most organizations are still grappling with how to budget for those expenses in an operational sense.
There are a number of elements of what the Government of Canada and all organizations are grappling with in order to have those elements of how to do digital transformation appropriately. Not having those policies in place is a key element of the challenge—
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I will ask Ms. Foster to finish, but I will preface that by saying I appreciate the presence of all the witnesses here today. You have shed light on the relationships—or lack thereof—you have with Dalian and with GC Strategies, and you have been dragged into this conversation around ArriveCAN.
To me, the most intriguing part of what you have discussed is what I see as the larger project, as Ms. Foster is alluding to, of digital adoption and transformation within government. It certainly is a monumental task, but this ArriveCAN situation, I believe, has certainly provided important lessons that government can take forward as we continue down a road of increasing technology.
Ms. Foster, your job title includes “artificial intelligence”. That certainly is high on the radar, as are the challenges you have highlighted with respect to the leadership that's needed for change management, for modernizing procurement, which was raised earlier, and certainly for building the understanding of technology and the capacities within government itself.
Ms. Foster, please continue with your testimony.
:
I was getting very quickly to wrapping up my point, but these are the four pillars that organizations need to consider as they embark on digital transformation projects.
The other thing I would love to leave this committee with is that we know Canadians are eager to interact with their government and to access government services on a digital basis. The experience of the pandemic also accelerated some of these things out of necessity and the need to social distance, but we know that Canadians have become very accustomed to accessing services digitally, whether it's buying things on Amazon, listening to music on Spotify or applying for a driver's licence.
Canadians want to be able to access these services digitally, and it is extremely important that the government also be able to undertake these projects in the way that Canadians expect in terms of accountability and due diligence and a very high bar on security. We wholeheartedly support that, but we have to make sure the systems we're working on are actually designed for the purpose and the objectives we're trying to meet on behalf of Canadians. It's always difficult when a major project doesn't go as well as people would like. Many of us have been involved in both successful projects and projects that we have learned a lot from, and we have to ensure that we don't give up on trying to achieve those goals.
:
There are a couple of things I can share for consideration of the committee.
We have a whole stream around cloud economics, so understanding how you build and then how you optimize that over time is a process for most organizations. When an organization starts to migrate workloads to the cloud, and that could be our cloud or other clouds, you generally see the initial stages of that really spiking in cost. This is because as organizations are building, they're using more services, they're accessing professional services to support that, and learning as they go, and you see a stark climb in the beginning of those efforts.
Then as customers become more sophisticated about their use of services, we see a process of optimization. The trend is that customers become more sophisticated at how to use those services. We work very closely with customers to try to reduce their costs, so it's part of what we do. In addition to that, our company has reduced costs over 130 times since we launched our business in 2006.
We're always trying to find those efficiencies within what we do, but we're also working with customers to find those as well.
Nick, maybe you can talk a little bit about some of the specifics in the work that you do around that.
:
To answer your question around how we engage, and what we're seeing globally, clearly there's a global trend towards digital innovation, we see it every day in terms of AI and several technologies.
The reason we have a public sector-focused business in Canada, as AWS, is to enable this in Canada. We, as well, are a partner-driven organization. Certainly you can hire and access AWS engineers, which was the case in our team, to help accelerate, and to help identify and demonstrate new technology.
Our advice was, and will remain, that Canada should continue to push forward on innovation and employ the organizations that are leading this innovation globally.
:
I call the meeting back to order.
Right off the top, I have some housekeeping items and some budgets to adopt for future studies.
The budget of $1,500 for “Report 2—Housing in First Nations Communities” has been sent to you. Could I have approval for this budget, please?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Chair: The budget for “Report 3—First Nations and Inuit Policing Program” is again $1,500.
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Chair: The budget for “Report 4—National Trade Corridors Fund—Transport Canada” is for $1,500. Is that approved?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Chair: Thank you very much.
Very good. We're going to go over the subcommittee meeting we had recently. Of note, I'm negotiating with the subcommittee members for a follow-up meeting, based in part on any feedback out of this, to plan the next steps.
I will say off the top that the deadline for ArriveCAN witnesses, as per my email, is tomorrow at noon. Given that it's a caucus day, that probably means tonight for most members because we're locked up without our devices—at least some of us are—for caucus meetings. I will just flag that to you and your teams.
Could I ask the subcommittee members to meet me right after the meeting so that we can try to agree on a time for the next meeting?
I'll go through this and see if I have it more or less correct. Then we'll pick it up from there. There are about eight points.
On March 21, your subcommittee met to discuss and prioritize upcoming business and to review the calendar. We will have a meeting on the 11th on “Report 2—Housing in First Nations Communities”. We'll have a meeting on the 16th on “Report 4—National Trade Corridors Fund”.
We will then have Ms. in the first hour on the 18th. This is per a motion that was passed by this committee but was also discussed, approved and reinforced in the subcommittee. We'll have the Auditor General on the main estimates in the second hour. This was again discussed in the subcommittee. It's also something that we as a committee do automatically.
On April 30, we'll meet on the topic of “Report 3—First Nations and Inuit Policing Program”.
These studies reflect the priorities, alongside ArriveCAN, as provided by the parties of the committee. I think everyone agreed that there were a number of top priorities, and I would say that we settled on everyone's top two. Some parties had a longer list. Others were quite focused, so what I did with the calendar was to fill up what was agreed to.
There was a request from Mr. Desjarlais for possible additional studies on the indigenous studies. Before going too far down that path, Mr. Desjarlais agreed to first have these meetings, and then we would come back to the subcommittee to discuss next steps.
The clerk and I are still working to find a date for , as per a motion that was passed by this committee.
We've scheduled, as per the study on Public Accounts 2023, with the Bank of Canada and the CPP Investment Board. This had previously been agreed to as part of a broader study on Public Accounts 2023. We were able to hear from witnesses from the government members, as well as the Bloc Québécois. These last two are for the Conservatives and the NDP.
We will also be hosting an informal meeting with Indonesian lawmakers on their public accounts committee on May 23, after our regular meeting. This obviously is more in the area of our diplomatic relations as lawmakers. They're hoping to come in to see our committee doing its normal business in public. We'll try to find something on the calendar for that. Then we'll have a discussion with them afterwards.
Finally, we finalized wording for the INAN committee letter, which was distributed to all of you. It was then sent to that committee. Again, that's as per a motion that was passed in this committee.
That's really the discussion that we had and the best that I could distill it, with assistance from the clerk.
I'm happy to take comments on it, and we'll see where we're at there.
Mr. Desjarlais was first.
:
We'll talk about it in subcommittee.
[English]
Just a note to the subcommittee, we will probably begin to meet more frequently so that we can have an airing of witnesses and a discussion about priorities that will come from both the government and opposition side to plan out the calendar.
Our next meeting will be on Thursday regarding the second report entitled “Housing in First Nations Communities”.
The witness list for ArriveCAN is due tomorrow.
Are there any other comments?
I'm going to ask the subcommittee members to come up here right after I adjourn the meeting.
The meeting is adjourned.