:
Good afternoon, everyone.
I call the meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 103 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Public Accounts.
[English]
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, pursuant to the Standing Orders. Members are attending in person in the room and remotely using the Zoom application.
As a reminder, all comments should be addressed through the chair.
[Translation]
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(3)(g), the committee is resuming its consideration of the Auditor General's 2024 report 1, entitled “ArriveCAN,” which was sent to the committee on Monday, February 12, 2024.
[English]
I would like to welcome our witnesses.
From the Office of the Auditor General, we have Andrew Hayes, deputy auditor general, and Lucie Després, director. It's good to see you both again.
From the Office of the Procurement Ombudsman, we have Alexander Jeglic, procurement ombudsman, and Derek Mersereau, acting director, inquiries, quality assurance and risk management.
Mr. Hayes and Mr. Jeglic, you will each be given a maximum of five minutes for your opening remarks, after which we will proceed to rounds of questions.
Mr. Hayes, as is custom, you'll begin first, please.
:
Mr. Chair, thank you for again inviting us to discuss our audit report on ArriveCAN.
I would like to acknowledge that this meeting is taking place on the traditional unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishinabe people.
Joining me today is Lucie Després, who was the director on the audit.
This audit examined whether the Canada Border Services Agency, the Public Health Agency of Canada and Public Services and Procurement Canada managed all aspects of the ArriveCAN application in a way that delivered value for money. I'll focus my remarks today on our findings related to the contracting practices.
We found many shortcomings in the Canada Border Services Agency's management of contracts. Essential information was missing from awarded contracts, such as clear deliverables and the qualifications required of workers. When we looked at invoices approved by the CBSA, details about the work performed and who did the work were often missing. This contributed to our conclusion that the best value for money wasn't achieved.
[English]
In our examination, we saw little documentation to support how and why the Canada Border Services Agency initially awarded GC Strategies the ArriveCAN contract through a non-competitive process. Only one potential contractor submitted a proposal, and that proposal did not come from GC Strategies.
Also concerning, we found evidence that GC Strategies was involved in the development of requirements that were used when the agency later moved to a competitive process to award a $25-million contract for work on the ArriveCAN app. The requirements were very specific and narrow. This gave GC Strategies an advantage that other potential bidders did not have.
Although the procurement ombudsman's review and our audit did not have the same scope, we have similar findings and recommendations as they relate to documenting the assessments and the decisions made in the awarding of contracts. We both found that basic contracting rules were simply not followed.
This concludes my opening statement. We would be pleased to answer any questions the committee may have.
Thank you.
I'd like to begin by acknowledging that the land from which I am joining you is the traditional unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishinabe people.
[Translation]
Mr. Chair, committee members, thank you for inviting me here today.
My name is Alexander Jeglic. I appreciate the opportunity to appear before this committee to shed a light on the findings of my office's recent report on procurement practices of federal departments pertaining to contracts associated with ArriveCAN.
[English]
With me today is Derek Mersereau, acting director of inquiries, quality assurance and risk management.
I'd also like to acknowledge my esteemed colleagues from the Office of the Auditor General, who have undertaken a review of this topic and shared the results of their findings in recent weeks.
[Translation]
My office is independent from other federal organizations, including Public Services and Procurement Canada.
[English]
I submit an annual report to the Minister of Public Services and Procurement Canada, but the minister has no influence over my reports or reviews, and all my activities are concluded at arm's length from PSPC and other federal organizations.
[Translation]
Specifically, our legislative mandate has three components.
First, we review complaints from Canadian suppliers about the awarding of federal contracts below $33,400 for goods and $133,800 for services.
The second component of our mandate consists of reviewing complaints respecting the administration of contracts, regardless of dollar value.
[English]
Third is alternative dispute resolution services that Canadian businesses and departments can utilize to resolve contractual disputes. The process is voluntary, and my office's certified mediators assist parties in resolving disputes in a cost-effective and timely manner without resorting to litigation. There are no dollar-value thresholds associated with our mediation services.
Fourth, we review the procurement practices of federal departments to assess fairness, openness, transparency and consistency with laws, policies and guidelines, which led to my review of the ArriveCAN-related contracts.
On November 14, 2022, the House of Commons Standing Committee on Government Operations and Estimates, OGGO, adopted a motion recommending that my office conduct a review to assess whether contracts awarded by departments in relation to the ArriveCAN application were issued in a fair, open and transparent manner, and whether contracts awarded on a non-competitive basis were issued in compliance with the Financial Administration Act, its regulations and applicable policies and procedures.
Once my office was able to establish reasonable grounds, as per our regulatory requirements, the review was launched in January 2023. As per its legislated deadline, my office completed the review of ArriveCAN contracts on January 12, 2024.
[Translation]
The report was published online on the Office of the Procurement Ombudsman's website on January 29, 2024.
[English]
My office completed a review of 41 competitive and non-competitive procurement processes and resulting contracts, contract amendments and task authorizations or service orders, under which work was performed for the creation, implementation and maintenance of ArriveCAN. The review does not include subcontracts, as these are beyond the legal authorities of my position.
CBSA was the client department for all 41 contracts. These contracts were established for CBSA by PSPC, Shared Services Canada and CBSA under its own contracting authority.
Regarding competitive procurement practices leading to the awarding of contracts, all 23 solicitations reviewed were issued under a PSPC supply arrangement. Overall, solicitation documents were clear and contained information potential bidders required to prepare a responsive bid. For the most part, solicitations, solicitation amendments and responses to questions from potential bidders were appropriately communicated, and bids were evaluated and contracts awarded in accordance with solicitation documents. However, mandatory criteria used in one solicitation, leading to the awarding of a $25-million contract, were overly restrictive and favoured an existing CBSA supplier.
My office has identified issues related to the achievement of best value in many procurements. For 10 of the 23 competitive procurements reviewed, the use of overly restrictive median bands in the financial evaluation of bids stifled price competition and resulted in rejection of some otherwise high-quality bids.
In roughly 76% of applicable contracts, resources proposed in the winning bid did not perform any work on the contract. This is known as a bait and switch. When TAs, or task authorizations, were issued under these contracts, the supplier offered up other resources, but not the individuals who had been proposed in order to win the contract.
Files for non-competitive contracts included written justification for awarding a contract through a sole-source process based on the exceptions to competition provided by the government contracts regulations. Reasons were cited for not competing these contracts: They were necessary due to the need being a pressing emergency or due to only one supplier being capable of performing the work.
Insufficient records maintained by Shared Services Canada raised questions as to whether certain service orders under the GC Cloud Framework Agreement followed appropriate procurement practices. There was no documented procurement strategy for work associated with ArriveCAN, and multiple service orders issued to one supplier were treated as separate, unrelated requirements despite the fact that all were associated with ArriveCAN.
A majority of the files reviewed were for professional services contracts through which work was authorized under a TA. Overall, documentation of TAs used for ArriveCAN was complete and, for the most part, properly authorized. However, 20 of the 143 TAs reviewed did not include specific tasks, including descriptions of the activities to be performed.
Resources authorized to work on a contract with TAs must be assessed by the business owner before a TA is issued to ensure the individual meets evaluation criteria for the resource category, as specified in the contract. There were no assessments for more than 30 resources named for ArriveCAN-related TAs.
Overall, amendments to the contracts reviewed were appropriate and in line with the contracting policy.
As the client department, CBSA was responsible for the proactive publication or public disclosure of contract information on the Open Government website for the contracts reviewed. Information was not proactively published for 17 of 41, or 41%, of contracts reviewed. In these 17 cases, the original contract or one or more contract amendments were not available on the Open Government website. This result runs counter to broader government commitments to transparency and strengthened accountability within the public sector.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to our witnesses for joining us today.
I'm not a regular member of the public accounts committee. Rather, I serve on the government operations and estimates committee and had the opportunity to hear from both of you in the very recent past.
After your appearance at the government operations and estimates committee, Mr. Jeglic, the Auditor General tabled her report. In it, she found that GC Strategies was involved in the development of the criteria for the contract, which you termed in your report—and mentioned again today—as “overly restrictive and favoured this existing CBSA supplier”.
Two weeks ago, I sent your office a letter regarding this new discovery in the Auditor General's report related to the $25.3-million contract awarded to GC Strategies back in May 2022. As I indicated in my letter, I wanted your office and you to investigate these findings and verify who allowed this private contractor to sit at the table and develop the criteria for a contract they were obviously going to win.
Will you undertake to investigate these findings and table the results with this committee?
:
Thank you so much. It's nice to visit this committee today and substitute for my good colleague .
This is for the Office of the Procurement Ombudsman.
Concerning is right. Your department's report on emergency procurement highlighted the common challenges to procurement and services in an emergency such as COVID-19, as we are currently witnessing.
By the way, before I go on, I want to highlight the good work of my NDP colleague , who brought forward the motion to commission the report. As we know, it has shed tremendous light on many of the issues being discussed today and certainly all over the news. We know this was an extremely important step for what we're doing today, which is to get more clarity around what happened with ArriveCAN.
Circling back, the Auditor General, when bringing forth this report, commented, “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.” This is really troubling and very concerning.
In your department's report, you identified certain steps in a national emergency that the government has to take. There's a need for flexibility, centralizing, and ultimately relying on non-competitive contracting to save time and resources. However, the Auditor General is absolutely on point here. An emergency does not mean a disregard for rules and accountability. This is troubling.
Was the non-competitive process justified in this situation, when it was done so poorly and resulted in a heightened lack of transparency and a waste of resources?
:
Thank you very much, Chair.
I was afraid that I had missed important elements of our hearings by not being present last week. My apologies to all my colleagues.
I am very happy to be here today, and I greatly appreciate the testimony we are hearing not only from our deputy auditor general, Mr. Hayes, but also from the procurement ombud, Mr. Jeglic.
It's very important to the public accounts committee that we have a clear understanding of the procurement process and the fact that it is independent of all political interference. Indeed, that is what you have seen to date, albeit that there were other issues happening that were of great concern.
Last week, I was with the Canada-Africa Parliamentary Association in Tanzania, and there is great interest from parliamentarians there about our public accounts committee, how we work with independent officers of Parliament and how we proceed with our work.
I am glad to see that PSPC has suspended the task authorization authority for all 87 departments and agencies that it contracts for when it comes to IT professional services. I think we agree that IT is definitely a very problematic area of procurement, not just for the CBSA and the companies involved in ArriveCAN, but for everybody. PSPC is doing this until it signs new agreements that incorporate the rule changes that you have suggested.
First, I'd like to get your reaction to this. It seems very dramatic, but do you feel that it's appropriate?
:
Yes. It was set to minus 10%.
There is a problem in the sense that the clause meant to address this issue was geared towards the previous amount. Therefore, if someone made a competitive price offering, there was no opportunity for them to validate their price point and suggest that they could in fact deliver the services at that price point. In essence, it de-emphasized or de-incentivized people from bidding low. There was a higher incentive for them to bid high because it was less risky. If you sat outside of those bands, you would receive a zero financial score.
You alluded to the reason this methodology was implemented. One was to prevent lowball offers. What that circumstance would present is someone bidding at a price so low that when the task authorization is requested, no resources are provided by that supplier because they're not able to do so at that price point. That would cause time-wasting and frustration on the part of the department or agency.
I would suggest that the median bands issue was meant to address this lowball issue. It was a valid attempt, I think. In execution, it certainly didn't play out as anticipated. As a result, it has had some unintended consequences, which we noted to be that in four instances, competitive-priced bids were given zero point allocations, with no opportunity to rectify or explain the price, and were therefore not considered, even though on the technical side they were very strong.
I'll pick up on my previous question right away.
We heard your criteria for awarding contracts on a non‑competitive basis. We're familiar with these criteria. This isn't the issue. My question concerned the proportion of these contracts within the government.
By 2023, with the pandemic over, an emergency exception could no longer be invoked. Financial reasons aren't at stake either. We're seeing contracts over $100,000 awarded on a non‑competitive basis.
Is it normal that, under these circumstances, departments such as Public Services and Procurement Canada have awarded 27% of their contracts, or over a quarter of their contracts, through a non‑competitive process?
In other words, is it normal for the government to have awarded 7,600 contracts on a non‑competitive basis in 2023 alone?
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thank you very much to our witnesses for being here today.
I want to thank you all for your work in bringing to light so much of the mismanagement of the Liberal government with regard to the arrive scam scandal. I was speaking in the House today on this issue, and it's evident from the evaluations of both of your offices that there is very little positive, if anything at all, to say about the ArriveCAN application. Again, I thank you both very much for your work.
Mr. Jeglic, in November 2021, you had a report on the CBSA. You stated in the report that your office, the OPO, “observed instances where CBSA failed to disqualify non-compliant bids, and awarded at least 1 contract to a non-compliant bidder. File documentation was also found to be incomplete and of significant concern in several files.” You recommended that they needed “to document every decision of business value”, and the CBSA agreed to do this by June 2022.
Certainly, there's been a lot of water under the bridge since then. Based on this most recent report of yours, do you feel these recommendations were followed?