I am pleased to present our report audits, which were tabled in the House of Commons last week.
First, let's look at our audit of the Canadian Armed Forces efforts to stop inappropriate sexual behaviour in the military.
In August 2015, the chief of the defence staff launched Operation Honour—a top-down, institution-wide military operation to eliminate this behaviour. He informed all members of the Canadian Armed Forces that he and senior leaders intended to change the culture in the forces and stop inappropriate sexual behaviour.
We found that Operation Honour increased awareness of inappropriate sexual behaviour within the forces. After its implementation, the number of reported complaints increased from about 40 in 2015 to about 300 in 2017. The forces believed that the increase was a sign that members trusted that the organization would effectively respond to inappropriate sexual behaviour.
[English]
However, we found that some members still did not feel safe and supported. For example, the duty to report all incidents of inappropriate sexual behaviour increased the number of cases reported by a third party, even if the victim was not ready to come forward at that time. Also, the military police had to conduct an initial investigation of all reported incidents even if the victim would have preferred to resolve the issue informally. This discouraged some victims from coming forward.
According to information gathered by Statistics Canada in 2016, there were many unreported incidents of inappropriate sexual behaviour in the Canadian Armed Forces. In mid-2018, the forces acknowledged that inappropriate sexual behaviour remained a serious problem and that a significant focus on victim support and the use of external independent advice was required.
I'll move now to another audit, which also focused on National Defence. It examined whether the department managed risks to Canada's fighter force so that it could meet Canada's commitments to NORAD and NATO until a replacement fleet is operational.
In 2016, the Government of Canada directed National Defence to have enough fighter aircraft available every day to meet the highest NORAD alert level and Canada's NATO commitment at the same time. This meant that National Defence had to increase the number of fighter aircraft available for operations by 23%. This new requirement came at a time when the Canadian air force faced a growing shortage of trained and experienced pilots and technicians.
To meet the new requirement, the government focused its efforts on increasing the number of aircraft. It first planned to buy 18 new Super Hornets, even though National Defence's analysis indicated that this would make the air force's personnel shortage worse and would not help it meet the new requirement.
[Translation]
The government's focus has remained on buying more aircraft. It is now planning to purchase used fighter jets from Australia, as an interim solution to bridge the gap to 2032, which is the current target date for rolling out a replacement fleet. The Australian jets are about 30 years old and have the same operational limitations as Canada's current fleet of CF-18s.
National Defence expects to spend almost $3 billion to expand the life of its current fleet and to buy, operate, and maintain the interim aircraft. However, without a plan to deal with its biggest obstacles—a shortage of experienced pilots and the CF-18's declining combat capability—these spending decisions will not be enough to ensure that the Air Force will have available on a daily basis the number of aircraft needed to meet the highest NORAD alert level and Canada's NATO commitment at the same time. Until National Defence knows how and when it will solve pilot shortages and get better combat capability, more aircraft won't solve its problems.
Let's turn now to the results of our audit of physical security at Canada's missions abroad.
Overall, we found that Global Affairs Canada had not kept pace with evolving security threats at its missions abroad. The department identified many significant security deficiencies in need of immediate attention in a large number of missions. The department had known about several of them for years, yet it had not put in place all of the recommended measures to address them, such as improved video surveillance, alarms, and installing vehicle barriers at entrances.
[English]
We found that most of Global Affairs Canada's capital projects to upgrade security were at least three years behind schedule, usually because of weaknesses in project management and in oversight.
Because security assessments were missing or incomplete for some missions, Global Affairs Canada did not have the information it needed to prioritize investments on the basis of where they were most needed, yet the department is responsible for the safety of its staff working at missions abroad and security upgrades to many missions are urgently needed.
The next audit I'm going to discuss also looked at physical assets that the government safeguards on behalf of Canadians—in this case, the country's national historic sites and heritage buildings.
There are long-standing problems in the conservation of Canada's federal heritage properties, and we saw few improvements since we last audited this area in 2003.
We found that Parks Canada, Fisheries and Oceans Canada and National Defence either did not know how many heritage properties they had or did not know what condition they were in. As a result, the information they provided to the public or to Parliament about these properties was either incorrect or incomplete.
We also found that conservation decisions were based on available resources and operational requirements rather than heritage considerations. The money needed to maintain federal heritage properties was not always available.
[Translation]
Needs have outpaced efforts when it comes to the conservation of federal heritage properties, yet their number continues to grow. Because there has been no additional funding to conserve these properties, there is a risk that more may fall into disrepair and eventually be erased from the country's history.
In another audit, we examined how Correctional Service Canada supervised offenders released into the community. The number of offenders released into community supervision increased by nearly 20% between 2013 and 2018, and the Correctional Service anticipates that this number will keep growing.
The Correctional Service has largely reached the limit of offenders it can house in community-based residential facilities. As a result, offenders ready for release in 2018 had to wait twice as long for a space in the community compared to four years before.
[English]
Despite the growing backlog and despite research that shows that gradual supervised release gives offenders a better chance of returning to society as law-abiding citizens, the Correctional Service of Canada did not have a long-term plan to respond to its housing pressures. The audit also found that the Correctional Service of Canada did not properly support and supervise offenders once they were released into the community. For 19 of 50 offenders sampled, we found that parole officers did not meet with offenders as often as they should have. We also found that parole officers did not always receive the information they needed to effectively support offenders in the community, including health care information to prepare release plans.
In our view, the Correctional Service of Canada needs to do more to supervise and support offenders released under community supervision. The Correctional Service of Canada must also plan to ensure that it has the types of community housing offenders need where they need it and when they need it.
[Translation]
I want to turn now to our examination of the government's efforts to ensure that all Canadians have access to reliable and high-quality Internet services. Many examinations of the state of broadband Internet in Canada have recommended that the federal government create a national broadband strategy, but the government only agreed to take that step a few weeks ago in late October, after we had concluded our audit.
In the absence of sufficient funding, Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada has been reluctant to put in place a strategy to meet the connectivity needs of Canadians in rural and remote areas. This means that almost 3.7 million Canadians have less access to important online services, such as education, banking and health care, and they don't know when they can expect the situation to improve.
In 2016, the department launched a 5-year, $500-million funding program that focused on bringing high speed Internet to 300 rural and remote Canadian communities. However, as a result of a number of weaknesses in the design of the program, it did not ensure maximum broadband expansion for the public money spent.
[English]
The difficulty of improving Internet access for 3.7 million Canadians in rural and remote areas has been further compounded by the way Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada has managed the radio frequency spectrum. We found that small Internet service providers struggle to access high-quality spectrum to support broadband deployment in rural and remote areas. For example, the department auctioned spectrum licences for geographic areas that are too large for smaller service providers to bid on, and a secondary market for unused spectrum did not function well, partly because there is little incentive for licence holders to make available for subordinate licensing the spectrum they are not using in rural and remote areas.
That brings me to the last of the performance audits in this fall release. The audit focused on whether the Canada Revenue Agency consistently applied the Income Tax Act during its compliance activities.
We found that the agency inconsistently applied tax rules when it audited or reviewed taxpayers' files, even though the Taxpayer Bill of Rights requires the agency to apply the rules in the same way to taxpayers in similar situations. There were a number of reasons for these inconsistencies, and they included the judgment of agency staff conducting compliance activities, the region where the file was reassessed, and the type of taxpayer—for example, a small business or a large corporation.
Taxpayers in one region waited an average of seven months longer than those in another region for the agency to complete an audit. In one region, it took the agency more than 40 weeks to process taxpayers' requests for adjustments, while in another region it took 12 weeks.
[Translation]
When it came to the financial impact of the Revenue Agency's compliance activities, we found that CRA did not know the full results of the work it undertakes to ensure that all taxpayers pay they fair share of taxes. The agency's calculation of the additional revenues resulting from its compliance activities, beyond the amount it initially assessed, was incomplete. The agency's number did not reflect the portion of taxes written off as unrecoverable from taxpayers. This means that the amount the agency reported to Parliament as additional revenues resulting from the extra funding it received for compliance activities was an estimate, and the impact on the government's fiscal results was significantly less than the agency's estimate.
[English]
The reports also include copies of the audit work we've completed in Crown corporations since the spring. These reports have already been made available to the public by the Crown corporations that received them.
We audited the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, the Canada Council for the Arts and the Canada Development Investment Corporation. We found a significant deficiency related to board appointments in both the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation and the Canada Development Investment Corporation.
Mr. Chair, that concludes my opening statement. We are now ready to answer your questions.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I thank all of the witnesses for being with us again today to provide us with this overview of the audit reports.
[English]
I'm going to ask a few questions on one of the reports, for personal interest—actually, it struck a chord with me—and that's the one on heritage buildings, the patrimonial aspect of our country.
I was quite distraught to see that we pay so little attention to what little historic patrimony we have in this country. We are a very new country, so we don't have that many heritage buildings around, or even heritage areas. It seems astounding that we don't put emphasis on preserving and taking care of these buildings as they warrant, in my opinion.
[Translation]
For those who don't know, I am of European origin. In Europe, it's very normal to pay great attention to all heritage properties. I was very shocked to discover the state of our heritage properties.
I'd like to know if this is entirely due to the lack of financial means.
In paragraph 19 of your brief, you say:
[English]
“We...found that conservation decisions were based on available resources and operational requirements, rather than heritage considerations.”
[Translation]
Is this mostly an issue with money, rather than a lack of public interest? Is that why we are neglecting our heritage buildings to that extent?
:
In closing, we've come to inviting the departments and, starting next week, we will have various departments before us.
As you know, our committee has been very focused on this data problem, and it has come up today. Madam Mendès and others—Mr. Kelly—have clearly expressed the frustration that we have on this issue.
As we look through these reports, it's of particular concern when we see, for example, the one that Madam Mendès mentioned in Report 2.
I'll quote straight from your report dealing with conserving federal heritage properties, in which you state:
Because we could not rely on the data in the organizations’ databases, we could not put together an accurate overview of the condition of federally owned heritage buildings and national historic sites.
Then, with Parks Canada and Fisheries and Oceans Canada, you said they “did not have up-to-date information on the condition” of their heritage buildings. Parks Canada and Fisheries and Oceans didn't even have accurate information on the number of their heritage buildings.
Needless to say, this is a rather disturbing finding, particularly given that there were previous audits in 2003 and 2007.
On page 5 of Parks Canada, you mentioned this:
...Parks Canada had an asset management database that did not indicate all of its heritage buildings. We found that the database identified only 186 heritage buildings. The Agency took over four weeks to provide us with what it said was the complete list of 504 heritage buildings.
To you, is there anything, any way, any method that you have, or that we as a committee have, to again drive it home? Can we have this little box in our reports drawing attention to the data? Is there something more that we can be doing?
We're seeing all these reports mentioning data compilation, inaccurate data, data analysis, not being able to use the data because you don't know how to find it. Is there a way that you can send out something, almost like a shot across the bow, that says, “You know we're coming. You know that we want to see upgraded methods of access and retention of data.”
is there something more that we can do or you can do?
Mr. Goulet, would you comment?