The Telegram (St. John's)

Phoenix ‘incomprehe­nsible failure’

Auditor general critical of federal public service pay system

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The failed federal public service pay system was the result of a “government culture’’ that stands in the way of helping people, auditor general Michael Ferguson said Tuesday as he issued his latest report to Parliament.

The problem-plagued Phoenix pay system was mismanaged from the very beginning and is just one of the “incomprehe­nsible failures’’ of the government over the last decade, Ferguson told a news conference after tabling the report.

Auditors also found flaws in Canada’s military justice system; in how government surplus assets are disposed of; and in Ottawa’s failure to close socio-economic gaps between on-reserve First Nations people and other Canadians.

“The building and implementa­tion of Phoenix was an incomprehe­nsible failure of project management and oversight,’’ Ferguson said, adding later that the government has reached a critical moment where it needs to reflect on how to change the way it does business.

The report on Phoenix — the second in six months — prompted the country’s biggest civil service union to call for a wider investigat­ion.

“It is clear a public inquiry is needed,’’ said Chris Aylward, president of the Public Service Alliance of Canada.

“We need to build on what we found out today ... so that we can ensure that nothing like this ever happens again.’’

The pay system was never properly tested before its launch in February 2016 and Phoenix executives either didn’t understand or ignored warnings of problems, choosing to place potential savings targets ahead of system readiness, said Ferguson’s spring report.

“Phoenix executives were more focused on meeting the project budget and timeline than on what the system needed to do,’’ the report concluded.

The former Conservati­ve government had projected that Phoenix, conceived in 2009,

would save taxpayers about $70 million annually by requiring fewer people to work on pay files.

So far, however, it’s estimated that the system could cost $1.2 billion by the time it is stabilized, which could take years.

More than half of the federal government’s 290,000 employees have reported being affected by Phoenix over the last two years. Some have been overpaid, some underpaid and others not paid at all — in some cases for months.

How a system with such glaring shortcomin­gs could be fully launched without raising alarms at the highest levels came down to who was minding the store, said the report.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Auditor General Michael Ferguson holds a press conference following the tabling of the AG Report in the House of Commons in Ottawa on Tuesday.
CP PHOTO Auditor General Michael Ferguson holds a press conference following the tabling of the AG Report in the House of Commons in Ottawa on Tuesday.

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