Medicine Hat News

Federal government refers three cases of suspected contractor fraud to RCMP

- SARAH RITCHIE

The federal procuremen­t department has asked the RCMP to investigat­e at least $5 million in suspected fraud by IT subcontrac­tors who were billing multiple department­s for the same work and taking advantage of poor data-sharing inside the government.

Procuremen­t Minister Jean-Yves Duclos said a recent data review, prompted by a call to a tipline, uncovered three fraudulent billing schemes that were being used between 2018 and 2022.

Duclos said his department has revoked or suspended the security clearance of the contractor­s and is taking action to recover the money.

The department said in a press release that this is a “first wave” of cases and it expects there will be more in the coming months. Officials said another five to 10 cases are being examined, though they could not provide an estimate of how much money is involved.

“The good news, if there is good news here, is that it shows that the investment­s in what we call electronic procuremen­t, in data-gathering and data analytics, over the last few years are starting to work really well,” Duclos said at a press conference.

The IT sub-contractor­s in the cases that are now being investigat­ed by police submitted timesheets and billed department­s under separate contracts. The scheme involved 36 federal department­s, agencies and Crown corporatio­ns.

Duclos said the sub-contractor­s took advantage of the fact that most of the invoicing was done on paper, making comparison­s of data difficult.

“Until now, there has not been any sign that this was due to mismanagem­ent within the federal government,” he said, adding no one has lost their job and an internal investigat­ion is ongoing.

The government said it is not naming the individual­s or department­s involved to protect the integrity of the RCMP investigat­ion.

The cases are not related to the ArriveCan applicatio­n, which has been the subject of numerous investigat­ions, independen­t reports and studies by parliament­ary committees in recent months.

The main contractor­s that worked on the app, which was created during the COVID-19 pandemic, have been criticized for billing millions of dollars and sub-contractin­g out the work of building it.

The two-person firm GC Strategies got a sole-source contract for the work and billed an estimated $19 million, according to a report by the federal auditor general — though the company insists it was closer to $11 million.

Auditor general Karen Hogan’s report on the controvers­ial contracts found the government’s record-keeping was poor and its reliance on outside contractor­s allowed the cost to balloon to $60 million.

Conservati­ve critic Michael Barrett said his party had to fight to get the auditor involved in the first place. “That’s the type of transparen­cy that they’re not willing to put forward,” he said.

The government suspended its contracts with GC Strategies late last year and has now suspended its security status.

Treasury Board President Anita Anand said Wednesday that the auditor’s findings were “very concerning and unacceptab­le,” and she announced new measures aimed at increasing oversight of contractin­g.

“This is a very serious issue and it deserves a very serious response,” Anand said.

The comptrolle­r-general will begin a horizontal audit of a number of government department­s to assess decisionma­king, controls and governance of contracts next month, she said.

The guidance given to department­s last fall on procuring profession­al services has been updated to reinforce managers’ responsibi­lities, and a revised directive on conflict of interest will enforce that conflicts must be disclosed at the time of contractin­g.

“What we need to ensure is not only the accountabi­lity of the public service employee who is entering into that contract, but the responsibi­lity and accountabi­lity of the deputy heads and managers who are overseeing those individual­s,” she said.

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