Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
I must say I'm delighted to be back among you today to tell you what my office has been working on and outline our priorities for what I believe is going to be a very busy and eventful year for all of us.
As you mentioned in your opening remarks, I'm accompanied today by Suzanne Legault and Andrea Neill.
These are exciting times for access to information. Two bills have been tabled in the House of Commons and there is a recommendation from this committee for the government to introduce a bill to modernize and strengthen the Access to Information Act by May 31 of this year.
These recent developments tell me that we have reached a pivotal moment in the access to information regime.
I believe the committee wanted to discuss the issue of resources as well as the measures I put in place to significantly reduce our backlog. I'll also outline some of the issues that I believe require the committee's attention in the coming months.
I've distributed two documents. One provides some background information on my office, and the other provides our recommendations on modernizing the act.
Last year one of our priorities was to begin a renewal process to improve the effectiveness of our service delivery. This year this work continued in full force and will remain a major priority for the office.
In 2007-08 we saw the number of complaints we received increase by 81%, and as a result, our backlog has continued to grow. In order to reduce this historical backlog and conduct more timely investigations, we've introduced some new initiatives to strengthen and streamline the complaint-handling process and better manage our workload. These include the creation of an intake and early resolution unit as a pilot project, and a new separate team that is focused on tackling all of our older cases. Our goal continues to be to eliminate or significantly reduce the current backlog by the end of next year. We'll also want to prevent the recurrence of such a backlog.
I'm happy to report that already we are seeing promising improvements in our complaint-handling process and response time, but I'll be in a better position to attest to this at the end of this fiscal year, as some of these measures have been put in place only in the last few months. We'll continue to test our new workload management model and make necessary adjustments to keep us on track.
Mr. Chairman, the last time I was here, I indicated that one of our priorities was to review our approach to the report cards to ensure that contextual elements that may affect the performance of selected institutions are taken into account.
This year, we have come up with a new process that allowed us to examine the performance of institutions and provide a broader picture of institutional compliance with the act.
As you mentioned, a few days ago I tabled my special report on the performance of federal institutions to Parliament. The results provide a grim picture of the federal government's access to information regime.
The most significant finding indicates that requesters are right to be frustrated by the system. The 30-day period has indeed become the exception rather than the norm, and quite frankly it is just not acceptable. The prevalence of extensions and consultation requests have significantly slowed down the treatment of requests, to the point that some institutions take an average of 120 days to respond to requesters. As I have publicly stated, these are systemic problems; it's not just a departmental performance issue.
I firmly believe that central agencies, such as the Treasury Board Secretariat, have to exercise leadership to provide federal government departments with the resources they need to fulfill their obligations under the act. I also fundamentally believe that Canada needs a better compliance model for access to information, with adequate performance incentives.
As this committee has stated on numerous occasions, the need to modernize the legislative framework is urgent. The round-table discussions held by the Office of the Information Commissioner on the reform of the Access to Information Act, last June, demonstrated that the modernization of the ATIA is a priority for all.
Mr. Chairman, the document I'm providing to the committee contains a series of recommendations on this matter. It is the result of my reflection over the past year. For instance, I recommend the review of the legislation by Parliament every five years, universal access, a greater coverage of the act, and measures to improve timeliness, strengthen the compliance model, and improve public education. Although I support the open government act, which was developed by my predecessor, the recommendations outlined in this document should be implemented without further delay.
Mr. Chairman, should this committee decide to pursue legislative reform, rest assured that I and my office will make it our first priority to assist you in your deliberations.
Another issue I would like to briefly touch on is inherent weaknesses that are significantly limiting my ability to carry out my mandate and my new responsibilities stemming from the Federal Accountability Act.
I will be appearing before the Advisory Panel on the Funding and Oversight of Officers of Parliament on March 12 to discuss our financial requirements.
In order to address the resource issue, my office undertook an A-base review to identify what our needs are and how to make efficiency improvements to our operations. The review revealed a lack of capacity of my office to support the role of ombudsman and officer of Parliament.
Basically we need to obtain additional funding in order for my office to establish realistic resource levels and service standards based on the size and complexity of my program. We need these resources so we can put a greater focus on accountability, effective governance and oversight, and improve service delivery. Otherwise, my ability to deliver on my legislative mandate as well as the integrity of my office's program could be put in jeopardy.
In closing, Mr. Chairman, a stronger regime requires more than modernizing the legislative framework and administrative processes. It requires the leadership necessary to effect the cultural change required to lift the fog over access to information and create a real climate of openness. Your leadership is also required, to see that legislative reform becomes a reality.
It was Alvin Toffler who wrote Future Shock in 1970. You may remember he coined the phrase “information overload”, and he wrote the following: “Knowledge is the most democratic source of power.” You have a unique opportunity to bring about measures to modernize the access to information regime and bring it into the 21st century.
As I said earlier, I think this is going to be an interesting year for access to information. As you can see, there's lots of work to be done. With the appropriate resources and leadership, I'm confident we can meet these challenges.
Thank you for your attention and I look forward to your questions.