Fixing Phoenix
The federal government’s chronic salary struggles could be on the verge of ballooning into a billiondollar boondoggle, the auditor general says in a scathing indictment of the Phoenix civil service pay system.
The federal government’s chronic salary struggles will take more time and more dollars than the three years and $540 million projected to fix the snafu-stricken Phoenix public service pay system, the auditor general warned Tuesday — an escalating “fiasco” that the governing Liberals laid squarely at the feet of their Conservative predecessors.
Auditor Michael Ferguson even went so far as to warn that the government may be “in a similar situation” to Australia, where a comparable problem has already cost more than $1.2 billion over the last eight years and still isn’t completely fixed.
Ferguson’s review of the disastrous Phoenix pay system detailed just how many and how often public servants are either being overpaid and underpaid, how badly federal officials gauged the size and the scope of the problem, and how the government under-reported the number of outstanding pay problems even as issues grew.
In all, there were 150,000 employees with pay problems that needed correcting at the start of summer, and a value of over $520 million worth of mistakes.
The Liberals will provide a full and detailed cost estimate to fix the system, but not until next May, with plans to finalize by next month a preliminary road map of dozens of projects aimed at fixing Phoenix. Public Services Minister Carla Qualtrough said the government would look at all options for the long-term, including whether Phoenix will still run the federal pay system. But she also didn’t mince words when she addressed the genesis of the problem. “The previous government botched the Phoenix pay system from the start,” she told a news conference in the foyer of the House of Commons. “They spent $309 million to create an unproven and flawed pay system, and prematurely booked $70 million in savings per year. They rushed the design and implementation, and they did not train staff — in fact, they terminated 700 special compensation staff before Phoenix was launched.” When asked whether scrapping the system would make financial sense, Ferguson wasn’t convinced, noting the pay software alternatives that would be available today aren’t all that different than the one the government bought.
“If they started all over again, it’s hard to see how they would actually end up in a better situation,” Ferguson said. “Their only real option is to try and resolve the problem within the system as it exists.” Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer disputed Qualtrough’s version of events.
“It was this Liberal government that decided to rush the launch of it, even over the objections of a third-party analysis that this government asked for,” Scheer said.
“They commissioned a thirdparty analysis of whether or not they should proceed and whether it was ready; the analysis said that it wasn’t, (but) they decided to overrule that and go ahead with it. It was this government’s decision to press the start button.”
The report says the government has set aside a lot of time, money and staff to deal with Phoenix, but it hasn’t tackled the underlying causes or developed a long-term sustainable solution. “Unacceptable just doesn’t capture the seriousness of this issue,” Ferguson said. “This has to be the government’s main priority to get this resolved, because it is touching so many of the civil servants and they need to get this right.”