Times Colonist

Firm defends ArriveCan actions

- MICKEY DJURIC

A company that worked on the ArriveCan app is defending its integrity and asserts steps were taken to address conflict-of-interest concerns related to its founder, who recently went to work for the Department of National Defence.

Dalian Enterprise­s Inc. said David Yeo made the appropriat­e conflict-of-interest filing, resigned as a director and officer and put his company shares in a blind trust since its main customer is the government of Canada.

Yeo also agreed not to participat­e in any direct or indirect work that the company was doing for the Defence Department, said a spokespers­on for the company.

The spokespers­on said in a statement that from 2002 until September 2023, Yeo, a former military member, “was not an employee of the government of Canada in any capacity.”

He “only provided IT profession­al services on a contract basis through Dalian to the Department of National Defence,” the statement said.

It’s the first time the company has publicly responded after CTV News reported last month on Yeo’s employment status and Dalian’s previous work on ArriveCan. The government paid the company $7.9 million as part of the app’s nearly $60-million overall cost. Following that report, the Defence Department announced that Yeo was suspended and that it had launched an internal investigat­ion.

A week ago, Public Services and Procuremen­t Canada announced it was suspending the company’s security status “in response to informatio­n that recently came to light.” It said that the company would no longer be able to work on federal contracts or participat­e in new procuremen­t opportunit­ies.

On Friday, the Defence Department would only say the investigat­ion is still ongoing.

Dalian’s spokespers­on said Yeo would not be available for an interview.

When he began working for the government in September, the company’s work for ArriveCan had long since concluded, the spokespers­on said.

Dalian, along with Coradix Technology Consulting, were authorized in August of 2019 to work on various Canada Border Services Agency projects. That later included the ArriveCan app, which has since fallen under intense scrutiny for its bloated cost.

Coradix has also been suspended from government work.

When Yeo testified before a House of Commons committee in October, he spoke to his integrity. He didn’t mention his current employment and wasn’t asked about it. “During my 36-year career with the Canadian army, which included deployment­s to Afghanista­n and the Middle East, I was held to the highest levels of integrity, and of course, I continue to conduct myself in this manner today,” Yeo said.

He was recently invited to speak to the committee again, after the department announced its investigat­ion.

This week, Canada’s auditor General Karen Hogan told MPs at a committee hearing about Yeo’s connection to the Department of National Defence.

She said that connection wasn’t detected as part of her audit of the ArriveCan project because the Defence Department was not involved in the developmen­t of the app.

But she said employees’ full disclosure is “essential” so that supervisor­s can assess if any outside work is incompatib­le with the person’s job, and “whether it might have an impact on their ability to carry out their duties in an objective and fair manner.”

 ?? DARRYL DYCK, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A Canada Border Services Agency officer hands documents to a driver entering Canada at the Douglas-Peace Arch border crossing in Surrey.
DARRYL DYCK, THE CANADIAN PRESS A Canada Border Services Agency officer hands documents to a driver entering Canada at the Douglas-Peace Arch border crossing in Surrey.

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