:
I would just ask that the cameras depart, and then we'll begin the meeting.
Thank you very much, and again, welcome to our guests.
There are a couple of items I'd like to deal with first, before we get into the testimony and what we're here for.
The first is the election of the vice-chair, which I explained yesterday was necessary. What happens here is that I vacate the chair and the clerk takes over, there are nominations, and the process occurs.
The second thing I'd like to deal with is the schedule, which was brought up at the end of the meeting, as to when we could have our meetings for the upcoming weeks.
So I would ask the clerk to take over, and we'll get that done and carry on.
:
Congratulations, Mr. Regan. Good campaign.
Concerning the schedule, we talked about the problems with Bill C-30. What the clerk has managed to arrange is that our meetings that normally would be on Tuesdays could be held on February 5, 12, 19, and 26, on those Mondays. Those meetings would be held from 3:30 until 5:30 on Mondays. Our Thursday meetings would carry on as scheduled, with the meeting on the 15th being cancelled, but all the other meetings on the Thursdays would carry on.
:
Are there any other comments on that schedule as put forward? I hope that accommodated....
I think it was you, Mr. Cullen, who brought this to the attention of the group.
Does that meet everybody's approval? Are there any problems?
The clerk will send out notices, and our next meeting, then, will be at 3:30 on Monday, February 5.
We'll now move on.
Mr. Cullen.
:
The clerk advises me that it's quite within protocol to do this. You take testimony in camera that, with all agreement, can in fact be then put on the record.
In that regard, I think I should express on behalf of myself, and hopefully most of the committee, that I was fairly upset, fairly annoyed, that I received from the Canadian Press through The Globe and Mail at 12:51 statements made by a reporter of what happened in that in camera meeting. Obviously, I feel that an in camera meeting is in camera.
We will have cause, hopefully very seldom, to have in camera meetings, but I don't want to read about them or hear about them. Reporters were immediately calling about comments as soon as I left this room. Of course, some of those stories ended up being totally incorrect and inaccurate. I found that to be most disturbing and unfair to our witness, because of course the notice of meeting had gone out that it was in camera, we discussed that at some length, and we decided to go ahead to hear the heads-up about what was going to happen at 3 o'clock. Obviously, at 3:01, I assumed people could talk about that meeting, but I didn't expect to see it at 12:51, in writing, on my desk. I was very troubled by that. It's not the sort of thing that I would hope this committee would allow to happen ever again, and it's a discredit to all of us I think that it did happen.
I don't believe we need to discuss that any further than to make that statement and for everyone to get that message. We're now going to be dealing with the CEPA report, which again has to be in camera until it's tabled in the House. I don't want to read about it, and I'm sure none of the other members here wants to read about what happens during those discussions of important pieces of legislation. I think that's enough said. I don't believe I want to entertain a lot of comments on this.
However that happened, I trust it won't ever happen again. Whoever leaked that material obviously knows who they are. Anyway, I think we'll move on.
I believe, Mr. Cullen, you indicated that....
Mr. Warawa, is it on the same subject, or have I satisfied the issue?
I think everybody understands what we're talking about today. We're talking about the proposed new reporting scheme that we're going to be looking at for the upcoming year on environmental reports, and also some of the criteria that we think should be considered in the hiring of a new environment commissioner.
If we could keep our comments to those two topic areas, we'll follow our normal procedure. I should warn the new members--we have a number of new members--that I have this wonderful little grey box. This grey box is extremely accurate and takes us to the ten minutes. I will give you a little bit of time to finish answering the question, but I'd really ask you to live by the time: ten minutes, ten minutes, ten minutes, ten minutes, and then we go to five-minute sessions.
I would ask Ms. Fraser to begin. We will then go to the Liberals first, whoever is their speaker.
Thank you.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I am pleased to be here to discuss these issues with members of the committee.
I would like today to provide clarification around three issues: first, the appointment of an interim Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development; second, the internal review of our environment and sustainable development audit practice; and, finally, the role of the Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development as defined in the Auditor General Act.
First, on the appointment of an interim commissioner, I take full responsibility for the decision to name an interim commissioner, and I made this decision after careful deliberation. I would like to assure the committee that my decision has absolutely nothing to do with the commissioner's 2006 report or with any other commissioner's report. As I stated yesterday, the Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development reports to Parliament on behalf of the Auditor General. Accordingly, I, along with other senior officials in my office, approve all audits and review all reports before they are made public. I consider all reports of the commissioner and her team to have been excellent work, and I stand behind all of them. The large team of auditors that is responsible for producing the commissioner's reports will continue to perform the same quality of work under Mr. Thompson's leadership as they have in the past.
As well, I wish to assure the committee that there was absolutely no pressure or interference from the government regarding this decision. As I'm sure members will understand, I cannot comment any further on this for a number of reasons, including privacy issues. And while I would imagine that some of you may find this frustrating, I simply cannot comment further.
[Translation]
The second issue concerns internal review. Our role is to provide parliamentarians with fact-based, independent information that can assist them in holding the government to account for its management. We attempt to measure our effectiveness in a number of ways — by surveys of MPs, and by several performance indicators. From time to time, we assess our performance and introduce changes that we believe will strengthen our audit practice. We have done this in our financial and performance audit practices to good effect. That is the objective of the internal review of our environment and sustainable development practice I mentioned yesterday.
Our environment and sustainable development practice is a very significant and important one within our Office. I believe that we have done very valuable work, but there are always opportunities to improve. Certain indicators for example show that our environment and sustainable development audits may not have as much impact as other work in the Office in improving government management. We need to understand if that is the case and, if so, how we can improve. The review is not intended in any way to diminish the work we currently do, but rather to strengthen it.
As I mentioned earlier, our role is to provide objective, fact-based information to parliamentarians to assist them in holding government to account. To preserve our credibility, we must remain independent of government and not stray into policy issues.
We cannot, as an audit office, comment on policy choice, nor dictate to government what policies they should adopt. That is the role of government and parliament. I believe that we have carried out the mandate given to us in 1995 faithfully — we have not crossed that line into policy. However, there is some indication that some people would like the Commissioner to go further. Comments by some environmentalists and more recently the introduction of Bill C-288 showed that there may be a gap between what is expected from the Commissioner and what the legislation states. In its original form, Bill C-288 would have required us to act as a policy advisor to the government of the day and to evaluate programs. This is inconsistent with our role as auditors and it is not a role we can fulfill in our Office.
These examples led me to believe that I should bring this issue forward to this committee as only you can determine if it merits further consideration.
[English]
Mr. Chair, my office has been conducting environmental audits for more than 20 years, and we will continue to do so, in keeping with our audit mandate. We view the 1995 modification to our act as a very important addition to our mandate.
I believe that the environment and sustainable development work of my office is important and is valuable. Our objective in conducting an internal review is certainly not to diminish it. Our objective is to strengthen this practice and to ensure that our environmental audit work best serves parliamentarians.
That concludes my opening statement, Mr. Chair. I would be pleased to take any questions from committee members. Thank you.
I would just remind members to try to focus on the issues that have been presented to us. In other words, we had a process where the environment commissioner reported once a year, and it's proposed that the environment commissioner report with the Auditor General's report. The second item, of course, is any guidance we can give in hiring the new environment commissioner.
I'll begin with Mr. McGuinty, please.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thank you, again, Ms. Fraser, for appearing today, and thank you for appearing yesterday.
I'd like to pick up on your opening comment, if I could, just to explore your own clarification about yesterday. You can imagine there are an awful lot of shell-shocked Canadians. Madame Gélinas has been I think judged to be one of the best Commissioners of the Environment and Sustainable Development that the country might have aspired to, held in the highest of regard I think by all parties, and, I'm assuming from your own comments, by yourself.
I think she has demonstrated a very even-handed approach to the delicate charge she has, responsibilities. In a sense, she's lived beyond the expectations of the original conception of the commissioner's office, which we as a government introduced a decade ago, and she has really held successive governments' feet to the fire, so to speak, our previous government and this government, and I think did quite a knockout job.
It was very, very kind of you to come yesterday and give us a heads-up, as you described it, with respect to what you were going to be announcing in the afternoon, but I do want to explore a little bit only because Canadians are confused. They'd like a better answer, perhaps, or a better idea of what has transpired here, and it does relate directly to the appointment of the interim Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development.
In your own press release that was issued yesterday there was talk about Madame Gélinas leaving, if I recall the words—you'll forgive me, I don't have the press release in front of me—“to pursue other opportunities”. Five or six hours later, most of us received a second press release, from Madame Gélinas herself, indicating that in fact she was surprised that she was, I guess, effectively terminated and that this was being made public sooner than she had expected it to be, and that negotiations or discussions had gone on for some time between herself and your office, and so on and so forth.
Could you help us understand, given the media reports that our chair cited just moments ago, some of the discrepancies between both your press releases and also perhaps some of the comments that are now public that were in the four-page document presented to this committee yesterday about the performance of the commissioner? Help us, please, understand what has transpired here so that we can work together to move to improve the functioning of that office and its structure and the role it ought to be playing, and perhaps an accentuated role that it ought to be playing going forward.
:
Could I then ask, Mr. Chair, with all of the
délicatesse, as my colleague from the Bloc put it yesterday, are Canadians right to conclude that there's a difference here in view, or a difference in denouement rollout here in terms of what has happened? I do have constituents calling me and asking, “This is a very important post. What's the problem here? Was it inter-professional? Why would there be two different public versions about what has transpired?” It's a pretty important issue for Canadians. There's a great mystery.
You have a very, very strong reputation, Ms. Fraser, in Canadian society, one that I strongly support. Madame Gélinas has a very strong reputation in Canadian society, has done, I think you would agree, and most of us would, a knockout job in her role, in a difficult role.
So I put it to you again. It would be important to illuminate in some way how there could be such a difference publicly. Without getting into, obviously, the details of whatever might be internal to your office, can you help us understand here in practical terms what has happened?
:
The only thing that I would like to clarify, as I said in my opening statement, is that there seems to be, certainly in certain quarters, people trying to attribute this to the audit report that was produced in the fall of 2006 on climate change. This situation has absolutely nothing to do with that.
As I mentioned in the statement, the reports that are tabled by the commissioner go through the same process as any other audit of the office, which means that the senior management and executive are involved in the choice of the audits. So the fact that we were doing that audit was a decision of the executive of the Office of the Auditor General. I review all of the reports. I am briefed on them. I actually participate in helping the commissioner with her forward remarks. So that report, while it was tabled as a report of the commissioner, is a report of the Office of the Auditor General. We stand behind that.
I would just like to clarify that it has absolutely nothing to do with that, and I really cannot go further than that.
:
What I said yesterday, and I will quote, is that “In the course of our analysis”—and this was over frequency and timing of reports, and I'll come back to that in a minute:
...we also noted that performance audits on environmental and sustainable development issues do not appear to have the same impact as our other performance audit work. This conclusion is based on an assessment of our effectiveness, as measured by performance indicators that have been established for the Office such as how many of our recommendations are implemented.
Then I said:
This, I believe, is very unfortunate, because our work on environmental and sustainable development issues is very important to us--and, I believe, to Parliament and Canadians.
This is not a reflection on the commissioner. It is a reflection on the effectiveness overall. For example, one of the key measures we have for our work in the office is, do our audits contribute to improving the management within government? We use as an indicator of that the degree to which recommendations are implemented. The work on environment and sustainable development has consistently, over 12 years, had a much lower rate of implementation than our other work.
Now, I think we have to question ourselves, is that measure an appropriate one? If so, why is it lower? There can be a number of reasons. Our recommendations may be part of the problem, but we need to understand that, because at the end of the day we have several roles. Obviously one is to provide information to parliamentarians as they go through and consider policy legislation, but another one is to improve management in government over very important issues, such as environment and sustainable development issues. One would expect that when we do work, for example, on pesticides and have recommendations to government on how to improve that management, they should be implemented. So that's where this review is headed. We have done the same work in other areas in the office and have modified our practices, and hopefully we'll see our practice improve because of that.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I was recently in Mali—and I mentioned this yesterday to the Auditor General. We were there as a delegation of Canadian parliamentarians supporting democratic development in countries such as Benin, Burkina Faso, and Mali. Of course, as the Auditor General knows, Mali has actually adopted our concept of an auditor general and they're developing that in their own country.
My point in saying that is how proud I am of the fact that this institution, which in my view has been even-handed and very important in holding governments to account, including the one that I was part of.... Canadians have great pride in that institution. It's very important that we recognize that to start off with, and we all admire that.
I want to come back for a second, because I think Canadians may want to understand a little better what's going on and what happened yesterday. I had the impression from our meeting yesterday that Madame Gélinas was leaving voluntarily. Maybe that wasn't the impression that was intended to be given, but that was the impression I got—it's my mistake, perhaps—but then it seems that she didn't go voluntarily. I guess the question is, and I don't know if you can answer it or not, can you tell us whether she was in fact dismissed?
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Ms. Fraser, welcome to the committee. I'm reading the notes for your address and your statement of this afternoon, and I'd like to hear you comment in more detail on what's written on page 2 of your statement:
As I mentioned earlier, our role is to provide objective, fact-based information to parliamentarians to assist them in holding government to account. To preserve our credibility, we must remain independent of government and not stray into policy issues.
Has the government made any approach whatever to you that would lead you to suspect that Ms. Gélinas, or any other commissioner before her, infringed that duty of independence?
:
Absolutely not. Moreover, in paragraph 10, I say I believe we've faithfully carried out the mandate given to us and that we have not strayed from it.
As I mentioned, every report that comes out of the office is approved by senior management, including myself. If I had ever found that we had gone too far in the report, it would not have been published. The issue I'm raising here is more for the future and concerns pressures that you sometimes see or expectations of certain persons who would like the Office to play a much more active role as policy advisor, by evaluating programs. That role is not compatible with the role of auditor.
So I'm asking the committee whether this is an issue that is perceived and whether it's an issue that deserves more in-depth study. If you say that is absolutely not the case and that you're entirely satisfied with the present role, that confirms for me that parliamentarians are satisfied.
:
That's one of the options we considered. Allow me to explain the strategy, because a lot of information was conveyed without me ever explaining to you what it was about.
It all started with a request from the Standing Committee on Public Accounts that we review the due dates of our reports. We noted that, when we tabled our report in late November, Parliament had very few sitting days left to hold hearings. After considering the House's calendar, we decided to bring the presentation of our November report forward and to present it in October.
In reviewing all that, we began to question the Commissioner's way of reporting. We wondered whether we should table one report a year or whether we should report more frequently. Indeed, perhaps it would be useful for the committee if we tabled reports two or three times a year, rather than only once a year.
It is interesting to note that this possibility, that the Auditor General table report more than once a year, was raised during the discussions of the amendments to the bill in 1995. There was even some question of tabling reports on the environment and sustainable development more frequently during the year. That's where the idea came from. The idea wasn't to abolish the Commissioner's report, but rather to determine whether it would be advantageous to table reports more frequently.
Another question was also raised: would it be advantageous for the Commissioner to table his report at the same time as that of the Auditor General? Could we have a little more visibility? Because, apart from the last report, the Commissioner's report has had very little visibility in recent years. That, quite honestly, is what the suggestions were.
Mr. Chair, I want to say that, if the committee states that it absolutely does not want to change anything and that it wishes us to continue as we've done in the past, tabling one commissioner's report a year, we will maintain that practice.
:
Mr. Chair, I'm definitely not an expert in communications, but our communications staff conducted a study comparing the reports that are tabled by the other officers of Parliament concerning quite unique subjects, official languages, privacy and others.
The Commissioner's report attracts a lot more attention than those other reports, but not as much as ours, simply because we cover a broader range of subjects. In addition, we interest the parliamentary press gallery, whereas the Commissioner's report is considered a report on the environment. It interests and attracts journalists specialized in that field to a greater degree.
That's why we wondered whether we would try that, to see if we would have a broader audience of journalists at an in camera meeting. I'll give you some examples: when the Commissioner's last report was tabled in September, there were about 25 journalists; there are more than 100 journalists when the Auditor General's reports are tabled.
There is indeed a danger, that an audit may attract more attention, but, in so doing, perhaps we can increase visibility.
That's an element that we're proposing, but, if you say that you absolutely don't want that, we'll respect the wish of Parliament.
:
Ms. Fraser, could I possibly get you to include that in your next answer? We're over the time.
Mr. Bigras, in all fairness to the Auditor General, I advise you that we had a discussion, and it came down to one report versus a number of reports. My feeling is that we should try to put the highest profile we can on the environment. We should try it for a year and see if it works.
So we had that discussion, and today we have input directly to the Auditor General. I think that's very positive.
Mr. Cullen.
Thank you, Ms. Fraser, for being here.
This is a struggle. There's obviously a conflicting view of some of the things that have transpired in the last 24 hours. As a parliamentarian, I'm struggling to determine what happened, because in essence, at the end of the day, it seems that the country has lost the advocacy of a voice within your office that was able to clearly describe the shortcomings of government and was a strong call to action. Members of this committee and across the entire parliament used that voice effectively.
You've said repeatedly that the work of Madame Gélinas was of good quality. But what I do not understand is that from the testimony you gave yesterday and the very strong impression left—and this is a critical factor—is that Madame Gélinas left of her own free will to pursue other options; what we believe today is that she was terminated. It is very difficult for me to reconcile those two views, and this matter is essential to what we're talking about.
:
Mr. Chair, the work of the commissioner's group has to continue. Audits are under way. We need someone who will lead that, and Mr. Thompson is a very experienced professional within the office. He has been responsible for a number of portfolios, including work on the north, which would include contaminated sites, for example. He has done work in fisheries, with salmon, and agriculture.
I think it's important for the committee to realize that the assistant Auditor General, who leads the group, is not alone. There are some 50 to 60 people working in that team, and many of them have environmental specialties and backgrounds. Also, where we don't have the expertise we need, we go out and bring in people to help us on our audits.
:
Yes. I have two last thoughts, in the time left.
Mr. McGuinty today brought a motion forward. The original intent, it seemed, when the former Liberal government made this commitment, was to have an independent commissioner, one who reported directly and was removed. We'll be making suggestions to bring that right into the review process of Bill , the government's bill. We think this is potentially an effective tool.
I know you can't comment on that, it being policy. My question is this. Looking at some of the comments your organization, the Auditor General's office, made about the employment insurance account—that government is consistently taking too much in—I'll quote:
[To allow] the Account to accumulate a surplus beyond what could reasonably be spent for employment insurance purposes, given the existing benefit structure and allowing.... In our opinion, the government has not observed the intent of the Employment Insurance Act.
Where's the line? Where is the line between commenting on ineffective government spending, or promises made and not kept, and advocating for policy options, which in Ms. Gélinas' last report she commented on, saying on climate change that the government had not taken it seriously enough yet and needed to ramp it up? Where is that line?
:
If we use the employment insurance account as an example, there was at the time we made those comments a clear definition in the act as to how the rate was to be set. The way the surpluses were accumulating, we believe, was not in compliance with that legislation. We did not say you have to change the legislation, or you have to do this. We are simply stating a fact: that the legislation says it should be established this way and we do not believe you are establishing it according to legislation.
In fact, to complete this point on the Employment Insurance Act, what subsequently happened was that the legislation was changed. The surpluses are still continuing to grow, but we are no longer justified to make any comment, because the legislation has changed and Parliament has agreed that the rate can be set in another way. That's fine.
On climate change, government has an international obligation, and we are perfectly entitled to ask if government is respecting that obligation—
:
Thank you, Auditor General.
The government respects the autonomy of your office of Auditor General, so I will not be asking any questions regarding Ms. Gélinas. I will comment, though, that we appreciate the work of your office, and yourself particularly, and the work that Madame Gélinas did while she was working within your office. As you said, she's still within your office.
My questions relate to your comments on reporting. You're going to be looking for input from each of us around this table.
In your comments made yesterday, you said that as you assess the effectiveness of the government, you're looking at how many of our recommendations were implemented. In the report we received last fall, there was a critique of different departments not working together. It appeared that one department didn't even know what the other was doing and that the recommendations were not being acted on. It was a challenge for the new government to try to make sure that issue was solved, so that we could move forward on environmental issues, which are very important to the government.
If what is being discussed and will be discussed is, as was said, the possible creation of an office of the Commissioner of the Environment separate from your office.... At this time we have one body doing the audit of all different departments within government. These are not questions on policy, but I'm wondering, if you can comment, whether you think it would be more effective for your office to audit all of the offices of government or more effective to have an individual office of the Commissioner of the Environment. Which would be more effective?
Let me make a very short comment on the first part, about implementation of recommendations. One of the things we do in the office is what we call follow-up audits, where we go back and actually assess whether government is making satisfactory progress on addressing issues we've raised in previous audits. We call them status reports. Our report of February 2008 will be devoted strictly to environmental and sustainable development issues. I think we have nine or ten audits coming in that area, on everything from pesticides to...a whole range of them. We will be assessing whether government has made satisfactory progress or not in dealing with the recommendations that were made in audits going back sometimes several years.
The question of creating an independent commissioner is of course a decision for Parliament. I would just say that the audit function has to remain separate from the policy advice evaluation of programs. Those two functions are really inconsistent. In order to have an effective audit function, you must be independent from, if you will, the management and the establishment. If you're involved in establishing policy, you cannot then audit it objectively.
We believe that the audit function we've carried out in the office through the commissioner to date has been very valuable and very good. There is, though, an expectation that we can do policy advice evaluations of the effectiveness of programs. That is work that we cannot do, that is inconsistent, and that could actually damage our office if we were to go into that kind of work.
:
Obviously, the Commissioner's mandate will depend on what Parliament tells the Commissioner to do.
The Commissioner's present role is more like that of the Auditor General. Ultimately, the Commissioner must comply with certain provisions of the act, but the other duties, as well as the audits that the Commissioner tables in Parliament, depend on the mandate given to the Auditor General.
If another agency or independent entity were created, that would concern more questions of advice on policy and program evaluation, things that we cannot do.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Like Mr. Warawa, I certainly respect the autonomy of the Office of the Auditor General—and our party respects that autonomy, as we should. Obviously, the public has a great deal of admiration for the Office of the Auditor General, for you personally as Auditor General, and I think also for the office of the Commissioner of the Environment and for Ms. Gélinas personally, which I think is one of the reasons why there's public interest in understanding what's happened here.
Obviously, as we are a standing committee of the House of Commons and members of Parliament, we have our own responsibilities to consider what's happened and to make sure we make our decisions and Parliament makes decisions on the basis of good information.
Let me refer to your statement of yesterday to this committee. As you know, the committee has now passed a motion that this should be public, and with your concurrence. In paragraph three of yesterday's statement, you said:
...I wish to advise you that the current Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development, Johanne Gélinas, will be leaving the position to pursue other opportunities. She will be announcing her specific plans once they are finalized.
It was your wish to come before us to inform us of this. It seems when you say she “will be leaving the position to pursue other opportunities”.... I get the impression from this that it was her wish, that she was leaving so that she could pursue other opportunities. I'm trying to understand whether that's accurate.
:
You have it with you? All right, that's fine. That's what I heard, and I haven't had a chance to look at it directly.
It seems to me that rolling the report of the commissioner into the report of the Auditor General on a quarterly basis.... My concern is that it would diminish the impact of that report in itself. I understand what you're saying, that in past years it perhaps hasn't always received the attention it should receive; however, it certainly received a lot of attention in September. We've seen in recent polls and in what we've seen this week in the House of Commons that it is receiving a lot of attention these days. Whether that's a result of a cumulative amount of effort by the commissioner and other people as well.... I don't know how we attribute it exactly, but perhaps that's part of it.
I guess my inclination is to say that it ought to remain as a separate, stand-alone report. I think it's incumbent on us to hear.... We've heard part of your argument on this, and maybe you'll help us a little more to understand why you feel...because it's important to understand and respect your opinion.
:
What is unfortunate is that we really did start this as a consultation process. No hard, fast decision has been made, and we wanted to come before the committee to consult.
One of the advantages that we saw was reporting more frequently throughout the year—not to have one report at the beginning of the year in September, but to have reports in October, April, and possibly in February.
Having said that, it became an issue that there wouldn't be five, six, or eight chapters. Would we then table those reports concurrently? At the same time, it doesn't necessarily have to be in the box with the Auditor General's report. It could be a separate commissioner's report; it could be volume 1, then volume 2. There are different ways of packaging it.
What we had hoped was to give more visibility and quite frankly to get it in front of more journalists. The other advantage—and I say this with all due respect for this committee—is that we think there would be an advantage to having certain reports, which deal with management issues, go to the Standing Committee on Public Accounts, in addition to this committee. That committee really holds the government to account for management issues.
If any of you have been there...they have a very different role and procedure from all of the other House committees. They bring witnesses forward from the departments, ask them for action plans, follow up on what they are doing, and issue their own reports. By tabling at the same time as the AG report, we could then say that this report is really about the management of a program; could it not also go to the public accounts committee, rather than just to this one?
Quite honestly, that was what our thinking was. If the members say no, we really like the way it was working, then we will stay with that.
:
Thank you for being here, Ms. Fraser. We appreciate the work you do and the manner in which you do it. The thoroughness of your work is much appreciated as well.
My question relates to a comment you made in point number eight in this statement. You said that the performance audits on the environment and sustainable development issues don't appear to have the same impact as other performance audits.
Off the top of your head, can you give us some general percentage over the years of how many recommendations from your office have been implemented, compared to the recommendations from the CESD?
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I'd like to go back to the statement you made yesterday before the committee, particularly since it's now public. Paragraph 13 reads:
According to some of our advisors, there is a gap between the expectations of certain persons regarding the Commissioner's role and the mandate [...]
I must tell you I fell off my chair reading the example that you then gave:
[...] to what extent can or should the Commissioner defend a cause with respect to a government policy issue?
And you nearly suggest that the committee look into this matter.
So I would like to ask you two questions. First, who are these people who communicated with your advisors to point out this gap? Second, do you think that Ms. Gélinas was perhaps a little too militant in favour of the environmental cause relative to the mandate that was given her under the act?
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you for coming today. I know it's a difficult set of circumstances.
As I listened to some of the questioning that has taken place earlier today, I have had some concerns about the great reputation that the Office of the Auditor General has right now. I'm going to try to point these out, and this is probably going to take me a few minutes. I might only get one question in here.
I heard Mr. Cullen, when he was speaking earlier about Ms. Gélinas leaving in her role as commissioner, say, “We lost an advocate.”
The brief you gave here says:
Comments by some environmentalists and more recently the introduction of Bill C-288 showed that there may be a gap between what is expected from the Commissioner and what the legislation states.
It goes on: “...would have required us”—that is, the Auditor General's Office—“to act as a policy advisor to the government of the day and to evaluate programs”.
I'm very concerned about that. As a parliamentarian, it's my job to advocate policy. It sounds as though, through Bill and everybody who's agreed with it, they would like to abdicate that responsibility as parliamentarians and place it squarely on the shoulders of either the Office of the Auditor General or an independent officer of some other branch of the Auditor General.
To me, that's quite alarming, because I can see that what's going to happen is that as soon as the policy doesn't work, they can shift the blame. The blame can be shifted away from bad policy squarely onto the shoulders of somebody else. It's always nice to have a scapegoat when your ideas don't work. I'm really concerned, because, quite frankly, I like the idea of somebody monitoring what government does. It's just a good idea to have an independent party clearly look at and assess how the government is doing in implementing policy—period.
It's the implementation of the policy that the Auditor General's Office should be responsible for—and this is my opinion—strictly. I wonder, are you not concerned about the risk of exposing the Office of the Auditor to the subjectivity of a conflict of interest between assessing policy and assessing the outcomes of how government implements programs?
Let me just talk a minute about the word “advocacy”. The Office of the Auditor General and the commissioner are advocates. We are advocates for responsible spending, we are advocates for open and transparent contracting processes, and we are advocates for good environmental management practices.
We cannot be advocates for a particular policy or be seen to represent a particular interest or group. That is why, as was said very correctly, we cannot audit policies; we can audit implementation of policies. We can see your policies being implemented in the way Parliament had intended; we cannot get into the discussion about the policy or comment on the policy, but we can see whether the policy is being implemented according to either good management practices or as Parliament has established it. Obviously, that is our mandate.
We do not, as I mentioned earlier, actually conduct effectiveness studies ourselves. In our mandate it's very clear that we can look to see whether departments have measured the effectiveness of the programs. And the only way you can really measure effectiveness is if you have set established objectives at the beginning.
We often—I would say in the vast majority of our reports—report on whether there have been reviews of effectiveness: does government know whether the program is being effective; is there information in place; and are the objectives of the program clear at the beginning of the program?
One of the critiques or concerns you've raised is the implementation.
I would clearly, particularly as an opposition member, put much of the fault for that with the government of the day. They make a commitment; you audit that commitment and find it lacking—as Ms. Gélinas did on numerous occasions—and the government doesn't act upon your recommendations; it essentially goes against the auditor's word.
It's something—for me, anyway, in the private sector—I'd never encountered before I came to Parliament: that the auditor's comments were just refused outright by departments, or ignored, or delayed over time.
We have to take a look at the climate change file in particular. I can remember—and I have the reports here—recommendations, and then recommendations, and things getting continually worse.
One of the concerns you raised was around that implementation. I would find a great deal more fault with the government of the day and the current government than with Madame Gélinas or her office for recommending it. That's where it lies.
But the critique you raised—and this is what I want to get to—is that there's a visibility question. I'm confused by that, because particularly over the last six to twelve months the Commissioner of the Environment's report has received a great deal of attention and notice. It's certainly driven much of what this committee has been up to.
:
Yes, but let me add, Chair, that we began this review and began the discussion about the reporting strategy and actually looked at all of this close to a year ago now. At that point the reports were not getting the same kind of visibility as the last one has, and I take that.
On the question of recommendations, you were right that it is beyond our control. We cannot force government to act on recommendations, but it is a measure of our effectiveness nonetheless. So we have to look at whether there are things we can do differently or that we can have the system do differently to try to make those recommendations.
The recommendations are valuable ones. They are not done lightly, and they are things that we believe should change.
:
The question of effectiveness is important for us here. When you bring recommendations forward....
I heard something you strayed into earlier, that the Office of the Auditor General should never comment on policy or make those policy recommendations—in a sense offering some policy recommendation yourself.
Perhaps there is a role, and a role not traditionally held by auditors' offices, that can be put forward.... When I look at Madame Gélinas' last report, I think it's quite clear in saying that, looking at the plans of the government, there needs to be more. That, under some strict auditor's interpretation, would be suggesting that the policies put forward are not enough to meet Canada's commitments. That seemed appropriate to me. It was appropriate to you.
Again, I go back to this question of the line that, under strict auditor's guidelines—very traditional—would have been crossed over. The role of the auditor of the environment seems to be one that is so broad-sweeping that comments like that become something appropriate in this context but would not pass the test in traditional standards.
:
We felt those comments were appropriate within the mandate and our interpretation of the role of the Office of the Auditor General, because the reports of the commissioner are released on behalf of the Auditor General. I have to be comfortable with everything that is said, and I was comfortable.
It is a broader issue whether, quite frankly, we are straying very close to that line sometimes. Probably we do, and at times when you see that a policy is being implemented very badly, it can call into question the policy. We try very studiously to say that it's not a question of the policy but a question of the implementation and the management.
The issue I'm bringing forward today is, I believe, of importance to us, because if that expectation continues, quite frankly, I believe it could at some point damage the Office of the Auditor General.
Members, as you know, we end at 5:30. We have two more people who have asked to speak, Mr. Lussier and Mr. Rota. Then we have a comment that Mr. Warawa would like to make, and Mr. McGuinty wants to advise us of the notice of motion for his item for next Monday. I would ask you to be as brief as you can. If a question has been asked, please move on. We'll do this as quickly as we can so that we can live by our 5:30 timeline.
Mr. Rota.
One of the issues discussed earlier—I'll go through it and tell you what I feel of it, and the answer should be very brief—is about moving from an annual report to four reports. I share the same concerns that were spoken earlier, that it may be buried in four small slices, as opposed to having one major report, as was discussed or presented in September. It brought a lot of importance to a very pertinent issue.
A comment you made earlier was to confirm that if, as the main consumer of that report, this committee were to request that report, it was not a problem.
I just want to confirm that.
:
Our plans for the coming year are that we will table the report, the statutory work, in October. That's the sustainable development strategies and petitions.
We have moved the other work, which is what we call the follow-up work, to February, because that is normally the time we produce what we call a status report. That would be a report strictly devoted to follow-up on environmental and sustainable development audits that we have done in the past, and it will fall in February.
After that, if the committee gives us an indication of their preference on reporting, be it one report or two reports, and the timing of it, we will obviously follow your wishes.
According to the job description listed on the Auditor General's website, the environment commissioner is responsible for “[e]ncouraging the government to be more accountable for greening its policies, operations, and programs”, and this “is a key to the Commissioner's mandate”.
Discussed earlier was advocacy and an auditor's functions. When I think of an auditor, it is as someone who looks at what was done in the past, audits it—looks at it—and reports on it. The Auditor General Act says, in section 21.1:
(h) respect for nature and the needs of future generations.
Do we have a conflict within the Auditor General's department, whereby we have basically someone who does audits...? I respect what an audit does; it points out mistakes we've made in the past. But an advocate will talk about the future and suggest policies and where we should go in the future, as opposed to just relating to past experience.
Maybe you can comment on that.
Mr. McGuinty, I understand you want to speak briefly to your notice of motion.
I will just advise members that this is not debate on this motion. This motion will be put next Monday. This will just be some advice for the committee.
Thank you very much, Ms. Fraser. I believe you've answered our questions, and there will be, I'm sure, some follow-up from us.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you for the indulgence of the committee.
I'd like to very quickly speak to a notice of motion, which I hope we can debate Monday, Mr. Chair. It speaks to the question of making the Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development a fully independent officer of Parliament, reporting directly to Parliament. It clearly affirms and appropriately circumscribes the duty of that office, of that commissioner, which would include the role of advocacy on environmental and sustainable development issues, making sure that this office was properly funded at arm's length and had the right kind of staff and auditing function without government influence, and so on.
I raise this, Mr. Chair, because of the original intent that created this position. It flowed from the 1992 Earth Summit at which governments of that time—Prime Minister Mulroney's government—signed the Rio Declaration. One of the undertakings at the time by states that signed was to do two things: to strengthen and create a council for sustainable development in their respective countries—in our case, Prime Minister Mulroney created the National Round Table on the Environment and the Economy—and to strengthen the follow-up and monitoring of.... There is no debate.
I'm sad to have to raise this issue, but it's clear to each of us that the contents of the discussion that took place yesterday during the in camera portion were leaked to the media immediately after the commissioner left the room and while the meeting was still going on. I believe this is a serious breach of our privileges as members of Parliament. I have 16 years of serving in government in an elected position, and if we cannot trust the confidence of an in camera meeting, it will cripple the ability of this committee to operate. There has to be trust. There has to be respect for confidential documents and confidential meetings.
I asked Ms. Fraser if she was aware of any member of this committee breaching the contents of the in camera portion of the meeting, revealing the information that she shared in confidence. She answered yes, that she made her announcement at three o'clock. She said she had received a document entitled...it was 12:58, I think; mine shows 12:59. It was already out. There was an article in The Globe and Mail under the name of Bill Curry as the reporter who reported in detail.
We have to be able to trust one another. I would first ask if somebody did leak the document, to share that with the committee at this time. That would be my first question, Mr. Chair.
:
Well, I would have to say that I was very nervous, because I could almost see and predict where this was heading when there were, right from the get-go, members of the opposition, Mr. McGuinty in particular, making a big issue about the media outside and questions for him, and he went on about this at length, and several times in fact. So my sense at that point was that this scenario could well develop, of something of a confidential meeting being leaked out, because there was all this lathering up about the media out there. And I thought, well, if it's a confidential meeting, with confidential documents, what does that matter? It's not really the issue we should be discussing at this point.
I'd like members of the opposition, the member I named, to think deeply in their hearts, do we want this kind of pattern occurring? I think it's a tremendous breach of what goes on here. It's a difficult circumstance as it is when we get in these committee meetings, but when we have people who are not holding things in confidence, it's a very unsettling and disturbing precedent for any member of this committee to do, and I don't appreciate it.
I did see members meeting with the media, off in huddles in corners. Mr. McGuinty was in fact with a particular named reporter. It left me a bit uneasy that that would occur within minutes of the meeting being over. Why are these confidential huddles going on when in fact this is a confidential meeting?
:
Well, only to say, Mr. Chair, that I think it's important in the future, if we're going to have an in camera meeting, that we should have the discussion as a committee first. If a witness approaches the committee, or, in terms of membership, you, or the clerk, or any individual member, it would be very important for us to have that discussion first.
I remain troubled by what happened yesterday, absolutely. I don't think that meeting should have been held in camera. I was very supportive of what our colleague from the NDP said about opening it up. I don't think there was any justification for holding it in camera in the first place, and I don't think we've come out of this meeting today with any further elucidation or illumination as to what actually has occurred here. That's what I think most of us are leaving with today. We don't exactly know what's happening. I don't know whether the commissioner has been fired. We asked whether she'd been fired and we were told she's not fired, but she's fired. She issued a statement saying she's fired.
So I think in the future we have to be extremely scrupulous in terms of our choice, as a committee, as to when things will be held in camera or not in camera. That's my reaction today.
:
Obviously, I'm the one who made the decision when the Auditor General approached me and said, “I would like to give a heads-up in camera and it's regarding a position.” Obviously that was her intention, and I think that's what she did. Of course, by us going ahead, obviously it was in camera. Everyone was advised that it was in camera; it was in camera. I think everyone stayed in the room and agreed it was in camera, and obviously that confidence was broken. So that's the problem that cannot happen. If it's in camera, it's in camera; if it's not in camera, it's not.
I take your advice, obviously. I have fought that in camera thing for years. I don't like having meetings in camera. I wasn't elected in camera. I don't believe we should have those kinds of meetings. However, when the Auditor General came to me with that specific request, the clerk and I talked about it. She approached both of us. We talked about it, we brought that to the committee, and we carried on. I think that's the point that needs to be made, it has been made, and I really believe we can drop it at that point.
We do have time, but Mr. Vellacott, is this something new?
:
Mr. Warawa, having just talked to the clerk briefly, a motion can be made. If it is passed, then a report can be done. It will go to the House. The Speaker ultimately is our boss, but I have heard his reports in the past when he said that committees are in control of what they do.
This has been a learning experience for all of us that obviously we can't have that sort of thing happening. It is certainly my opinion that we should simply move on.
Mr. McGuinty and Mr. Vellacott and Mr. Warawa may want to get together. Mr. McGuinty and I in the past have had disagreements and have sat down over a cup of coffee and solved the problem and moved on. To pursue this any further, certainly you can. You can make the motion and the committee can vote on it. If it's passed, then a report will be done and it will go to the House. If that's the will of the committee, obviously, you can overrule what I'm suggesting. My suggestion is that enough has been said about it.
Who had a comment? Was it you, Mr. Regan?
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I'd just like to comment.
Maybe there's a way to shortcut this, because my question to David before was not grabbed out of thin air.
Dennis Bueckert, of The Kingston Whig-Standard, says:
But Liberal environment critic David McGuinty said Fraser made it clear to the environment committee at a private meeting yesterday that she felt Gélinas had been taking on too much of an advocacy role.
The clerk can go to Dennis Bueckert and confirm the fact that Mr. McGuinty is reporting, out of this place, stuff that occurred in a “private meeting”. It occurred here.
So I think we actually have it on the record as to—
:
First of all, I commend you on the attitude you're bringing to this issue.
Mr. Chair, I've been around Parliament Hill for awhile, as a staffer and now as a member of Parliament, and I remember when your party was in opposition. I was working on the Hill and there were leaks from members of your party, leaks of important committee documents. Those were resolved in a collegial way and with good faith, and nobody was launching witch hunts as a result.
Mr. Warawa says trust has been undermined. I'd like to pick up on Mr. Harvey's point at the beginning. Quite frankly, I agree with Mr. Harvey. When we decided retroactively to publish the proceedings of yesterday's in camera meeting, quite frankly, I didn't mind that myself, but who is going to take an in camera meeting seriously? If trust has been undermined, it's by the fact that we, as a committee, have decided retroactively to divulge what happened in camera yesterday.
:
The issue is relatively simple. I believe that Ms. Fraser has put her trust in us by coming to present to us what she was going to announce in the afternoon concerning Ms. Gélinas. I believe we all appreciated getting that information before everyone, in that it was even out of respect for us that she did it, and she formally asked us that it be done in camera and that this information not be circulated before she had her press conference. I understand her: she didn't want the information to come out all wrong before she had her press conference. She showed respect by coming and making this presentation to us. However, if we disclose information, I believe that the next time someone comes here, there will be some reluctance. Then we'll understand why not all the information is given to us. That's an effect.
When I asked Ms. Fraser earlier whether it was possible for something that happened in camera subsequently to become public, if that set a precedent... Once again, if someone comes and makes a presentation to us in camera, that in camera meeting must be respected. Otherwise, it's as though we had asked someone to tell us a secret, but we went and told it to everyone. It becomes a little complex. I believe it's a matter of trust. Perhaps I'm a little naive, but that's how things work, I believe.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.