Overwhelmed by workload, public sector integrity commissioner asks for more money - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 04:37 PM | Calgary | 6.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Overwhelmed by workload, public sector integrity commissioner asks for more money

Canada's public service integrity watchdog says it's so overwhelmed with tips about wrongdoing, from mismanagement to violations of departmental codes of conduct,that it needs to double its budget just to keep up.

Federal whistleblowers already waiting 2-3 years for investigations to begin, warns Harriet Solloway

Public service integrity watchdog overwhelmed by tips of wrongdoing

10 days ago
Duration 3:21
The office of the federal integrity commissioner is asking for a funding increase in the face of a backlog of complaints in the public sector, leaving whistleblowers potentially waiting up to three years for investigations to begin.

Canada's public service integrity watchdog says it's so overwhelmed with tips about wrongdoing, from mismanagement to violations of departmental codes of conduct,that it needs to double its budget just to keep up.

Harriet Solloway, public sector integrity commissioner for just over a year, is warning the "crisis" could undermine her office's mandate to investigate wrongdoing in the federal public sector and protect whistleblowers from reprisal.

She said it's already causing two- to three-year delays in analyzing new cases.

I will have to determine which parts of our mandate we continue and which parts I have to put on hold because I simply don't have the resources.- Harriet Solloway, public sector integrity commissioner

"If we don't get to the investigations, we can't get to the conclusions and we can't make recommendations," Solloway said. "If there are things that are amiss, they will continue to fester and probably get worse rather than improve."

Currently, 161 files regarding alleged wrongdoing or wrongful reprisal are on hold five times the number of cases the commissioner has capacity to investigate each month, according toSolloway's office.

Since the start of the current fiscal year on April 1,the commissioner's office has already received 198disclosures. It received a total of 332 during the previous fiscalyear, suggesting a continuing upward trend, according to Solloway.

Advocates and whistleblowers have criticized the commissioner's office in the past, but Solloway said the surge in disclosures is a sign of growing confidence in their work. She said she's fearful any delays could undermine that new confidence.

"We may get to the point where evidence may no longer be available. People may move on, we may not be able to find them. People's memories fade, and so it will impact the outcome," she said.

"In short order, I will have to determine which parts of our mandate we continue and which parts I have to put on hold because I simply don't have the resources."

Commissioner asks to double budget

For the first time since its creation in 2007, the commissioner's office is asking the federal government for more funding.

Specifically, it wants an immediate injection of $1.3 million. It's alsoaskingto effectively double its annual budget with a $7.6-million increase until 2028-29, followed bya permanent $7.2-million increase thereafter.

Solloway said that cash infusion would allow her officeto reduce and manage itscurrent backlog.

The office of Treasury BoardPresident Anita Anand said officials are reviewing the commissioner's request through the standard process for increasing operating budgets.

Spokesperson MyahTomasisaid the government has introduced measures to support disclosure, including internal process guidelines, training and awareness activities for public servants.

A woman with dark hair wearing a red blazer smiles for a photo in her office.
Harriet Solloway was appointed public service integrity commissioner in the summer of 2023. (Office of the Public Service Integrity Commissioner)

Even with the backlog and delays, Solloway is encouraging federal workers to continue reporting wrongdoing to her office.

"Please do come forward. Nobody will hear about your disclosure from us," Solloway said."I remain optimistic that we'll get the resources that we need to be able to deal with these cases, as they need to be."

Meanwhile, an opposition private member'sbill proposes updating the commissioner's mandate to expand her responsibilities, but with no new funding.

The bill, which critics say is long overdue,is currently before the Senate butcould die on the order paper if there's an early election.

'Nip serious wrongdoing in the bud'

David Hutton, a senior fellow at Toronto Metropolitan University's Centre for Free Expression, agrees with Solloway's assessment that her office faces a crisis. He said properly funding theoffice provides substantial value for money.

"The integrity commissioner has the unique ability to nip serious wrongdoing in the bud," Hutton said.

Hutton pointed to the recent ArriveCan and Sustainable Development Technology Canada scandals, and even the Phoenix pay system fiasco as examples of costly mistakes that might have been avoided or mitigated if whistleblowers were more empowered.

"As soon as the whistleblower begins to see things wrong and shows themselves in any way to their management then they're a target," he said.

A man with grey and white hair wearing a grey suit with a red tie and glasses
David Hutton, a senior fellow at Toronto Metropolitan University's Centre for Free Expression, believes whistleblowers need better protection. (Guillaume Lafrenire/CBC)

Hutton offered the exampleof a bureaucrat who appeared before a parliamentary committee after raising the alarm over mismanagement of funds at Sustainable Development Technology Canada.

The individual, identified only as Witness 1, said their complaints had fallen on deaf ears despite pursuing it far up the chain within their department.

"Frankly, I'm embarrassed to be here because me being here is an indication that the systems that are set out to protect people don't work," the witness said during their opening remarks.

Law hasn't changed since 2007

Hutton said an overhaul of the Public Servants Disclosure Protection Act (PSDPA), which gives the public sector commissioner their mandate, is overdue.

The Conservatives passed the law in 2007 as part of a suite of accountability measures proposed in the wake of the Liberal sponsorship scandal. It was due for a legislative review in 2011, but that didn't happen.

A 2017 report by the House of Commons committee recommended substantial changesincluding placingthe burden of proof on the employer in cases where the complainantfaced retaliation for coming forward, and giving departments the duty to protect whistleblowers.

The Canada flag catches the morning light on the Peace Tower on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Tuesday, April 16, 2024.
The legislation that gives the public service integrity commissioner her mandate is unchanged since its inception 17 years ago. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

Those recommendations went nowhere. In 2022, the Trudeau government appointed an external task force that'sscheduled to report bythe end of this year.

Hutton said the current law gives the commissioner's office "unlimited discretion to do nothing" despite giving it investigative powers under the Inquiry Act.

"It just creates a series of bogus processes that tie [whistleblowers] up and exhaust them for years with really no possibility of any remedy," he said.

Senators reviewing update tolaw

A Bloc Qubcois private member'sbill to update the commissioner's mandate has made it through the House of Commons with bipartisan support and is currently undergoing second reading in the Senate.

Rookie MP Jean-Denis Garon said the Bill C-290 proposes better protection for whistleblowers and witnesses, as well as expanding the scope of complaints that can be investigated.

The statement from Anand's office said the government supports all efforts to strengthen thePSDPAand looks forward to Bill C-290 receiving royal assent.

A photo of the new Senate with red seats.
A Bloc Qubcios private member's bill is before the Senate, but would have to pass before a potential snap election to make any changes. (Benoit Roussel/CBC)

Solloway said she expects the bill would increase her office's workload,but declined to comment on criticismof the existing act.

If the bill is amended in the Senate, it would have to be sent back to the House of Commons and would then be unlikely to get royal assent before the next election.

"We have limited time left," cautionedSen. Pierre Dalphond, the bill's sponsor. "This legislation is a major improvement, and I think time has come to pass it.

"We have to have a system that is able to treat their complaints properly and efficiently in a short time."

Harriet Solloway, the public sector integrity commissioner, says her department is facing a severe backlog on complaints filed by the public service. Shes asking for more funding from the government to address the spike in complaints.