In the wake of the ArriveCAN scandal | Conservatives want to punish cases of perjury

In the wake of the ArriveCAN scandal | Conservatives want to punish cases of perjury
In the wake of the ArriveCAN scandal | Conservatives want to punish cases of perjury

(Ottawa) Tired of dealing with uncooperative witnesses in the case ArriveCAN, the Conservatives want to impose a prison sentence of six months to 14 years for cases of perjury before one of the two houses of Parliament. At the same time, they are demanding, like the Bloc Québécois, an end to abuses of the procurement strategy intended for Indigenous businesses.


Posted at 1:34 a.m.

Updated at 6:00 a.m.

MP Michael Barrett tabled Bill C-405 on Friday to crack down on contempt of Parliament by amending the Criminal Code and the Parliament Act. “People must respect the Parliament of Canada, our laws and our institutions,” he said in a press release. In addition to a prison sentence, offenders would also face a fine of up to $50,000.

The scandal ArriveCAN gave rise to a series of testimonies in parliamentary committee where elected officials had difficulty obtaining answers to their questions. The most egregious case is that of Kristian Firth, one of two GC Strategies partners who was forced to testify in the House of Commons in April, a rare procedure that had not been used since 1913.

“I admit to having made mistakes in the other committees,” he finally admitted.

His firm obtained around 20 million in contracts for the development of the application ArriveCAN. She then subcontracted the work, taking a commission of between 15% and 30% in the process. During his third testimony to the House of Commons Standing Committee on Government Operations and Estimates, he refused to name the civil servants with whom he had developed the criteria for one of these contracts subsequently obtained without a call for tenders. .

Last week, the Conservatives also suggested the use of this exceptional procedure in the face of the evasive responses of Minh Doan, a former official of the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) in the file ArriveCAN. Their motion did not obtain the support of the Liberal Party, the Bloc Québécois and the New Democratic Party.

“The federal government created these companies”

This scandal revealed certain abuses in the Aboriginal Business Procurement Strategy (PSAB). The federal government must put an end to these abuses, demand the Conservatives and the Bloc. The Press revealed Friday that Advanced Chippewa Technologies, another company in the information technology sector, obtained millions of dollars in federal contracts thanks to its status as an indigenous company by playing middleman.

“The federal government basically created these companies,” responded Bloc Québécois MP Nathalie Sinclair-Desgagné in an interview. She believes that the supply system, which has become too complex, must be fundamentally reformed.

We have just seen several examples of cases where the indigenous procurement strategy benefits companies who ultimately take advantage of it and abuse it instead of truly benefiting indigenous businesses and indigenous communities.

Nathalie Sinclair-Desgagné, Bloc Québécois MP

The firm, also known as ACT, presents itself as a “procurement vehicle” to help other companies obtain federal government contracts. It resells computer hardware and software to ministries on behalf of multinationals such as Apple, IBM and Microsoft.

“The particular problem here with this procurement strategy is that there are cases where a small Indigenous business is used as a vehicle for non-Indigenous businesses,” Conservative MP Garnett Genuis noted in an interview.

“As with many other issues, the Liberals absolutely do not care about the concrete impacts [de cette politique]. »

In 2021, the Trudeau government has set itself the objective of annually awarding at least 5% of the total value of all public contracts to Indigenous businesses, the equivalent of the proportion of the Indigenous population in the country. This represents approximately $1 billion per year in contracts.

Advanced Chippewa Technologies is registered with the Aboriginal Business Register. It was the subject of an audit by the Ministry of Indigenous Services in 2023 and another audit is due to begin this summer.

Since 2004, the firm has obtained 432 contracts worth a total of $134.4 million, according to the Ministry of Public Services and Procurement. The company, which has just four employees and lists an Ottawa residence as its headquarters, also won $1 million in contracts in the deal ArriveCAN.

The deputy leader of the New Democratic Party (NDP), Alexandre Boulerice, believes that “taxpayers are paying too much” under the current procurement system and that the government must “reinvest in the public service.”

Neither the Minister of Public Services and Procurement, Jean-Yves Duclos, nor the Minister of Indigenous Services, Patty Hajdu, were able to answer questions from The Press Friday.

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