I call the meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting 92 of the Standing Committee on Public Accounts. Pursuant to Standing Order 108(3)(g), the committee is meeting today to begin its study of Government of Canada information technology systems and reports 7 and 8, 2023, of the Auditor General of Canada.
[English]
I'd now like to welcome our witnesses.
From the Office of the Auditor General, we have Andrew Hayes, deputy auditor general; Patrice Malboeuf, director; and Jocelyn Matthews, director, by video conference, I believe.
From the Department of Employment and Social Development, we have Paul Thompson, deputy minister; Cliff Groen, associate deputy minister and business lead, benefits delivery modernization; and John Ostrander, technical lead, benefits delivery modernization.
From the Department of Public Works and Government Services, we have Arianne Reza, deputy minister, and Mollie Royds, associate assistant deputy minister, procurement branch.
From Shared Services Canada, we have Scott Jones, president; Shannon Archibald, assistant deputy minister, hosting services; and Scott Davis, chief financial officer.
Hello, welcome and thank you. There might be some votes here, so you might have to be patient with the parliamentarians today.
As usual, we allow our witnesses to open with a five-minute presentation each. We'll begin with the Office of the Auditor General.
To begin, I'll turn it over to Mr. Hayes.
:
Mr. Chair, thank you for this opportunity to discuss our reports on modernizing information technology systems and on the Benefits Delivery Modernization programme. Both reports were tabled in the House of Commons on October 19, 2023.
I would like to acknowledge that this hearing is taking place on the traditional unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishinaabe people.
Joining me today are Patrice Malboeuf and Jocelyn Matthews, who were both responsible for these audits.
These two reports are closely related. Our report on modernizing information technology systems examined the government’s overall approach to modernizing its systems, while our report on the benefits delivery modernization program focused specifically on the modernization of old age security, the Canada Pension Plan, and employment insurance. More than 10 million Canadians rely on these three benefits.
Overall, we found that the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat and Shared Services Canada did not do enough to lead and support departments and agencies in updating their information technology systems. These lead organizations still do not have a strategy to drive modernization efforts even though the government first identified aging systems as a significant concern more than 24 years ago.
Whether it is applying for a benefit or managing the business of government, both Canadians and the public service need reliable information technology systems. We found that about two thirds of the government's 7,500 software applications were in poor health. Of those, 562 are essential to the health, safety, security, or economic well-being of Canadians. Some of the systems date back to the early 1960s. The risk that outdated systems could fail and that Canadians could lose access to essential services increases with every passing day.
[English]
While aging information technology infrastructure is a problem that the government has known about for decades, progress has been very slow. We found that in addition to the lack of centralized leadership and oversight, other factors had contributed to delays, including a shortage of skilled people to carry out the work, and an inflexible funding approach.
Our report on the benefits delivery modernization program echoes these findings. In particular, this report shows the effects of the government's inflexible funding approach. When the program was launched in 2017, Employment and Social Development Canada estimated that it would cost $1.75 billion. That number has since been revised twice, and it will probably change again as delays and challenges persist.
In April 2022 the cost estimate reached $2.5 billion. That's a 43% increase since 2017. In other words, halfway through the program's 13-year timeline, all three benefits were still running on systems that were between 20 and 60 years old. Faced with ongoing delays, cost increases and staffing challenges, Employment and Social Development Canada adjusted its approach and delayed transformation efforts to prioritize the migration of aging systems. This step was intended to mitigate the risk of system failure.
The department also moved old age security ahead of employment insurance in the migration schedule because old age security was the oldest system with the greatest risk of failing.
The department's decision to focus on migrating the systems to prioritize the continuity of benefits was the right one. However, we are concerned that if challenges and delays persist, decisions could be made to remove aspects of transformation or to take shortcuts to maintain the timelines or budget, as happened with the Phoenix pay system.
Reducing or eliminating the transformation component of the program increases the risk that the final product will not meet the needs of those who rely on these benefits, including seniors, indigenous people and refugees.
We would be pleased to answer any questions the committee may have.
:
Mr. Chair and members of the Committee, I am pleased to be here today to address the Auditor General’s recent reports and the progress made by Shared Services Canada, or SSC, on their recommendations.
Before I begin, I would like to acknowledge that we are gathered on the traditional unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishinaabe people.
With me today are Scott Davis, chief financial officer, and Shannon Archibald, assistant deputy minister of our hosting services branch.
SSC welcomes the findings of the audit and its recommendations. This audit will help the Government of Canada strengthen and improve its information technology or IT systems and hosting services.
[English]
Modernizing the Government of Canada's IT systems requires an enterprise-wide approach, and SSC is committed to collaborating with departments and their chief information officers to achieve this.
SSC provides the foundational IT infrastructure for departments to host their applications so that Canadians can have access to secure digital programs and services. While SSC is responsible for the Government of Canada IT infrastructure, it is important to note that departments are responsible for modernizing or decommissioning the applications that run on the infrastructure SSC provides.
SSC has a plan in place to address aging infrastructure, as the AG's report pointed out, and we are working on it. SSC continues to collaborate with the Treasury Board Secretariat and all departments to advance modernization goals and to ensure that outdated IT infrastructure is replaced with modern and stable hosting solutions. As part of that process, we are working with TBS, departments and their chief information officers to identify applications most at risk.
Investments over the last two years have allowed us to renew the base infrastructure of the government, and through that, the core network is being completely transformed into a modern, agile network.
To support the modernization of applications by departments, SSC is offering modern hosting solutions, including cloud services and the Government of Canada's own state-of-the-art enterprise data centres. These modern solutions are key to be able to offer digital solutions and programs to Canadians.
For example, SSC is working on private cloud to offer opportunities to modernize applications and working on edge solutions to address latency needs. Through our hosting services strategy, SSC will continue to support applications across departments and improve the security and the stability of those within the enterprise data centres.
This hosting services strategy will also offer solutions tailored to different workloads and applications. Focusing on innovation, sustainability and cybersecurity will ensure we serve Canadians efficiently while building stronger partnerships and inspiring confidence and trust.
For Employment and Social Development Canada's benefits delivery modernization program, SSC is providing the underlying cloud connectivity and associated procurement vehicles to that cloud connectivity. More precisely, SSC is responsible for designing and modernizing the digital infrastructure to support BDM through rigorous project planning, oversight and governance in collaboration with our colleagues. SSC continues to work closely with ESDC to provide guidance and advisory services on the various components of the digital solution.
To better communicate and collaborate with all departments across government, SSC has launched “digital together”. This plan is designed to accelerate progress in the areas of digital services, connectivity, hosting and cybersecurity.
SSC acknowledges the need for efficient and cost effective modernization. We also acknowledge the need to speed things up. Under “digital together” we identify and prioritize initiatives that respond to the government's priorities while aligning with digital modernization goals and our enterprise approach.
This is a journey that will be powered by both larger-scale modernization of legacy platforms as well as ongoing improvements in the way Canadians interact with technology to access services. Decommissioning legacy infrastructure is complex, and it requires collaborations with departments to ensure there is no disruption to critical business applications.
Working together and leveraging the strengths of partners, we can address the complex challenges facing the government and deliver innovative solutions that drive positive, secure change for Canadians.
[Translation]
Mr. Chair, to summarize, SSC has a plan to have a stable IT infrastructure and to ensure connectivity coast to coast. We will continue to look for ways to innovate and improve. However, to achieve this vision, continued investments will be required.
We would be happy to answer your questions.
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair, for the opportunity to discuss the role of Public Services and Procurement Canada in relation to the benefits delivery modernization program.
All Canadians should expect to receive accurate and timely benefits, regardless of how those benefits are managed from an IT infrastructure perspective. They trust that the government departments responsible for old age security, employment insurance and the Canada pension plan can preserve the continuity of payments, even during large-scale IT transformation projects.
The benefits delivery modernization program is the largest IT transformation initiative ever undertaken by the Government of Canada. It will replace outdated and complicated legacy systems with a streamlined and secure software platform to access benefits for old age security, employment insurance and the Canada pension plan.
Canada requires the skill and expertise to execute transformations of this magnitude and complexity. Consequently, PSPC, on behalf of ESDC, has contracted vendors with a proven track record of success in large transformation projects.
In her fall reports, the Auditor General concluded a study as to whether the program was progressing in a way that supports the continuous delivery of critical benefits for Canadians. This includes an examination of the various processes, including procurement, that are engaged during the transition of IT systems and business processes.
The study did not result in recommendations directed at PSPC, but our role in the program is important and critical, and we will continue to support ESDC as it moves forward.
[Translation]
As a common service provider, PSPC provides support to Employment and Social Development Canada for major procurements related to the benefit delivery modernization program, including all professional services contracts. These contracts ensure that Canada has access to the strategic advice and specialized expertise of system integrators that are critical to the success of the Program.
In early 2021, following a competitive procurement process, PSPC awarded four contracts to qualified systems integrators to provide integration services to onboard the three large benefits onto the new technology platform, which involves hundreds of different technologies. The systems integrators also provide strategic advice and some technologies as needed. Specifically, as a result of a competitive process, contracts were awarded to Accenture, CGI Information Systems, Deloitte, and Fujitsu Consulting.
These four qualified suppliers usually compete for work packages. In some instances, and where appropriate, the work is allocated among all four suppliers, who then work collaboratively to advance the program.
The combined cumulative value of contracts awarded to the four system integrators is currently $409 million. I will note that PSPC is currently supporting ESDC in designing the procurement to replace the employment insurance system, which will result in additional work via these contracts.
The department has also awarded a contract on behalf of ESDC, as a result of a competitive process, for the core technology platform to IBM Canada, currently valued at $70 million. Each of the benefit programs will be onboarded and integrated onto this platform. PSPC also issued a large competitive contract for strategic transformation advice, as well a project management services, to PricewaterhouseCoopers, currently valued at $147 million.
[English]
Finally, work has begun with ESDC to prepare for the retendering of the strategic transformation advice contract, and it is estimated that the contract will be valued at approximately $70 million.
Mr. Chair, PSPC is integrated into all levels of benefits delivery modernization governance in order to provide guidance on the procurement elements of this transformation program. Given the size and scope of the program, we have a team of procurement specialists working full time on this file to support ESDC in ensuring that it meets the needs of Canadians across the country.
For this project, as with everything we do, PSPC is committed to ensuring that procurements are conducted in a fair, open and transparent manner. At the same time, we are ensuring that procurements are undertaken in accordance with relevant policies, guidelines, regulations, trade agreements and procedures while meeting the requirements outlined by client departments.
We will continue to provide contracting services and work with ESDC and other partners to deliver BDM with the shared goal of ensuring that the government delivers benefits for Canadians with an emphasis on efficiency, accuracy and accessibility.
[Translation]
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I would be pleased to answer the committee’s questions.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thanks for the opportunity to discuss the Auditor General's report, “The Benefits Delivery Modernization Programme”.
[Translation]
The Government of Canada welcomes the report and its recommendations. They will help us refine our project management approach, not only for this project, but also for other large IT projects.
[English]
As my colleague has noted, benefits delivery modernization is the largest IT project undertaken by the federal government. Ultimately, the project will securely and reliably deliver to millions of Canadians benefits through three key programs: employment insurance, the Canada pension plan and old age security. Over the last year alone, Service Canada delivered over $145 billion in benefits through these programs to over 10 million Canadians.
The challenge we have is that the current technology that supports these services is outdated, risking errors and payment delays. There is an increasingly urgent need to replace these aging systems with modern, reliable, digital solutions. A new platform will position us for not only a better client experience but also one that is safer and more secure than ever before.
It will also give us more agility to respond to policy and legislative changes. We'll be able to implement such changes more quickly and better enable ESDC to adapt to both client expectations and changing circumstances and events.
[Translation]
The recommendations from the Auditor General’s report will help us carry out this project and will contribute to its success.
We have taken action in a number of different areas based on extensive research, best practices and lessons learned from both the private and public sectors, Canadian provinces and territories, the United Kingdom, Australia, and the United States. And we learned the lessons from less successful IT enabled transformations, such as the Phoenix pay system.
[English]
In speaking to some of the improvements we've made, we now have a dedicated senior level leadership in place for both the business and technical aspects of the project, both of whom have significant combined experience in the public and private sector.
The appointment of my colleague, Cliff Groen, as associate deputy minister and business lead, and John Ostrander, as the technical lead, combine this business expertise and proven technology leadership at the most senior levels of the program.
In June 2022, the government’s chief information officer conducted a strategic assessment of the program. This is a common practice for large and complex transformations, and it positions the program for success.
The CIO’s office works in close collaboration with a dedicated ESDC internal audit team. Together, they give real-time advice and recommendations on risks and issues to senior management. They also work with a third party assurance provider to assess the effectiveness of risk management, control and governance processes of specific areas.
With regard to implementation, old age security is the first benefit that is being transitioned to the new BDM platform. It is important to note that it has already gone live.
Last June, 600,000 old age security foreign beneficiaries were successfully transitioned to the modernized system. Full onboarding of all OAS clients to the new platform is on track to be completed in 12 months' time in December 2024.
[Translation]
We are modernizing OAS, EI, and the CPP over three phases, with an expected completion date of 2030. This incremental and phased approach allows us to demonstrate the value of early and continuous transformation as the platform capabilities mature.
[English]
In terms of costs of the BDM program outlined in the report, I would highlight that current spending is consistent with other jurisdictions undertaking similar transformations. Since 2017, the BDM program has spent $817 million. The Treasury Board approvals to date amount to $2.2 billion over a 10-year period. While this is a very sizable investment, it is important to note that the total benefits delivered to Canadians during the lifetime of the platform will be more than $1.5 trillion.
With large IT projects like this, we know they are intricate, but we are determined to get it right.
Mr. Chair, serving Canadians is our top priority. We understand that the success of benefits delivery modernization is non-negotiable.
[Translation]
We will continue to work with the Treasury Board Secretariat to refine our approaches to delivering services, sharing best practices across all levels of government, and minimize system risks.
[English]
Again, thank you very much for the opportunity to appear. I look forward to taking your questions.
:
Yes. Good morning. The irony of the CIO having tech problems getting into the meeting is not lost on me. I hope my audio is working fine.
I'm going to just add to my colleague's comments.
The chief information officer and my office are accountable for the overall leadership of IT, and for service and digital transformations across government. My colleagues have outlined some of the challenges there. We're also accountable for oversight on high-risk and complex programs. BDM is one of those. When you take the two audit reports, the Auditor General has done a very good job of outlining the issues in front of us.
Today, I look forward to the conversation with the committee around my opinions on the fact that we are trying to do too many things, and that is part of what is slowing our progress and improvement.
With that, I'll pass it back to you.
:
I think that would be a good question for the departments.
I think part of the challenge, as we have signalled in the report, relates to the availability of skilled staff and recruiting and retaining skilled staff.
Again, the information upon which to make priority decisions is also a reason this could be progressing slowly.
Also, as the deputy minister mentioned, Shared Services is responsible for infrastructure, whereas the departments themselves are responsible for modernizing their applications. They sometimes have to make difficult decisions with their financing, because if they have to pay for modernization, that might have to come out of the funds they would otherwise use for services or programs for Canadians.
Those are all challenges that could be contributing to the delays.
There are a few areas in which I would say that SSC has changed its strategy to try to make it easier for departments. First of all, we have pre-positioned some infrastructure before what we call “workload migration”, which is really about moving applications to modern data centres.
We did it on demand, and then it would take 18 months to build the infrastructure. We're working to pre-position infrastructure through our hosting services.
The second piece that is a challenge, I would say, is just how old some of these applications have become, so it becomes not just an upgrade but generational leaps of technology, so it's a very difficult skill set to build up.
Also, we need to look at how we build applications, in general, and how they get sustained funding.
I ran a number of applications in previous roles when I was with the cyber centre. We made sure we invested continually in upgrading those applications to keep them fresh.
Perhaps I'll turn it over to Catherine, from OCIO.
:
I might contrast it with some of the differences I've noted from doing this in a number of private sector organizations. A fundamental lack of prioritization is getting in the way of progress. The numbers are staggering when you think about 38% healthy. The unhealthy number is high, and we can't tackle those at once. In prioritization, there are winners and losers, and we don't seem to have a comfort with stopping programs, or delaying them, to allow us to do the work that needs to happen on the higher-risk programs.
The other piece I would point to is that we are challenged with standardization. That's not a phenomenon unique to government, but it is, I think, amplified in government. It is much easier to keep on a modern path if you have standard protocols for doing things, yet everything is special around government in areas where frankly it shouldn't be—pay and HR being one of them.
Finally I would note that the CIO of Canada has accountability but very few levers that would be consistent with what I would have been used to in the private sector. Certainly, I am in the planning, but there is no central control around funding, dispensing of funds and prioritization that is consistent with what I've experienced outside government.
Thank you.
First, I would like to recall a saying that often guides my work and I hope also guides yours. The true measure of any society can be found in how it treats its most vulnerable members. The most vulnerable people in Canadian and Quebec society are people who are receiving old age security or people who are unemployed and receiving employment insurance benefits.
What we learn in the Auditor General's report is that the computer systems that support those payments, which are essential every month for the most vulnerable members of our society, are on the brink of collapsing. This is very disturbing. It is why we are happy to have you here today and get a little more explanation.
You have started to tell us about the problems. Now that you have got a picture of it, now that you pretty much know what the problems are, what is being done to fix them quickly? That is what I am interested in today.
One of the important figures that was mentioned in your report, Mr. Hayes, deals with the percentage target that the government has set itself: 60% by 2030, I believe. At the present pace, if things continue as they are, the government will only reach 45% of the target, in terms of the modernizing it thought it could do.
Mr. Hayes, do you stand by that figure?
So you are distinguishing between modernization and transformation. When you say we need to pick up the pace, what is Treasury Board going to do, in concrete terms? Right now, what we learn from the Auditor General's report is that Treasury Board does not have all the data from the departments for accelerating the process.
First, are you going to be getting that information from the departments?
Second, what strategy are you planning to put in place?
Third, what measures are you going to implement as part of that strategy so that it is put in place and contributes to accelerating the process?
:
Those were three rapid-fire questions; I hope I get the answers to all three.
One, you are correct. We don't have all the information. We are putting in place a new system in 2024 that is going to assist with that. We have enough of the right information that we shouldn't wait until we get more fulsome information to go. That's message number one.
Message number two is from the modernization, transformation perspective. As part of the reviews we do—granted we do them on an subset of programs—benefits delivery modernization is one that we have spent a lot of time on. We are continuing to go in and do assurance activities with these programs to ensure that they are not getting too, I'll use the word “distracted”, around transformation and stay very focused on the tight scope of managing.
I think, from a broader sense, that we will be looking to provide dashboards to the different departments through 2024 that help them identify where they have specific issues and assists in putting together business cases to have those upgraded.
I would note, and I haven't had a chance to say it, that we spend about $10 billion a year on technology. I'm not sure if this is about more money at this stage, because we have lack of staffing, and we have an inability to access the resources even externally. The talent pool is very light. This is about the right work done better versus doing more work.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank the witnesses for being present. Although you are many, I hope we can keep up with the information that gets supplied today.
This committee is concerned. Earlier this week, we passed a motion.
It expressed:
decades of unchecked spending on outsourcing—which accelerated in 2006—has cost Canadians tens of billions of dollars while creating a shadow public service that works alongside the real public service—but without the same hiring practices or transparency requirements
If it's in relation to outsourcing in Canada, I think the Auditor General may be familiar with my position. For example, we heard, a few weeks ago, in relation to the National Capital Commission, remarks on the reality that, since 2018, they've had to take on private contracting to try to make up the huge deficits that have compounded within their ministry due to government underfunding of critical services. It's beginning to paint a picture for me. Audit after audit has begun. I begin to clearly see a continued pattern of outsourcing, which is ballooning the costs while also diminishing our public service.
I'll turn to recommendation 7.37 of the modernizing information systems audit.
It states:
In coordination with [SSC] and in consultation with departments and agencies, [TBS] should finalize and implement a comprehensive strategy for addressing the information technology modernization needs of departments and agencies. The strategy should
among other things
address the scarcity of personnel with the needed skills to support information technology modernization...
My question is for the deputy auditor general. How severe is the shortage of qualified personnel within the public service?
:
Thank you, Mrs. Gray. That is your time.
I think that was all well understood, and, of course, our analysts are recording it as well.
Incidentally, just so you're aware, I did add 20 seconds to Mrs. Gray's time, because she left a lot on the table in her first round and wasn't familiar with the practice of this committee to allow the question to be answered in the time and for the answer to run over.
We have Ms. Bradford for five minutes, please.
Thank you so much to our abundance of witnesses today. It's a cast of thousands. For those of you watching at home, we actually have 10 witnesses in the room and two on the screen. I think that speaks to the importance of the issues we're dealing with today.
These are two very important reports—modernizing information technology systems and benefits delivery modernization. As the Auditor General's report indicated, more than 10 million Canadians rely on these income-support programs: OAS, CPP and EI. Obviously, failure is not an option.
I have a couple of questions for Mr. Jones, first of all. Basically, I was wondering, given that failure is not an option, why was no action taken after the 2010 spring audit report from the Office of the Auditor General that indicated action needed to be taken. It seemed like not a lot happened after that, and it was clearly identified that something needed to happen. Do you have any insight as to why there was a bit of a non-response on that?
:
I'll start, and then maybe I'll turn to my colleague from the Treasury Board Secretariat, if that's okay.
AI is a huge opportunity for us, and we've started to see it being applied. We apply it, for example, on our access to information program, so that we can find information quickly and respond quickly. I think 99.6% was our rate last year for on-time responses at Shared Services.
We apply that throughout our technology stack. We can apply it to operations, looking for trends, etc. There's a huge benefit there.
The risk with cybersecurity is that AI can also be turned into how you breach a system, and then conversely, how you put AI in your defences.
We look to see where we can leverage it in terms of making ourselves more efficient, pushing our technology to where the state of the art in industry is heading, and then, of course, working with our cyber-partners around government.
Perhaps I could turn to my colleague, if that's okay.
:
I think Scott described that very well.
I'll add maybe three points.
First is that the Treasury Board Secretariat's CIO office has published guidance around using AI, and specifically generative AI, as that emerges. I think we have some really good leading policy work in that space.
Second, it's a wonderful opportunity for us to actually decrease costs and be more effective in terms of automating predictive problems.
Third, I would say that built on a foundation of poor systems, poor data, you don't optimize your AI. It goes right back to the Auditor General's conclusion that we have lots of work to do there.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I want to continue on my question in regard to outsourcing and contracting in the public service. You just heard from the member from OCIO, Catherine, that we're not paying our staff enough, and I fully agree. That is leading to serious competition issues, such that it's much easier to work for IBM; it's much easier to work for McKinsey; it's much easier to work for these other companies that then hold the government hostage by saying it has to pay them because there's no one else to do this work because the government has failed to pay its employees properly or at least at a competitive rate.
I can't express how disappointed I am by that. It is a serious concern, and I hope that after today's meeting, you can supply us with written advice on how, maybe by the time you renew your strategy, you're actually going to implement wage increases or become more competitive. We're losing real taxpayer dollars to profit CEOs and boards. Those profits could be directly paying for the salaries and wages of technicians who could be doing this work.
I hope that's simple enough and could be understood enough so that you know how serious an issue this is, and I hope that members of the government will also be keen to address it. Of course it is not just the civil service that is dealing with these problems; it's likely a funding capacity issue due to long decades of non-spending on operations and maintenance, similar to what we've seen in many audits before.
How much profit are these seven contracts generating for those companies?
The information of Canadians and the privacy of their information, the security of their information, is something top of mind for all of the deputies and ADMs who are sitting in the room. That is an accountability that I have within our office, and you'll see that, with the data breach that we've been working through with a third party provider, we've taken a very active role—perhaps when it wasn't ours to take—to protect our employees' information. That's at the core.
I think, as Scott outlined, there's been good investment in network and cybersecurity and in privacy protocols that really give us some comfort that we have both good protections and good response mechanisms with regard to that. I'm comfortable saying that I think we have the right things in play there. That doesn't mean that there's no risk. That means that we have some managed risk in that space.
In terms of the leap-frogging, that's a situation many organizations find themselves in, not just government. It's a huge opportunity to actually rethink business process and to move from old ways of doing things to new ways of doing things.
I think that Canadians should be concerned that we're on old infrastructure. I think that, in the programs where we need to be advancing that—like OAS, like EI, like our immigration system—we have the right practices in place there. They should feel comforted by the fact that we are starting to look at more modern technology, and part of that means standardizing, which ultimately is going to drive the cost line down if done well.
Thank you to our witnesses. We have 12 witnesses in total. I'm sure there could be a joke made there about the complexity of government and perhaps the need to streamline in some areas, but I'll digress on that.
I may begin with Ms. Luelo.
Again, I echo the comments of wishing you well as you depart government for a return, I'm assuming, to the private sector. I want to touch a little bit on that, given your unique experience, and maybe use this as a bit of an exit interview with you as we go forward—your experience in the private sector and then in government.
I'd like to follow up on a few answers that you've given so far about this concept of the specialness of government and where there seems to be a want or a need in government to see itself as unique or special—needing almost tailor-made solutions.
Could you elaborate a little bit on that? You mentioned in one of your responses that—and I'm paraphrasing—not everything needs to be special, in some cases. Could you elaborate a little bit on the idea that, if we were to take out some of the specialness, we might be able to be more effective in delivering services?
:
It has been remarkable to be able to go between the private and public sectors. I hope every executive takes the opportunity to do this. I think it would make for a different discussion between government and the private sector. I think we need to send government folks out into industry. I think it's a very rich experience. The U.S. likely does a better job of that than we do.
The big similarity is that the people are completely committed. The people I get to work with and support every day in tech in government are awesome. They work very hard. The specialness drives the complexity.
To very directly answer your question, why do we need 33 different HR systems? Recruitment is recruitment and development is development. That is consistent. Certainly, we have collective agreements that are different. I am not dismissing that. But in terms of the basics of HR, we have not had the discipline to get to a common approach to HR, regardless of the collective agreement complexities.
The biggest difference I would note—I ran into this at Enbridge and at Air Canada—is that there is a severity of consequence if you do not standardize in the private sector that does not exist in government. What I mean by that is that getting into an enterprise approach, when that is what has been decided by the board and the CEO, there is only one consequence if you choose not to get on board with that plan. It's a meritocracy in a way that's a little bit different from what I've experienced.
Now, the consensus-based, collegial-based complexity of government lends itself to having a bit of a different discussion around things, but I think there is room for improvement there to perhaps have a little bit more of that “edgeness”, for lack of a better word, for not complying with enterprise. That includes both public service...but as we actually build and make government policy as well.
:
That's actually a large question to answer.
I think there are two broad levels of things that we do. One is the infrastructure security piece, and that's where the investment in Shared Services paid dividends. When it was created, that wasn't the plan. The plan was to figure out how to consolidate infrastructure and save costs. What it did was give us a platform to build very strong cybersecurity and kind of ring the government with defences. Those are continuously augmented. We invest, constantly upgrade and keep up with modern technology. SSC provides the best available infrastructure-level modern technology, and then we have our partners at the Communications Security Establishment on top of that.
Then we turn to our partners in the departments, where we look at things like fraud, abuse of the systems, social engineering, etc., and try to provide them with the skills they need or the services they need, but to augment that part, which is a very hard problem as well, and a different set of cybersecurity problems. The investment is continuous and changes constantly. We are constantly upgrading. It requires that continuous investment just because the threat environment is incredibly fast paced.
How can we make sure that Canadians receiving old age security do not suffer the same problems as we had with Phoenix? That is a question I am asked once a week. We have taken a number of steps in this regard.
First, we have put a new governance structure in place to meet the challenge associated with the overall oversight of the benefits delivery modernization program. Employment and Social Development Canada is managing the project, but we are not alone. Senior officials at Treasury Board Secretariat, Supply and Services Canada and Shared Services Canada are working together to provide overall oversight of the program.
Second, we are not counting on the anticipated efficiency gains before they have been achieved. That was one of the big problems in the case of the Phoenix pay system. We had changed the staffing levels for processing applications based on our projections. Then we did not have enough employees to process the applications. We will not be doing that for the benefits delivery modernization program. We are going to make sure that we always have enough employees to process the applications.
Third, we have implemented a process for bringing the system online gradually rather than doing it for all clients at the same time. As Mr. Thompson said, 600,000 client files have already been onboarded to the new system in the initial operation. It is working well at present.
And last, we have also put a pilot project in place to test all of the new system's processes before deploying it for new clients.
This means that we have learned lessons from the experience involved with the Phoenix system in order to avoid reproducing the same failures in the case of the benefits delivery modernization program.
I want to thank Ms. Luelo for her service and advice today. I think it's important advice. I hope to include many of her comments within our final report. If she can table any recommendations and information related to the recommendations, that would be very helpful.
I want to follow up on two questions. I'll start with the question I ended on the last time with regard to the profits of the companies IBM, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Accenture, CGI Information Systems, Deloitte and Fujitsu Consulting. They're all contracts that are currently in operation, I understand, and they're contracts that generate profit for their shareholders. For Canadians to understand the risk that these face, it's important that we have transparency on what kinds of profits these companies making off public services.
Again, I will ask—and this is for the final time—what are the profits of these companies? I only want the numbers. If you don't have them, will you supply them to this committee please?
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Very clearly, we were told in the operations committee, as part of the ArriveCAN study, that GC Strategies was given a sole-source contract, because Deloitte was banned.
This gets to my next issue. This comes out of a time when our friend, Mr. John Ossowski, who was head of CBSA, did this. Mr. Ossowski is now managing director of PwC, which is heavily involved in this program, as well.
Do you have any concerns of this issue going around? We have CBSA testifying that it banned Deloitte, and gave a sole-source contract to GC Strategies. The gentleman involved, who actually lied in committee about another thing left to GC Strategies, is now the managing director of PwC, which has its hooks into the government for this program.
My point may not be relevant, but given that we've talked a lot about contracting and outsourcing in firms, there are a couple things I'd like to leave you with, given I'm moving out of the public service.
One is that there is no world where we're going to do this modernization without using third party help—we just will not. The volume of work, the labour intensity that it requires, and the fact, which was well pointed out, that we have difficulty bringing people into government with speed are all going to play into our using third party firms.
We've launched a digital talent strategy this year to attract.... We have an indigenous apprenticeship program that we're launching. There are some leading things that are going on in government. That's thing one.
Thing two is that I think in every firm I've ever worked in, I've fired every one of the firms, because they've not performed on a specific project. You name the firm—IBM, Deloitte, Accenture, EY.
In order for large organizations to maintain integrity of competitiveness and to get the best talent available, you need to be able to take the lessons from those bad projects, apply them into the new projects, make sure there are consequences in contracts—which I believe our procurement team does—then move on and demand better work for them. Having bad feelings around firms, because they have failed.... By the way, the Government of Canada is the consistency in all of these relationships, so we also need to put a mirror on ourselves in terms of how we work with partners.
I just wanted to make sure I shared that whole perspective. Thank you for giving me the opportunity to do that.
I think that shows the importance of the balance between the private and public sector.
At the same time, I remember sitting in this committee in 2015-16 looking at the Phoenix report from the Auditor General, which talked about the failings of the Phoenix program at that point.
We heard from the current , who was sitting in that committee—who had been, I believe, the ESDC minister in the previous Harper government—that the firing of 700 public servants, who were experts in the HR systems in their field, was a savings. That was a savings to the implementation of the Phoenix system. That was what we heard then, and of course we see the results today.
I understand that we have continued to work—
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Certainly, we have derived and are continuing to derive lessons learned from what was experienced with Phoenix, and we have reviewed the different reports that have been prepared.
I'll reiterate a couple of the key elements.
First, we recognize that the success or failure of the BDM does not solely rest on ESDC. It is a cross-Government of Canada responsibility, which is why we put in strengthened governance in which deputy minister colleagues participate on a monthly basis and in which we review the status of the program to make sure that it remains on track.
Second is dedicated senior-level leadership. I'm an associate deputy minister, and my sole remit is accountability for the benefits delivery modernization program. I come with decades of experience in delivering government programs. My partner—the technical lead, John Ostrander—comes with over 40 years of experience in leading major transformation technology programs.
Third, we have implemented multiple releases to ensure that, when we go live, we will be successful and that if something happens with the release, we're able to roll back.
The last piece is that we know we will be more efficient once we implement the new programs, but we're not counting ahead of time what the savings and efficiencies might be.
The time has elapsed. We'll end the sparring now.
I appreciate everyone coming in today. Thank you. This was a large group of witnesses, but everyone handled themselves very well.
I'm going to excuse the witnesses now. Thank you.
I'm going to suspend this meeting, and we'll come back in camera very quickly. If you don't have business in the in camera meeting, please excuse yourself and leave the room.
I'm going to suspend.
[Proceedings continue in camera]
[Public proceedings resume]
There are three issues with this motion. One, Alberta has a Parliament. Two, on investigating and instructing a provincial government, Alberta has its own audit office. Three, the federal government and Parliament have no ability to instruct the Alberta government or the Alberta Energy Regulator to do anything.
To me, this is a very moot point. You are certainly welcome to work with the clerk and come back to this committee with language that is more in the federal sphere, and in this committee's sphere. That is my decision.
Yes, go ahead, Ms. Khalid.
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Thank you very much, Chair.
Thank you very much to everyone for understanding how important this motion is for our committee. I must say I have welcomed in previous sessions of this committee opening up and reviewing environmental reports from the commissioner of the environment and sustainable development to, of course, report to the federal Auditor General of Canada on a wide range of issues. Indeed, we have some of those studies ongoing as well. We have also taken the initiative in this committee to make recommendations that I might have said in a previous session of the public accounts committee were not necessarily appropriate.
However, I have come to really appreciate the work—and I'm talking now to all members of the opposition—that has been done in bringing forward some of the critical elements, because the federal government does not work alone. We are in a federation of provinces and territories, and when we are talking about clean water on indigenous lands, we are talking about a federal responsibility, and it is one that we take with great seriousness.
This is why I was very happy to bring forward this motion, and I am very pleased that we are here, debating it now, so we can continue.
There are a couple of things about this that quite surprised me.
First of all, number five requests that the commissioner of the environment conduct an audit. That's wonderful. I would say please, 100%, they should go ahead with that. I have a lot of time for the commissioner of the environment and for the AG. The work that they do is very straightforward.
I have to say I'm not surprised. I have sat in this committee and heard again and again from the Liberal side that we shouldn't be doing the work that other committees are doing. This is almost identical, word for word, to a motion that's been dropped in the environment committee.
I'm shocked, but not surprised. We have been lectured by the Liberals about how public accounts is a committee built on consensus and not a political one. This is clearly one geared toward attacking the province of Alberta. I have nothing to say to defend the Alberta Energy Regulator. If the report should be done, then we should open and expand it entirely for the environment commissioner to go at it 100%.
I don't think it's the role of this committee to be criticizing, attacking or calling out provincial regulators. I'm sure there are lots, whether it's the city of Montreal dumping raw sewage, or the city of Victoria. This committee doesn't attack those or study those things.
It is unfortunate, but not surprising, that the government is playing this game.
Again, on recommendation number five...full on. If they want to do it, I'd love to see more reports from the environment side of the Auditor General, and certainly addressing the issue of clean drinking water.
The Macdonald-Laurier Institute put out an amazing report on the issue, and I think Mr. Desjarlais read it. There are a lot of pragmatic things, and maybe we'll get some pragmatic answers out of it. If the energy regulator has dropped the ball, 100%, we should address that.
Maybe in the end, having number five done.... How it has come about is very disappointing. I can imagine committees now attacking Alberta, perhaps now attacking Quebec on Bill 21 or attacking B.C. on this. For us to devolve into such pettiness is, I think, unfortunate.
The numbers are obviously here to support this motion. I think it's, again, number five and having that study. Maybe we should talk about having the recommendation expand this study for other provinces or other issues around it, not just the one, because I'm sure there are more safe drinking water issues than just the Alberta issue. Maybe it should be—
I think this is an issue that requires careful consideration as to the principles of cooperative federalism in Canada. It's important, and it's been ruled in many Supreme Court cases in the past, when it relates to first nations issues in particular. I can go back to the 2016 court decision in Daniels v. Canada, even before that, for the purpose of my discussion,
The 1939 Supreme Court reference case around the inclusion of “Eskimo in habitants of the Province of Quebec” makes it clear that when provincial entities, particularly the regulators of natural resources, come into conflict with federal jurisdiction, particularly in relation to their constitutional obligation to protect indigenous peoples under section 35, it is the honour of the Crown that is united both provincially and federally to the relations of first nations people.
It is well defined in common law in Canada, that when it relates to first nations issues, the honour of the Crown, which is indivisible....
We serve one Crown, both the provinces and the federal government. It is not that first nations people live under the provinces' jurisdiction; they don't even live under the federal government's jurisdiction. They live separate and distinct by way of treaty with the Crown.
This means that in instances where the Crown has acted dishonourably, in particular relating to the Athabaska Chipewyan First Nation's assertion that the Alberta government has breached its legal fiduciary and consultative duties to these leaks, it also would seek the protection of the federal government, with which it signed a treaty, for the very same.
We have to be cognizant that in relation to first nations issues, the Crown is indivisible, meaning you can't rule something out of order or out of jurisdiction because it's a provincial entity in direct relation to first nations issues. It is a commitment to all of us, all people, that we ensure that the treaty obligations of these nations are upheld.
That includes and is not limited to the Province of Alberta and the Alberta Energy Regulator. I see no problem enacting my duty as a member of Parliament to protect the constitutional rights of first nations peoples in Alberta under section 35 of our Constitution, which binds both the provinces and the federal government to the protective orders and protective status of the lands on which first nations people live and, most particularly, the waters that they drink.
Therefore, it is not out of order, in my perspective, that the Alberta Energy Regulator be held to account by the federal government as a measure of protection for first nations people and as a protection of their constitutional rights under section 35.
The alternative, or the suggestion of the alternative, would mean that first nations should not be able to find or hold accountable the AER, especially if it is directly impacting their rights, which I fundamentally disagree with. I fundamentally assert that this has been dealt with in case law many times before. As a matter of fact, the AER very often has to respond to federal jurisdiction and federal legislation. We saw that with the recent CEPA legislation, for example. The AER had to change its own regulations because of it.
These things don't exist in a vacuum. It's important that Alberta be held accountable for its breaches of aboriginal rights, and it's up to us, as federal parliamentarians, to uphold our obligations under subsection 91(24) of the 1982 Constitution Act, which is to ensure that indigenous—or in the words of the constitution, “Indians, and Lands reserved for the Indians”—are hereby protected.
It's well within our scope as a federal legislature to ensure that the honour of the Crown is upheld. Even if they're provincial institutions, it is still our constitutional obligation under section 35 to protect these rights and to ensure that those persons who would breach those rights are held to full account.
Therefore, I disagree with your ruling, Mr. Chair, and I would suggest that you revisit this with a common understanding of the law in relation to first nations issues, and have the law clerk maybe review that judgment in relation to that.
This is identical, word for word, to a motion that was moved when I was in an environment meeting on, I believe, November 28 by . I still don't think that this is necessarily within complete federal jurisdiction. I think, given the fact that the federal government has lost a couple of court cases recently to the Government of Alberta, that this is perhaps not the best way of building those relationships. It at least has some semblance of making sense in the environment committee.
When I was told that this was being discussed at public accounts, I was absolutely flabbergasted. I am having a very hard time understanding how this could even get to a space where this is something that public accounts has decided, "Well, environment hasn't ruled on this fast enough, so let's bring this to public accounts."
I'm very much at a loss for words. I believe that it is absolutely inappropriate for this to be at this committee. I would urge members to vote against this. I think that this is something that needs to be dealt with, if even dealt with at the federal level, at the environment committee. Frankly, I believe that this should be dealt with by the Government of Alberta in one of their committees.
I think this motion falls within the work of this committee. The connection was clearly established by Mr. McCauley a little earlier.
I want to inform colleagues who are joining us just to discuss this motion that we can ask the Office of the Auditor General, and so the commissioner of the environment and sustainable development, to do audits. To address the concerns voiced by my colleague who spoke before me, I would say that the connection with our committee is very clear.
However, I have enormous reservations about this motion. I believe that the responsibilities of provincial regulatory agencies and governments should not be discussed at the federal level. As Ms. Shanahan said, we are in a federation, and a federation must respect the provinces' jurisdictions.
I want to move an amendment that I think will have the support of other parties. I would like to reduce the motion to a minimum and simply keep the last paragraph with the colon, which starts with "that in relation to the Follow-up Study on Report 3". I would then keep only point 5, in which the committee requests that the Office of the Auditor General, through the commissioner of the environment and sustainable development, conduct an audit of environmental protections around Canada's waterbodies, especially those on Indigenous lands.
Obviously, this subject is very important to us. While I propose to remove any reference to matters that do not fall under federal jurisdiction, it is very important that the commissioner of the environment and sustainable development do an audit of the condition of water everywhere within Canada.
Thank you.
There is an amendment to the motion that would remove paragraph one and paragraph two. It would keep paragraph three, which begins, “That, in relation to the Follow-up Study”; cut items 1, 2, 3 and 4; and maintain point 5.
I have a speaking list. I'll continue to follow that.
Ms. Khalid, you're on that list. Go ahead, please.
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Paragraph one begins with “Whereas”. It's gone.
Paragraph two begins with “whereas, the Alberta Regulator”. It's proposed that this be removed.
“That the committee express”—that will be removed.
The entire paragraph four in the English, which begins with “That, in relation to the Follow-up Study” and ends with “the committee”, would remain.
Items 1, 2, 3 and 4 are to be cut, and 5 would remain: “Request that the Office of the Auditor General, through the Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development, conduct an audit of environmental protections of Canada's waterbodies, especially those on Indigenous lands.”
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I think the amendment is decent. I don't know a lot about provincial politics in Alberta. I will be very clear on that. I certainly don't know anything about this tailings pond. It's far out of my jurisdiction.
At the same time, for us as federal members of Parliament, the last thing we want to do is to be too heavy-handed with provinces by instructing them what to do with their time and with their industries. I think that's pretty heavy-handed.
I was thinking of Mr. Desjarlais' comments earlier. He wasn't wrong about the duty to consult with first nations. I went through that a lot in New Brunswick. It gets dicey when provincial governments and provincial bodies are consulting with the first nations chiefs of the communities. Sometimes you could get agreement within the first nations communities, but then there might be a grassroots element from within the community that didn't align with the council and chief of the actual community. Then you would have different factions, and that would really complicate matters for provincial bodies. I did see how sometimes opportunities were lost because of the differences of opinion among the greater indigenous community.
At the same time, I think the amendment is decent. It removes a lot of the aspects that I think were heavy-handed. I think it's okay at this point.
Thank you to the members. It's the first time I'm visiting this committee.
I just came from the environment committee, where I had the pleasure—this is not the right word—of hearing responses from . It was the first time I have had the chance to speak with the minister at the environment committee. It was the first time in 262 days that the minister had appeared.
The Alberta Energy Regulator has appeared twice at the environment committee during that same time. By my estimation, the federal environment committee should have appearances by the environment minister of this federal government more frequently than by a provincial regulatory body.
To have them thrown under the bus for political reasons as we are heading into the Christmas season, I think, is something that we should not really be focusing a lot of time on, given the frustrations that provinces have with this government and have rightfully already aired publicly. Most recently the premier of the Northwest Territories spoke out against the cost of the carbon tax for his constituents. We have had, obviously, headaches within the prairie provinces over natural resource regulations, particularly in the aftermath of Bill C-69, the “no more pipelines” legislation, being slapped down by the Supreme Court for its unconstitutionality. Then the federal Liberal government just decided to go further. They decided to impose the “Ottawa knows best” approach on provinces once again with new methane emissions being proposed and with the clean electricity regulations that most definitely are going to be ruled unconstitutional, particularly given the reference case of the Impact Assessment Agency and Bill C-69.
All of that said, I think it's frustrating that provinces are having to deal with what seems like a concerted effort by the federal government from Ottawa attacking them.
The reason I came and joined this committee was to look at the same motion that we saw at the environment committee, where the Liberals tabled it because they wanted to use it to distract. They want to divide and to distract provinces and Canadians, and it is so very frustrating. I think for the good of our federation, it's just time to stop.
If you actually want to work with provinces on issues like tailings pond seepage or regulations, you need to be an active partner in working with provincial governments and not just say you're going to work with them and then impose your measures from Ottawa.
Mr. Chair, in relation to the specific amendment to this motion, I agree that it is decent. I would propose an additional amendment that would remove the unnecessary third paragraph that states its disappointment, because I don't think it's the role of the federal government through the public accounts committee to relay disappointment to a provincial regulatory body.
I would move a subamendment to the amendment that we remove paragraph three.
I want to thank my colleague, Ms. Sinclair-Desgagné, for the amendments. Numbers (1) to (4) seem to be recommendations. Getting to recommendations ahead of the actual report...I certainly support taking those out.
As I mentioned, I'm very happy at the request to do the report. I'll put this out perhaps to my colleague who has joined us from the environment committee. It's whether “Canada's waterbodies” is an accurate enough description. In the general context, I understand it's about drinking water for first nations. Maybe my colleague from the NDP can chime in as well on this—whether “waterbodies” covers, specifically, drinking water.
I'm not sure if that needs to be a further amendment. I will rely on Mr. Leslie or Mr. Desjarlais to chime in afterwards.
The only other issue I have, and I mostly support the amendment, is that I guess we are keeping the fourth paragraph “in relation to the Follow-up Study on 'Report 3: Access to Safe Drinking Water'”, which is fine.
It then says, “following the evidence provided by witnesses at the Standing Committee on Environment”. I am hesitant to have this committee put forward suggestions based on the work of another committee that I haven't seen, and I am concerned about making recommendations. Certainly keep the first line in, and I'm just putting this out there for further discussion. Again, it's asking for us to put forward a statement based on witnesses at another committee that we haven't heard.
I bring this up because I brought this up with AG Hogan, and also AG Ferguson, before his passing, about the shipbuilding study. We were doing a study in OGGO, the only committee that matters, about shipbuilding and asked if they actually referred to the evidence, witnesses and testimony in that study. The AG commented that, no, they do not actually look at information that comes up in other studies. Therefore, the current AG and the previous AG both stated that they don't consider testimony, recommendations or anything else from other studies.
Again, I'm hesitant about putting forward something based on what was heard in another committee when I haven't heard it myself.
Mr. Desjarlais, I'll put this out to you as you were conferring with someone. On the last line about “Canada's waterbodies, especially those on Indigenous lands”, are you're satisfied that would actually cover drinking water as well?
There is water body access, but again, from the MLI report, there's also underground water access. I'm not sure if you're satisfied. I understand the intent, but I want to make sure we are clear that it's water bodies but also specifically drinking water. Could you just chime in on that?
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Yes, and I do appreciate that the member comes from an area where this bill is taking place, and they may have a motive in not talking about those impacts, but I digress, Mr. Chair.
It's important to first nations in Alberta and it's important to members of Parliament to understand that the Alberta Energy Regulator does not operate outside our Constitution. I must be clear that I do, in fact, want to see consensus on this. I'd like members of this committee to come together on this, so, to the Bloc Québécois' amendments and striking 1, 2, 3 and 4, I'm okay to do that.
However, on the principle of what needs to be addressed, I would offer a subamendment to the amendment, which I think will take into direct account the issues of first nations, in particular ACFN, in their discussions with members of Parliament and their discussions with the government as to their concern in relation to the AER's impact and the federal government's obligation to those communities. The language I think I proposed prior to the final recommendation, which would become the new 1, would be to:
Call on the Auditor General to assess the Treaty, Inherent, and S.35 Rights impact of FN and Métis Communities by the Alberta Energy Regulator as it relates to Canada’s obligations to Treaty and Inherent rights of First Nations and Métis Communities in Alberta.
This falls wholly within our jurisdictional responsibility, and it's important, Chair, that in instances—and there have been instances—where provinces have trampled on the rights of indigenous people, it's up to us to ensure that we have full accountability in the protection of those rights. This is an important amendment. It deals with what the government is proposing, which are really serious concerns with the Alberta Energy Regulator. It deals with the concerns the Conservatives have with it being out of jurisdiction. It deals with the concern of the Bloc about provincial jurisdiction and puts it wholly within our narrow obligation founded in section 91(24) of the Constitution Act, which is the sole responsibility of jurisdiction for “Indians, and Lands reserved for Indians”. When there is an impact to that jurisdiction, it's the federal government's obligation and duty to protect those rights that are founded within our legal framework here in Canada.
I think it's important, so I'll—