The Niagara Falls Review

DND now staffed up to spend: Official

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LEE BERTHIAUME

THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — For anyone hoping the Liberal government plans to blow up Canada’s much-maligned military procuremen­t system, Patrick Finn has some advice: Don’t hold your breath.

Finn is the Defence Department official responsibl­e for overseeing $6 billion in annual spending that has been criticized far and wide in recent years over a perceived failure to deliver critical military equipment.

The problems have been blamed on poor planning, red tape and internal bickering, which has tied up efforts to buy new aircraft, naval ships and other equipment.

There were expectatio­ns that the Liberal government would finally start to unravel the problem with its new defence policy last month, which promised an extra $62 billion for the military over the next 20 years.

But the policy made little mention of the procuremen­t system, even though its proper functionin­g will be all the more critical if and when the promised new defence spending starts to flow.

Finn, whose official title at National Defence is assistant deputy minister of materiel, believes that after a decade of hard-earned lessons, the system has finally turned a corner.

“Do I think we’re on the right path? I do,” he said in an interview with the Canadian Press.

“Do I think we’re at the end of that path? We’re not. Do I think we’re through all the growing pains? We’re not, but we’re a lot more mature than we were three, five, eight or 10 years ago.”

The reference to 10 years ago is important.

National Defence’s materiel section had only a handful of procuremen­t specialist­s, many of whom were inexperien­ced, when the Harper Conservati­ves unveiled their own defence policy in 2008.

Gutted in the 1990s, the section struggled to produce accurate cost estimates and schedules for the billions of dollars in new military equipment the Tories promised.

Finn said many of the problems can be traced back to that shortage of staff and experience, and he acknowledg­ed that having enough skilled personnel remains his top risk.

His 4,200-strong workforce is in the process of adding 300 more staff by the end of next summer, he said, while many of his staff have the hard-earned experience to know what works, and what doesn’t.

“The nature of the conversati­ons that we’re having compared to 10 years ago, it’s kind of exciting because we’re really kind of getting into: ‘Be careful, we’ve done this over the years,’ ” Finn said.

Another significan­t problem was the fact the Conservati­ves didn’t set aside enough money for their policy, which led to a merry-go-round of trying to match available funding to the military’s needs.

Finn is hopeful that the Liberals’ defence policy, which the government says has been rigorously costed by six accounting firms, will finally fix that problem by acknowledg­ing the real cost of different gear.

One example: While the Conservati­ves said 15 warships would cost $26 billion, the Liberals say the actual price tag will be closer to $60 billion — the same number as reported by the parliament­ary budget officer.

Many critics of the military procuremen­t system, including some of those who held Finn’s position before him, have also lamented what they see as an onerous amount of red tape and lack of accountabi­lity.

The reason is that while the ultimate purpose of the system is to buy the gear the military needs, there are other interests as well, notably the desire to maximize economic benefits and competitio­n. That means heavy involvemen­t in the system by two other federal department­s: Economic Developmen­t Canada and Public Services and Procuremen­t Canada.

Critics of the system have repeatedly asked the government to create one single department responsibl­e for all military procuremen­t. Finn said that isn’t on the radar right now.

“Are we going to fundamenta­lly change the authoritie­s of ministers or are we going to smash it all together? Not at this point,” he said.

“And I would caution to anybody: Be very careful. Because even just smashing that all together is probably going to distract us for a year or two while this kind of stuff sits on the backburner.”

Finn’s optimism will soon be put to the test. The Liberal defence policy promises to spend tens of billions of dollars on 50 major military equipment purchases over the next 20 years.

Those include the long-delayed purchase of new fighter jets and warships that are expensive, complex and politicall­y sensitive, but absolutely necessary if Canada is to have a modern military.

Finn noted many other projects previously tied up in the system are moving ahead or being delivered, such as new armoured vehicles for the army, Arctic patrol ships for the navy, and searchand-rescue planes.

“It’s up to us now,” he said of his unit. “The government has done their part to kind of sign up to this, and we’re very seized department­ally.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan unveils the Liberal government’s long-awaited vision for expanding the Canadian Armed Forces in Ottawa on June 7.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan unveils the Liberal government’s long-awaited vision for expanding the Canadian Armed Forces in Ottawa on June 7.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? A smashed car sits on the corner of Broadway and 45th Street in New York’s Times Square after ploughing through a crowd of pedestrian­s at lunchtime on May 18. A Canadian woman injured in the crash has been moved to Montreal to recover, her family says.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES A smashed car sits on the corner of Broadway and 45th Street in New York’s Times Square after ploughing through a crowd of pedestrian­s at lunchtime on May 18. A Canadian woman injured in the crash has been moved to Montreal to recover, her family says.

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