:
This is not a point of order, Ms. Khalid; this is a statement.
All committees are multipartisan. This is one that is also opposition-led. We had a subcommittee meeting on this, and I gave everyone what I thought to be suitable notice and I received no objections beforehand. I am now on the floor, which is disrupting the meeting. This is not a point of order, so I'm going to move on. You will be in a position to make a further statement when it is your time.
I will say that my email works even when I'm not in committee, and members are of course welcome to work either through me or through their representative on the subcommittee.
The idea, to Ms. Shanahan's point, that today's working calendar represents the first that any of you have heard of this is false. There was unofficial notice given a week ago as well as the official notification at the end of last week, and then yesterday as well.
:
Thank you, Mr. Barrett.
I was taking Ms. Shanahan's last comment as a tying a bow on her previous comment, and I will now continue the opening process of welcoming our witnesses. Then we'll get to the rounds of questioning.
Just for the record, everyone, the indication I have is that the preference from members is for us to review the Tuesday subcommittee work at the end of the meeting.
Without further ado, 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 by using the Zoom application.
I remind everyone that all comments should be addressed through the chair.
[Translation]
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(3)(g), the committee is resuming consideration of the Auditor General's Report 1, 2024, entitled “ArriveCAN”, referred to the committee on Monday, February 12, 2024.
[English]
I'd now like to welcome our witnesses. From the Office of the Auditor General, we have Andrew Hayes, deputy auditor general; Sami Hannoush, principal; and Lucie Després, director. From the Canada Border Services Agency, we have Darryl Vleeming, vice-president and chief information officer, and Jonathan Moor, vice-president, comptrollership branch.
Mr. Hayes, you'll be given up to five minutes for your opening remarks, and then we'll turn to the CBSA.
Without further ado, you have the floor, Mr. Hayes.
:
Mr. Chair, thank you for inviting us again to discuss our report on ArriveCAN.
I would like to acknowledge that this hearing is taking place on the traditional unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishinabe people.
I am accompanied today by Sami Hannoush and Lucie Després, who were responsible for the audit.
[Translation]
Our audit of the ArriveCAN application looked at how the Canada Border Services Agency, the Public Health Agency of Canada and Public Services and Procurement Canada managed the procurement and development of the application, and whether they spent public funds in a way that delivered value for money.
[English]
You have heard the Auditor General emphasize how deeply concerned we are by what this audit didn’t find.
We didn’t find records to accurately show how much was spent on what, who did the work, or how and why contracting decisions were made, and that paper trail should have existed. Overall, this audit shows a glaring disregard for basic management and contracting practices throughout ArriveCAN’s development and implementation.
Government organizations needed to be flexible and fast in responding to the COVID-19 pandemic, but they still needed to document their decisions and demonstrate the prudent use of public funds. In this audit, we found disappointing failures and omissions everywhere we looked.
Public servants must always be transparent and accountable to Canadians for their use of public funds. An emergency does not mean that all the rules go out the window and that departments and agencies are no longer required to document their decisions and keep complete and accurate records.
[Translation]
This concludes my opening remarks. We would be pleased to answer any questions the committee may have.
Thank you.
:
Good morning, Mr. Chair and honourable members of the committee.
I'd like to thank the Auditor General and the procurement ombud for their reports, which have identified some important lessons for us all.
The Canada Border Services Agency has already implemented a number of actions to address their recommendations. At the onset of the pandemic, the CBSA was focused on protecting our borders while maintaining the flow of essential travellers and trade. The agency needed to adapt its operations at a time of considerable uncertainty over health risks.
The need for ArriveCAN arose quickly when it became clear that the manual, paper-based processes for tracking the contact tracing and health information of travellers did not meet the needs of the Public Health Agency of Canada. PHAC asked the CBSA to assist it by developing a digital form, and the first version of ArriveCAN was released six weeks later. Over the following two and a half years, the CBSA responded to the changing health requirements set out in over 80 orders in council by releasing 177 different versions of the app.
The agency has estimated that the border health measures related to the ArriveCAN app cost $55 million, including a number of non-IT costs, such as over $6 million for the Service Canada call centre.
The Auditor General and the procurement ombud reports have identified a number of very serious weaknesses in procurement and internal controls processes. We have accepted their recommendations, and our management response plans are already under way.
I would like to highlight a few of those actions aimed at strengthening the agency's governance and assurance functions.
We have strengthened the first line of defence by requiring all HQ staff with financial delegations to retake four procurement training courses to help them better understand their responsibilities.
Given the weaknesses in procurement oversight, we have established a new executive procurement review committee to strengthen the second line of defence by reviewing all contracts and task authorizations over $40,000. We have also established a new procurement centre of expertise, which is developing an ongoing program of quality assurance reviews to ensure compliance with the directive, with a particular focus on the need for proper record-keeping.
Our management response plans are aligned with the plans of other government departments, as developing the ArriveCAN app was a shared responsibility. The agency leveraged PSPC's contracting authorities for over 30 of those contracts and Shared Services Canada's for seven contracts. The CBSA was the contracting authority for the remaining four contracts.
In the first year, the agency was responsible for managing the development, enhancement and operations of the ArriveCAN app on behalf of PHAC. However, no new funding was received in the 2020-21 financial year. The costs were coded to a general COVID-19 pandemic measures account, which would have included other pandemic-related expenditures, such as personal protective equipment and cleaning. The agency did establish a dedicated financial code in the second year when funding was provided by PHAC and by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada. In hindsight, it should have been created much earlier.
I am very proud of my employees, colleagues, and frontline border services officers who served Canada throughout the pandemic. We acknowledge the very serious deficiencies and welcome the lessons learned. We are now focused on addressing the recommendations that have already been made.
We would be pleased to answer your questions.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Good morning. Thank you to all the witnesses for your attendance today.
My first line of questioning will be for the Auditor General's team. Anyone can answer.
A couple of weeks ago, in mid-March, we heard from both Darren Anthony and Kristian Firth, the two principal owners of GC Strategies, also known as “Government of Canada strategies”, who picked apart the findings in the Auditor General's report.
Specifically, Mr. Firth said his reputation had been damaged by “false information” in what he called an “inaccurate” report by the AG and that—quoting—“virtually everything reported about my company in the media and stated about me and my company has been false.” He said that his company was paid $11 million for the ArriveCAN, disputing the Auditor General's findings that GC Strategies received almost double that, $19 million. He blamed the discrepancy on flaws in the government's financial systems.
We then heard from his partner, Darren Anthony, who, surprisingly, simply parroted everything that his partner had said. He didn't even take the time to actually read your report and didn't take the time to read the report of the procurement ombudsman, but had no problem stating that everything was categorically false. Specifically, he said the Auditor General's findings were inaccurate. He said that the reports from both the AG and the procurement ombudsman, which found serious problems with ArriveCAN contracts, were wrong and admitted again that he had not read the report.
I'm sure this is not the first time that the AG's team has learned about these particular statements. I'd like to provide an opportunity for you to respond on how you feel about these particular statements.
:
Thank you for the question.
I'll start with the findings. We're confident with the findings that we provided to Parliament in our reports. We have a rigorous audit process to make sure that the facts and information we provide are accurate.
With respect to the estimates, we did provide an estimate in the report around the overall cost, and we identified an amount per contractor. There are some facts that absolutely cannot be disputed. In particular, it is a fact that the contractors were paid the amounts that we listed in our report. I should say that they received at least those amounts. Some contractors received more.
What is really at issue is whether or not those amounts should be attributed to the ArriveCAN app versus work on another IT project, and this is where the problem of poor record-keeping by CBSA raises confusion and leaves these open questions. Ultimately, in our report we mentioned that the poor record-keeping led us to have to build up an estimate. We used the CBSA's financial systems, the contracting documents and other evidence to build up this estimate.
It is important to remember that our estimate includes more than what was spent on building the app. It also includes amounts for the implementation, maintenance and other associated costs, and this is because Parliament asked us to look at all aspects of the ArriveCAN app. The shortcomings in the documentation and the weak controls made it very difficult to precisely attribute costs among these elements of ArriveCAN, but ultimately, any number that is provided, whether it's the CBSA's or ours, is an estimate, because of the poor record-keeping.
I'll stop there.
:
I'm very happy to explain. I was not personally responsible for ArriveCAN, but as a member of the CBSA's executive committee, I am accountable for the failures. We have already taken note of those failures and we have already started to deal with them.
In terms of ArriveCAN, it was managed by the border task force. Actually, the comptrollership branch was mainly focused on managing the internal task force during the COVID pandemic. These were very, very difficult times. People were crossing the border to return back to Canada, and we were told that we could catch COVID from touching documents. Our number one priority initially, working with PHAC, was to get the e-form up and running. That cost about $80,000. The comptrollership branch involvement in this one was really around making sure we had the funding available for that.
We recognize the comments made by the Auditor General. In year one, we did not have an accounting code, so we were not identifying the ArriveCAN cost separately. That is one of the reasons we have different cost estimates included in the numbers. In fact, that is also recognized in the OAG report itself, in paragraph 1.24. It identifies that $53 million was the estimate for the OAG for the public health component, with a further $6.2 million included for the customs and immigration declaration. We recognize that in year one we did not have the information available to us, so those were estimates in both cases.
That was our primary role in terms of the first year. We were looking after the finances, but we were also working extensively on the internal task force.
:
The first thing I would say is that we have to look at the two or three lines of defence.
The first line of defence is based within the information, science and technology branch. It was responsible for the ArriveCAN app, for the development and operation of that application. We have over 1,600 delegated financial officers within the agency, and about 900 of those are based at headquarters. Quite a large number of those individuals are based in the border technologies innovation directorate, which was directly responsible for the development of the app and also for the contracting functions, working with PSPC.
What we were doing there was looking at the failures of the first line of defence. We have no doubt that there were failures in the first line of defence in terms of governance, oversight and record-keeping, and all of those things are lessons we have learned. They're also, potentially, subject to investigation to look at whether there was any wrongdoing in some of those failures. We recognize that there were failures, but we're not entirely sure of the exact reasons for those failures—whether they were from the stress of the pandemic or whether there was any wrongdoing included with that. We should wait for the investigations to conclude on that matter.
The second line of defence is where the comptrollership branch is involved. Every year, we take a sample of about 5,000 non-pay transactions to see if they are being properly processed. On average, we find about 9% to 10% have errors. That is not satisfactory to us; our target is less than 5%. We were very disappointed to see the Auditor General's report, which identified that 18% have those errors. We are looking into the reasons for that, and one of those reasons is that there wasn't a separate cost centre code. There was an administrative error in that the individual invoices were not being coded to the right account because we didn't have a separate code.
Those were really the basic functions of the first and second lines of defence.
I would also like to ask Mr. Moor some questions, to start with.
Mr. Moor, you're the vice-president of the Comptrollership Branch. You've had that title since 2018. So you were responsible for financial oversight at the Canada Border Services Agency when all these events took place between 2020 and 2021, including the awarding of contracts.
Do you feel that you did your job properly or that you simply did your job?
:
Thank you very much for your question.
[English]
I believe I did my job well during the pandemic. It was a very difficult period in time. I was appointed in January 2018, so I was there for the entirety of the pandemic.
It was a very challenging time for the agency as a whole, as I have said previously. I was responsible for the internal task force, which was primarily based on our employees: making sure they had PPE available to them and making sure that we were managing the work-from-home directive and managing all of the internal functions of the agency.
I was not directly responsible for the border task force. However, I did have oversight in terms of the finances, as I said before. I was responsible for ensuring that we had sufficient funding to manage the border task force activities, and I was also responsible for the second line of defence, as I previously described.
I'm very proud of what we did during the pandemic. I know that we made mistakes and I know that we've learned lessons from those mistakes. They were mistakes in the context of an operational crisis for us, with people coming across the border where we had to manage difficult situations.
:
Mr. Moor, every country in the world went through this crisis. Few paid $60 million for an app like ArriveCAN.
In some self-respecting countries, there is financial oversight, especially in large organizations comparable to the Canada Border Services Agency. Those in charge of that oversight do their job to prevent employees from going to events with companies and keep contracts from being awarded non-competitively to companies with two people. That kind of oversight exists in a lot of places.
You mentioned that you had a supervisory role in this. I believe that someone who has a supervisory role has a duty of responsibility and an obligation to be accountable. You have to be accountable to taxpayers, who paid far too much for an app.
In fact, you signed a letter sent in the spring of 2020, which argued that GC Strategies absolutely had to obtain a contract for a three-year term, and requesting that the emergency exception be applied. There's already a problem there. If it's urgent, we're not going to allocate millions of dollars over three years. Instead, we'll wait and see what happens. If ever there's an emergency and a contract has to be awarded, we may proceed quickly, but it will be a contract for a small dollar amount.
How is it that a person in charge of oversight can send a letter asking for an emergency exemption to be applied, when Mr. Utano's advice was to award a multi-million dollar contract for three years, which was much higher than the cost of the app in the first place? How do you justify this letter sent in May 2020?
:
There were a number of different questions in there.
We do not have details about other countries, but we do understand there were also significant costs involved in managing travellers across borders in other countries, in particular in the Border Five and the European Union.
I want to come back to the national security exemption letter.
I recognize that I did sign that in June of 2020. That was at the request of PSPC, to allow them to put in place the second contract with GC Strategies. They had already done the first contract with GC Strategies, I think in March, and they needed to do a second contract. As I referenced at the OGGO committee last week, we identified a supplier that had successfully implemented a modern tool for risk assessment. As I identified last week, that was a company called Lixar.
What I have learned since last week is that Lixar was actually working in a strategic partnership with GC Strategies, so I accept that the testimony of the PSPC deputy minister was correct in that this letter directly led to the second contract with GC Strategies. That is what the national security letter was used for. Only one contract was let under that national security exemption letter; the others were let under the PHAC-originated national security exemption letter.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank the witnesses for being present with us today.
It is a troubling fact that ArriveCAN has cost Canadians millions and millions of dollars while we're experiencing a cost of living crisis. Canadians, whether they're paying rent or just trying to pay their bills, are seeing things get more expensive. At the same time, it's troubling that their government, seemingly without care or oversight, is spending on expensive and extreme outsourced contracts. This is, I think, the crux of my concern, and one that I'll focus on in my questions to the witnesses.
We know, for example, from statements from the union representatives at the CBSA, that there is a double crisis happening right now. There's the crisis of the dramatic underfunding of our public service, which has created a vulnerability. CBSA has been forced, in some sense, to outsource, looking for the expertise they don't have.
The other problem is that when CBSA is given that longer leash, it seems as though things get way out of hand. We've seen multiple breaches of very, very basic levels of accounting and reporting, and, I'd argue, of basic ethics in disclosure of facts of when or how or if there was influence by private contractors and preferred access to private contractors, particularly when we look at the evidence that the Auditor General has found.
I want to look at the finding in paragraph 1.28 of the report:
The Canada Border Services Agency determined that it would need to rely on external resources to develop the web-based and mobile application because it did not have sufficient internal capacity with the skills needed.
We know that as early as 2006, there was a rapid increase in outsourced contracts by the Government of Canada. We can see it in, for example, the Phoenix pay system. The government gives a contract, and it gets out of control. These private contractors then endlessly bill the taxpayer for, in this case, even task authorizations that were not completed. Basic levels of trust, I think, were breached here.
In addition, we see in paragraph 1.29 that the Auditor General found the following:
We found that as time went on, the agency continued to rely heavily on external resources (Exhibit 1.2). Reduced reliance on external resources would have decreased the total cost of the application and enhanced value for money.
This is, I think, the most important piece to some of this work—to know that when they could have reassessed some of the task authorizations, even if the task authorizations had information relevant to what they were doing or who was doing it, there would have been an opportunity to reduce the overall cost of some of this work. You can look, for example, at that exhibit submitted by the Auditor General's office and at the tremendous cost this bears against the public.
I think it's now incredibly important that the checks and balances you mentioned at the outset of your testimony, Mr. Moor, aren't only listened to today in this committee but are also actually enforced.
I often find in this committee that we have officials like you. In this particular instance, we see a massive breach of public trust. In the attempt to rebuild that public trust, there are often words and recommendations put forward by the Auditor General. What I find troubling is that sometimes these recommendations don't fully meet their target or are not enforced.
That's troubling for me. I'll be requesting at the end of our meeting that we investigate follow-up opportunities from your appearance here and follow up on the enforcement of recommendations. The enforcement aspect is important to me, because it has to change. This just can't continue the way it has. I'm nervous that this could be going on in other ministries or even continuing in your ministry if we don't continue to see some of these checks and balances properly addressed and fully implemented.
It's true that we know that the CBSA, as you just mentioned, Mr. Moor, was approached by Public Services and Procurement Canada during the second contract, when they reviewed the first set of contracts and determined that they were insufficient for the purposes of being competitive, because of their non-competitive nature, and recommended a competitive process.
Is it the case that your letter that you just submitted, or that you admitted was signed in May of 2020, was your response to the initial inquiry by Public Services and Procurement Canada?
:
I'd be happy to start, and then maybe Darryl can take over.
Staff augmentation is what an organization does when it decides to build something in-house but doesn't have all of the skills required to do that. It involves bringing in contractors, often on a daily rate or, sometimes, on a rate for fixed product. Staff augmentation is widespread throughout the Government of Canada.
If I go back to what the deputy minister of DND testified to this committee, he identified that staff augmentation was actually necessary because sometimes it's not very easy for individual contractors to get contracts with the Government of Canada. It requires an awful lot of work to actually secure those contracts, so going through a staff augmentation specialist does add value for those individuals and small and medium-sized enterprises.
Also, hiring in the public service is not very easy, particularly for positions like technical architects and cloud architects. There are not enough in the Government of Canada. I think the previous CIO talked about a 25% or 30% shortfall in the number of people who are in-house. We are trying to increase the number of people in-house, but it is not easy to do. Also, the skill set may not be value for money for the public sector. We may not have sufficient work for a very technical specialist to do over a long period of time, but for short-term assignments and projects, they are very important.
Staff augmentation has its purpose. I think PSPC gave evidence that there are more than 600 different companies providing staff augmentation. The issue here is how we used it. We definitely agree that we used it too much, and we used it for too long.
I'll hand it over to Mr. Vleeming now to talk about what we're trying to do to reduce the requirement.
:
I established the executive procurement review committee last October to address many of the findings in the OAG report and also in the current ombudsman's report.
This is to deal with the second line of defence, which was clearly lacking for us during the COVID period. Now, the executive procurement review committee looks at every single contract and every single task authorization above $40,000. We have about 1,500 contracts across the CBSA, so that's a significant requirement. This is about ensuring that we make this change stick and making sure that this applies across the agency as a whole. Maybe in time, if we start to see performance improving, we can raise those limits.
We have had over a dozen meetings; the committee meets, on average, at least once a week. We go through all of the different proposals. In the case of Mr. Vleeming's branch, a presentation will be made to the committee to say what we aim to do, and questions will be asked about whether that is compliant with the procurement controls and measures. We will ask the procurement directorate to give us assurance that it is completely compliant. It's there as a second line of defence to ensure this never happens again.
:
But, Mr. Moor, you just said that it's everyone's responsibility—unless you're not in the ministry—to raise an alarm when they see mismanagement or bad practice. In this case, you're saying that you're not responsible because it was below your pay grade or below your authorization.
Mr. Jonathan Moor: I would say—
Mr. Blake Desjarlais: At what point do officials such as you and others who are involved directly in ArriveCAN, who are privy to information about ArriveCAN and who have access to the contracts of ArriveCAN, actually say that this is unreasonable? Canadians can't expect this, the non-competitive contracts and contracts that have no task authorizations. Even worse, there are instances where we don't even have information as to the contractors or how much they charged.
Mr. Moor, this is serious. It's something that I can't understand.
Thank you to our witnesses for joining us here this morning.
At a recent public accounts meeting, Dany Richard, president of the Association of Canadian Financial Officers, testified that between the three departments in question here, there are over 1,000 members in those departments, including five members who flagged issues with management. We understand that very few, perhaps a dozen of these financial officers, were actually involved in this procurement process.
Mr. Moor, are you concerned about this?
:
Well, frankly, there were problems identified, and nothing happened. I think that's on you, sir.
I want to move on. We know that there are a number of current investigations going on in a number of venues. Most concerning, obviously, is the one by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, the RCMP, the Mounties. Our concern here is that Minh Doan's emails have magically disappeared. The chief technology officer couldn't save his emails, which is rather concerning and rather perplexing. I'm sure the RCMP is very intrigued and interested by that.
I want to know this from you, Mr. Moor: What are you doing to recover those emails?
:
It's “surprisingly easy”. I am quite frankly shocked by the fact that the Government of Canada, with all the resources of the state behind it, cannot preserve the emails of someone in a position like Minh Doan's, when there is a criminal investigation going on, and these documents simply disappear. I think that's incredibly concerning.
I want to move on to you, Mr. Hayes. In your opening comments, you echoed many of the concerns that were previously raised by you and the Auditor General about the lack of records, about not having paper trails and about things just not existing.
We received a letter recently from the Department of Public Services and Procurement Canada, the supposed experts on procurement. The assistant deputy minister wrote this:
On February 2, 2017, PSPC awarded a contract to GC Strategies for $24,977.52 through a supply arrangement for professional services to provide business and technical learning to PSPC employees using a new client relationship management system. A search of PSPC systems found references to the contract, including the total amount, however the contract document itself was misplaced during a reorganization and relocation of hard-copy files.
The department that's supposed to be the expert on procurement is losing documents on procurement and on contracts.
What's more, Treasury Board Secretariat, a central agency, wrote to us and said, “On behalf of the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat...a NIL response to the expanded motion is provided.” There is no response about GC Strategies, yet the Public Accounts of Canada lists GC Strategies as having received a contract for the Treasury Board Secretariat.
Here we have two key agencies, neither of which can account for its own contracts with GC Strategies. Is that a concern for the Auditor General's office?
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I too thank the witnesses for appearing here today.
I appreciate some of the testimony we just heard regarding the emergency management fund. I'd like to ask Mr. Moor if there is anything he can add to that.
I have one of the largest land borders crossings in my riding of Châteauguay—Lacolle, and many CBSA workers live in the riding, so I know how much they were working during that time and the pressures they faced in addition to their usual duties. I'd like to hear more, please.
:
Okay. Just one second, please.
Mrs. Shanahan, the clerk will send the motion to members in a few moments.
I take it that you are tabling the motion. I will come back to you in a second and allow you to respond. It is in the broad category of committee business, which of course is acceptable, but it does not pertain to the business at hand of this ongoing meeting.
You are welcome to respond to that. We of course can pick it up. I am willing to seek additional time on Tuesday, if you're in agreement.
Go ahead, please, Mrs. Shanahan.
I'm relatively new to this committee and I recall Mrs. Shanahan naming Mr. Christopherson, with whom I had the privilege of serving on committee in the past. She laid out for me very early on in my time here that this committee generally operated on a consensus basis. She was the one who informed me Mr. Christopherson said that when this committee was working well, you couldn't tell which party a member was from, or whether they were an opposition member or a government member.
I therefore find it quite surprising that this motion is coming from Mrs. Shanahan in particular, as it demands that there should be equal representation among witnesses based on party allocation. I don't think that is in the spirit of this committee and I will vote against the motion.
:
Thanks very much, Chair.
Very much like Mr. Desjarlais, I believe that it's imperative for us to have full sway and full consensus as we work on the important matters this committee deals with. Over the past number of months that I've been part of this committee, I have had the privilege and honour to work with all members, regardless of party, to come together to build that consensus and find ways to move forward to tackle the issues that public accounts is tasked with in our government and our Parliament. Time and time again, I have had to remind you, Chair, and remind committee members, that we are willing to play ball here.
Can we please have a say in when meetings are called and have an understanding as to who the witnesses are? We are trying our very best to work with the committee to ensure we are doing what taxpayers—Canadians—want us to do. It is getting increasingly difficult for us on our side. I won't speak for members in other parties, but it's becoming more and more difficult for us, when we are in our constituencies trying to do important work for our constituents, to have a say in when meetings are held and which witnesses are called when that's done without any regard for what the rest of the committee wants.
I would not have wanted this motion put forward, because I personally thought there was a general understanding as to how we operate as a committee. In fact, it's sad that we have to put this motion forward. However, I fully support it because that's the nature of how parliamentary committees work. We should be able to operate with consensus while ensuring that every party has representatives and an equal say in which witnesses are called and when meetings are held.
Trust me, Chair, it's not just you. We all care about what issues are discussed in this committee, and we want to work with you. I'm really hoping that all members of this committee support this motion, because it is important for how we function as a non-partisan or multipartisan committee that cares about the public and the issues the public is interested in.
I'll stop there and express my support for this motion.
In terms of the wording of Mrs. Shanahan's motion, I see a problem more specifically with point (a), which is to set a deadline to have a final witness list.
First of all, who sets the deadline? I'd like Mrs. Shanahan to explain that further.
Second, does that mean that once the deadline has passed, witnesses can no longer be added to the study? I think that would be problematic because it's as a study progresses that you can determine who the relevant witnesses are. That's the case in this study on ArriveCAN. The more stones that are turned over, the clearer it becomes that new and worthwhile elements can be added to the study.
Basically, I understand the idea of wanting to know in a more predictable way what we're going to do in committee. However, tying our hands at the beginning of a study isn't a good idea. The committee must be able to have a minimum amount of flexibility.
:
I'll answer very briefly, because I already said what I had to say about this at the beginning of the meeting.
That's the normal process that's followed by committees when it comes to calling witnesses. Things are different here at the Standing Committee on Public Accounts. For a long time, the usual practice of this committee has been to invite the Auditor General as well as the deputy ministers and officials of the departments concerned in the report of the Auditor General in question.
Here we are with about a dozen meetings on ArriveCAN, which is also being studied by other committees. Witnesses are invited left and right. In this context, it's normal to have a work process that respects the will of all members of our committee. It's fine for the date to be set by the chair, but the committee members must certainly be consulted, as is the usual practice.
:
Let me ask for clarify from the chair's perspective.
In point (a), Mrs. Shanahan, you are looking to set a deadline for witness lists, with the explicit consent of the committee. Do you envision a standard deadline that the committee will approve once, or would it be done meeting by meeting? Could you give me a sense of how many days you think would be adequate?
There's an issue with point (b), of course. Often, for the bulk of our reports, we're on autopilot when it comes to witnesses; we have the Auditor General and the subjects of the audits. Are you talking about extraordinary meetings? How do you propose that would work given the typical work this committee does?
Point (c) reads, “no witness be invited without instruction of the committee.” Would this negate the witnesses being proportional? Would the committee have to approve all witnesses, or could witnesses be invited based on whatever ratio is agreed to, if that was, say, four, two, one and one? Do all witnesses have to be approved by the committee, giving some members the ability to veto witnesses a party might want to hear from?
Could you respond to those questions, please, to give some clarity?
:
Mr. Chair, you're an experienced member and many of us have sat on other committees. We know that when we are faced with a study the committee has already agreed to undertake and we are inviting witnesses outside the normal scope of.... Public accounts is a committee where we have guaranteed witnesses—the Auditor General and officials from the department—who are directly concerned.
It has come about in this session of Parliament that we are being confronted with the unilateral invitation of witnesses, which is outside of our normal way of functioning. This motion speaks to the practice that other committees have, which is that there's consultation with the members and the chair proceeds in consultation with the members. There is an added caveat that in public accounts, it has been the normal practice that this be done by consensus, but in the least, we should have the consultation done in good form, as we say.
I think the motion is clear. I, for one, am ready to vote on it.
:
Thanks very much, Chair.
I just want to add to everything that Mrs. Shanahan has said, which I one hundred per cent agree with.
There is no veto power. As it is with all committees, every party submits their witness list, and those witnesses are invited to appear before the committee. We're not talking about whether a party can veto. This is not the United Nations Security Council. We are trying to be as inclusive as possible here. I don't anticipate any veto power.
I think members should be given the opportunity to invite witnesses in a consensus format, to have a heads-up and to have some say in and some consultation on when meetings are held. We all lead very busy lives in our constituencies, doing important work for our constituents, and in Parliament and this committee as well. We want to build that consensus and work together. This is really the purpose of the motion.
Could I get a sense from you, Mrs. Shanahan, on how you see...? I'm serious about this. The subcommittee had a meeting and laid out priorities, and there was broad agreement from the opposition to continue the ArriveCAN study. If the motion passes, do you see this as immediate and tomorrow's meeting needs to be rescheduled, with the same thing for next week? Are we going to put a freeze on the work the clerk has done to arrange things, under my instructions, based on what I received coming out of the subcommittee meeting?
Could you respond to how you see this motion? Is this immediate or a go-forward?
To give greater clarity to point (a), after hearing from my colleagues around the table, about a witness list submission deadline set by the chair, I agree that you can determine, Mr. Chair, when that happens because of that portion. That's just to answer that question from my perspective.
Also, where it says, “the explicit consent of the committee”, I don't think it means the consensus of the committee. I think consent happens largely by a majority vote. I think a majority vote of the committee is the “explicit consent”, as I understand point (a) to read.
Ms. Khalid, have you said everything?
All right. I'm seeing no other intervenors. The clerk will call the vote.
(Motion agreed to: yeas 6; nays 4)
The Chair: The motion is carried, and I will of course follow it.
We're going to finish up our rounds. I apologize to our witnesses for the delay.
Mrs. Shanahan, you have the floor for two minutes and about 10 seconds.
:
As I said to OGGO last week, I believe the ArriveCAN application provided value for money, but I also accept that it didn't provide the best value for the taxpayer.
When you're looking at value for money, you have to look at economy, efficiency and effectiveness. The Auditor General has recognized that it was an effective app for providing factual information about quarantine on a timely basis to allow them to do their job.
I have spoken about efficiency. The ArriveCAN app costs about one dollar, whereas the paper-based process was costing about three dollars, so it is definitely a more efficient approach than the paper-based process.
When we talk about economy, there is a judgment there. We've talked previously about differences in how we count the money, but I think we all agree that there was insufficient information to record all of the expenditures correctly. Some of that we are going to be dealing with, but we recognize that we should have had the accounting code at the start.
I think it's important to note that the ArriveCAN project was conceived as something that would save money at CBSA. The fact is that it didn't, though, and we were all shocked by the testimony at this committee of people like Mr. Yeo, who was very proud to say that he was a Conservative member, Conservative donor and member of the People's Party of Canada, which means that he's not somebody who believes in tracking vaccination rates and so on. It was very bizarre, but he was very happy to make money on ArriveCAN.
What can you do to make sure that people like that don't get involved in projects again?
Mr. Moor, I'm going to take this opportunity to come back to what you just said. You're talking about value and efficiency. However, the awarding of contracts non‑competitively began in 2010, and this practice exploded between 2015 and 2019. In 2023, the Canada Border Services Agency awarded almost 20% of its contracts, if not a little more, non‑competitively.
Do you consider that all these non‑competitive contracts provide good value for taxpayers' money?
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Mr. Moor, you mentioned in our last round of questioning that, although everyone in your ministry is responsible for financial oversight and for ensuring accountability and more responsibility, you were accountable for ensuring that some of the costs here and, most particularly, the transparency and accountability piece with contracts were met.
What level of accountability have you faced given what has taken place, and what changes will you make as you continue this work?
Mr. Moor, I am so grateful you're part of the panel with the Auditor General. In fact, you're sitting right next to Mr. Hayes, the deputy auditor general.
Last week, exactly a week ago, I asked you a question and you couldn't answer it. I want to know why you deliberately—your agency, CBSA, not you personally—misled and lied to the Auditor General when saying that GC Strategies provided a proposal for the initial contract to work with CBSA. That's what CBSA confirmed to the Auditor General, and the Auditor General confirmed that this was, in fact, false.
Here's your opportunity, as a representative of CBSA, to come clean to Canadians and to members of this committee. Why did you mislead the Auditor General?
Mr. Firth of GC Strategies, when he attended a few weeks ago, refused to answer questions regarding his involvement in the $25-million IT service contract, stating that responding to that question would somehow jeopardize the RCMP investigation.
We know through the Auditor General's report, which I'm sure you have read, that GC—Government of Canada—Strategies was directly involved in the drafting of the narrow terms of that $25-million IT service contract.
For Mrs. Shanahan's benefit, I'll note that it was Mr. Firth himself who confirmed that the “GC” stands for “Government of Canada”—not my words. That's from your witness, Mrs. Shanahan.
Mr. Firth, through GC Strategies, created his own terms and drafted his own contract, which, surprisingly, he actually won, for 25 million Canadian taxpayer dollars. Who at CBSA allowed that to happen?
I won't be silenced by Ms. Khalid, Mrs. Shanahan or anyone on the Liberal bench, because these are relevant questions that Canadians want an answer to.
I'll ask it again, sir, for the fifth time: Why do you not know who in particular allowed GC to write the terms of their own contract, given your position at the CBSA?
The question can go to Mr. Vleeming as well. Why do you not know?
:
I just want to reiterate that I'm very disappointed that this has happened. The COVID pandemic was ongoing at the time, so some of our internal controls were not operating as effectively as they could have.
As I've said before, as the first line of defence, all 900 people with the delegation of financial signing authorities have been retrained. Everyone has undertaken 16.5 hours of training to remind them of what their responsibilities are in contracting. In addition, we have strengthened the conflicts of interest register. The conflicts of interest register covers employment, which is something Mr. Vleeming was talking about a minute ago, but it also covers procurement. We have now identified that anyone who has an interaction with procurement must talk to the procurement directorate and must log that as a potential conflict of interest. We've also strengthened our second line of defence in creating the procurement review committee, which is looking at all contracts and all TAs above $40,000.
We have done a lot already, but we have more to do to identify and address each recommendation that has been made.
:
Mr. Moor, it would be incredible, if not impossible, for Canadians to believe that the CBSA had no idea who authorized GC Strategies to ink the requirements for a $25-million contract, which then got awarded that same contract. Nobody knows.
You offered some names, and then when pressed by Mr. Brock on whether those you named were responsible, you said, “No, that's not what I'm saying.” However, you're not able or willing to tell us who was. Mr. Hayes then told you that one of those individuals wasn't even there.
It's hard to believe. In any other business or in any other environment, there would be serious repercussions. You said, sir, on ArriveCAN, “I am accountable for the failures.” These are massive failures, the likes of which have not been seen in decades in this country.
Have you offered to resign?
:
There's been $60 million in waste, along with allegations of fraud, forgery and corruption, and this arrive scam sees executives like you taking bonuses. You said, “I am accountable for the failures.” You said that today. Where is the accountability? Everyone keeps their job, everyone gets a bonus and Canadians are on the hook for all of it, for tens of millions of dollars.
As to the supposed cost savings from using this application versus paper, those paper costs were human costs. All of those humans are still being paid. These were costs on top of that, and so much of this, tens of millions of dollars of it, is grift. It's just Liberal insiders getting rich while Canadians get hammered and have to pick up the bill. It's egregious is what it is.
I have a question for the deputy auditor general. In your report, on page 5 there's a table. It's exhibit 1.1, “Estimated costs of the main contractors on the ArriveCAN application at 31 March 2023”. This details the $19.1 million that GC Strategies received, which, of course, they deny having been paid, and CBSA has no concept of how any of the contracts awarded to these two grifters were awarded. At the bottom of that table there's a line “other” and it's $6.1 million. Obviously the big numbers, like $19 million, draw a lot of attention, but with this $6.1 million, Canadians are now wondering how much of this corruption exists in the system and what makes up these companies.
Are there numbered companies involved? We need to understand who is getting rich off this project, which, of course, border services officers said was absolutely ineffective and prevented them from fulfilling their responsibilities. We've heard that from their union representatives and directly from BSOs. For that $6.1 million, who makes up the list?
:
Yes. Thank you very much.
As I've said before, it would be totally unacceptable for a contractor to be involved in drafting a request for proposals for a contract that they then bid for. Under the procurement rules, you can use a contractor for technical reasons, but they then have to exclude themselves from making a bid for that contract, and it has to be disclosed.
My answer to the question is I do not know, because I've not been involved in any of those internal investigations, and I'm certainly not involved in the RCMP investigation. If wrongdoing is found in any case, with any of these contracting approaches, then action will be taken. That's what I'm assuring, but I can't say at this moment a name because I do not know a name.
What Mr. Hayes helped me with was just to remind me of the chronology around who was involved in the border technologies and innovation directorate, and I do accept that chronology.
I apologize to Mr. MacDonald for mentioning him when clearly we know he was not there at that time.
:
My belief is that ArriveCAN did provide value for money, but it didn't provide the best value for money. I know that not necessarily everyone agrees with that approach, but we had to do this at a time of national emergency.
We had to get the paper-based system out of the approach and get into a digital system. That was done within six weeks, and it was very important for our officers not to fear touching pieces of paper from people crossing the border.
I think it's a really important sort of thing to recognize that we did not do everything right with ArriveCAN. We recognize that, and we accept the recommendations made and are doing something about it. Overall, we did a very difficult job in very difficult times, and I'm proud of what we did, but we did make some mistakes and will learn from those mistakes.
I want to follow up on some questions I asked Mr. Vleeming.
You confirmed that Aurora Cannabis was hacked when you were working there as chief information officer. According to an article by Yahoo Finance Canada, hackers stole all the computer data that Aurora Cannabis had, including copies of passports, copies of driver's licences and other highly confidential documents. When they tried to sell that data in an online marketplace, they posted, as proof of those documents, a photocopy of your passport, Mr. Vleeming.
Can you explain how you experienced these events, as chief information officer? Were you the victim of blackmail directed at you personally or at Aurora Cannabis as a result of this data breach?
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I want to ask the deputy auditor general about the findings on page 15. The subtitle is “No governance structure or budget”. The Auditor General's office found that “from April 2020 to July 2021, when the ArriveCAN application was being developed and regularly updated, no formal agreement existed between the Public Health Agency of Canada and the Canada Border Services Agency on their respective roles and responsibilities.” It goes on to say in the final sentence, “In our view, the Public Health Agency of Canada, as the business owner, was responsible for establishing the governance structure.” Then, later on it says, “A letter of intent between the agencies was signed in July 2021 and was in force until March 2022.”
Mr. Hayes, what evidence did your office review or not review that suggested that no governance structure was adhered to?
:
Thank you very much, Chair.
I want to say again how much I appreciate the witnesses being here today and making themselves available to us.
In my last line of questioning, we established that there indeed is enduring value to ArriveCAN. The original purpose was to offset the paper-based cost of dealing with people filling out forms and so on. I can just imagine the inefficiency of that system. What I'd like to know now, though, is what went wrong with the procurement of the ArriveCAN app.
Mr. Moor, you're familiar with the procurement ombud, who wrote a detailed report regarding the procurement of ArriveCAN.
:
Yes, absolutely. I really welcome the procurement ombud's report and also the OAG's report. We have learned an awful lot around the procurement, and as I have said before, we definitely made some mistakes on procurement and have learned those lessons.
I think the comptroller general at a recent committee appearance said that now is the time to move on and make sure the recommendations are implemented and that the organization has the time to implement the recommendations to ensure this does not happen again. However, I would also say that we should always go back four years and think about the atmosphere of the pandemic.
It was a very difficult atmosphere. Personally, I had to have a letter from the CBSA president to attend the office during that period, even though I was operating at an operational level. We had the relocation of all individuals back to their home environments, which they had never worked in before. We had the border, which was being significantly challenged. I think people need to have a look at the context around this period of time, and the Auditor General did recognize the context at the time.
I accept that we made mistakes. We have learned from those mistakes. We are implementing actions from those mistakes, but we also need to recognize that some of those mistakes may well have occurred because of the pandemic conditions.
Also, we're looking to see if there was any wrongdoing. If there was any wrongdoing, I can guarantee you action will be taken, but we really need to allow the RCMP and the internal investigations to conclude and find out whether any of these accusations are founded. If they are founded, action will be addressed.
I would go a step further and say that during the height of the pandemic emergency, when we did not even know the nature of COVID-19, whether we could have a vaccine and what kind of protection we could have in order to simply continue as a society from day to day, there were those who took advantage of the emergency situation and the fact that people were working from home and their services were needed. We talked about staff augmentation. We needed specialized services to provide that digitized application.
I'm thinking of the ombud's recommendation 3 concerning the “Replacement of Specific Individuals” clause in contracting. The procurement ombud was very clear about the bait and switch strategy used by contractors who were taking advantage of the emergency situation at the time. Can you comment on that?
:
I don't know. You're welcome to send a note to the clerk and find out what information Mr. Yeo has provided.
Mrs. Shanahan, you seem intent on this card. I will remind you, all members and the audience watching that those cards are sent out even before people donate. I wouldn't read too much into it, but we will of course endeavour to follow up on all documents that have been promised to this committee and report that information to committee members.
Thank you, members of the Office of the Auditor General, for coming today, along with members of the Canada Border Services Agency. We appreciate you being here. We also appreciate your patience with us. I know we've run a bit over time, but I thank you for your time today.
To wrap things up, I'll note that a working calendar was sent out to members this morning. I worked with Ms. Yip—actually, all members of the subcommittee—and we're going to factor in some time at the end of the meeting on Tuesday to review the subcommittee's work to date.
Also, to the next point, I previously requested witnesses for the ArriveCAN study, and I neglected to put a date on that. I will do so right now, and the clerk will send it out again today. It's one week from today for any witnesses members might want for the ArriveCAN study.
Of course, it is my intention to abide by every motion that is passed by this committee. I see no issues with the motion that was passed today. It will just mean working through and communicating clearly on deadlines.
I'm going to refer you all to House of Commons Procedure and Practice, chapter 20, regarding the convening of meetings. I don't want today's motion to be misunderstood. Chapter 20 says that meetings are called through a decision of the chair or through the chair's authority, which is demonstrated across the parliamentary precinct. Of course, I look forward to working with all members as we continue to study ArriveCAN and as we agree together on witnesses going forward.
I will see you all back here tomorrow.
Without further ado, I adjourn this meeting.