Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I am pleased to be here to discuss these issues with members of the committee.
I would like today to provide clarification around three issues: first, the appointment of an interim Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development; second, the internal review of our environment and sustainable development audit practice; and, finally, the role of the Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development as defined in the Auditor General Act.
First, on the appointment of an interim commissioner, I take full responsibility for the decision to name an interim commissioner, and I made this decision after careful deliberation. I would like to assure the committee that my decision has absolutely nothing to do with the commissioner's 2006 report or with any other commissioner's report. As I stated yesterday, the Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development reports to Parliament on behalf of the Auditor General. Accordingly, I, along with other senior officials in my office, approve all audits and review all reports before they are made public. I consider all reports of the commissioner and her team to have been excellent work, and I stand behind all of them. The large team of auditors that is responsible for producing the commissioner's reports will continue to perform the same quality of work under Mr. Thompson's leadership as they have in the past.
As well, I wish to assure the committee that there was absolutely no pressure or interference from the government regarding this decision. As I'm sure members will understand, I cannot comment any further on this for a number of reasons, including privacy issues. And while I would imagine that some of you may find this frustrating, I simply cannot comment further.
The second issue concerns internal review. Our role is to provide parliamentarians with fact-based, independent information that can assist them in holding the government to account for its management. We attempt to measure our effectiveness in a number of ways — by surveys of MPs, and by several performance indicators. From time to time, we assess our performance and introduce changes that we believe will strengthen our audit practice. We have done this in our financial and performance audit practices to good effect. That is the objective of the internal review of our environment and sustainable development practice I mentioned yesterday.
Our environment and sustainable development practice is a very significant and important one within our Office. I believe that we have done very valuable work, but there are always opportunities to improve. Certain indicators for example show that our environment and sustainable development audits may not have as much impact as other work in the Office in improving government management. We need to understand if that is the case and, if so, how we can improve. The review is not intended in any way to diminish the work we currently do, but rather to strengthen it.
As I mentioned earlier, our role is to provide objective, fact-based information to parliamentarians to assist them in holding government to account. To preserve our credibility, we must remain independent of government and not stray into policy issues.
We cannot, as an audit office, comment on policy choice, nor dictate to government what policies they should adopt. That is the role of government and parliament. I believe that we have carried out the mandate given to us in 1995 faithfully — we have not crossed that line into policy. However, there is some indication that some people would like the Commissioner to go further. Comments by some environmentalists and more recently the introduction of Bill C-288 showed that there may be a gap between what is expected from the Commissioner and what the legislation states. In its original form, Bill C-288 would have required us to act as a policy advisor to the government of the day and to evaluate programs. This is inconsistent with our role as auditors and it is not a role we can fulfill in our Office.
These examples led me to believe that I should bring this issue forward to this committee as only you can determine if it merits further consideration.
Mr. Chair, my office has been conducting environmental audits for more than 20 years, and we will continue to do so, in keeping with our audit mandate. We view the 1995 modification to our act as a very important addition to our mandate.
I believe that the environment and sustainable development work of my office is important and is valuable. Our objective in conducting an internal review is certainly not to diminish it. Our objective is to strengthen this practice and to ensure that our environmental audit work best serves parliamentarians.
That concludes my opening statement, Mr. Chair. I would be pleased to take any questions from committee members. Thank you.