Regina Leader-Post

Officials discussed risks of sole-source military contracts

Mismanagem­ent leads to capability gaps, analyst says

- Lee Berthiaume

OTTAWA • New court documents show public servants discussing the risk to taxpayers as successive federal government­s have turned to sole-source contracts to buy desperatel­y needed equipment for the Canadian Forces and others.

The documents were filed on behalf of suspended Vice-admiral Mark Norman, who is charged with breach of trust in connection with one such contract. They land amid frustratio­ns with Canada’s military procuremen­t system — including because of political mismanagem­ent — that have led to the need for quick fixes.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government has chosen to sign several solesource contracts to bolster the coast guard’s aging icebreakin­g fleet and the military’s fighter-jet force, buying time to find permanent replacemen­ts.

Sole-sourcing does make sense in many cases, said defence analyst David Perry of the Canadian Global Affairs Institute, particular­ly where there is an emergency or it’s clear that only one company can meet the government’s needs.

“But if you’re sole-sourcing to fill a capability gap, that’s the result of mismanagin­g a procuremen­t to the point where you are out of options and have no alternativ­e,” Perry said. “That’s not really a good reason to be sole-sourcing.”

The Tories under Stephen Harper once intended to buy a fleet of F-35 jets on an untendered contract, but aborted that plan in 2012 once the full price became known.

Then the Trudeau government planned to spend about $6 billion on 18 solesource­d “interim” Super Hornets from Boeing because it said Canada needed more fighter jets to support its aging CF-18S until replacemen­ts could be purchased through a competitio­n.

The Super Hornets deal eventually fell apart because of a trade dispute with Boeing. So the government is buying 25 second-hand Australian fighter jets, also without a competitio­n. Canada isn’t expected to get new fighter jets until at least 2025.

The Liberals also recently bought three second-hand icebreaker­s from Quebecbase­d Davie Shipbuildi­ng for the coast guard, whose existing fleet is on average 35 years old — with no immediate plan to replace it on the horizon.

Suspended as the military’s second-in-command in January 2017, Norman was charged in March 2018 with one count of breach of trust for allegedly leaking cabinet secrets to Davie over a different contract. He has denied any wrongdoing and vowed to fight the charge.

The case against Norman centres on a sole-sourced deal negotiated between Davie and the previous Conservati­ve government in 2015, in which the Quebec shipyard proposed converting a civilian cargo ship into a temporary support vessel for the navy.

The $700-million contract with Davie was not finalized before that year’s federal election. Although the newly elected Liberals at first wanted to delay it for a closer review, they signed off on the deal a short time later.

Before Liberal ministers agreed to buy the converted ship, bureaucrat­s from the Privy Council Office wrote a secret briefing note in November 2015 that discussed the problems with not holding a competitio­n.

“The risk inherent with a sole-source contract is that much of the leverage in the contract negotiatio­n resides with the company,” the bureaucrat­s wrote, even as they noted that the Conservati­ves had exempted the deal from the usual oversight for such projects.

Despite these concerns, the officials recommende­d the government approve the deal.

The navy at the time had just retired its 50-year-old support ships and while replacemen­ts are being built in Vancouver through the government’s national shipbuildi­ng plan, numerous delays and problems mean they won’t be ready until the 2020s.

The navy had originally expected to get new support ships in 2012.

The briefing note said a competitio­n could have been held to find another, perhaps cheaper, solution, but “a competitiv­e process would take longer to deliver a solution — likely 10 to 14 months for a contract award, and then more time for the service to be ready.”

RCMP interviews with several senior civil servants raise similar concerns about awarding a contract to Davie without a competitio­n while also alluding to the sense of urgency in getting new support ships.

The Defence Department’s head of procuremen­t, Patrick Finn, told the Mounties that other companies were clamouring to compete to supply a temporary support ship in late 2014, and that “the informatio­n existed to say that this could be done competitiv­ely.”

But Finn noted that Davie had already found a ship that it could convert for the navy, which “at that point had no replenishm­ent ships.”

THE RISK ... IS THAT MUCH OF THE LEVERAGE (IN THE TALKS) RESIDES WITH THE COMPANY.

 ??  ?? Mark Norman
Mark Norman

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