Mr. Chair, ladies and gentlemen of the committee, hello.
My name is David Janzen. I'm the director general of the access to information and privacy branch at the RCMP.
I am joined by my colleague Danielle Golden, our new director of privacy.
I'm honoured to be invited to speak to you today on this important issue from the traditional territory of the Algonquin Anishinabe people.
I'd like to start by addressing a point that will come as no surprise to this committee. For the last decade, the RCMP has struggled in its responsibility to be compliant under both the Access to Information Act and the Privacy Act. The Information Commissioner's 2020 systematic investigation of the RCMP outlined this in stark detail and directly led to the minister issuing a direction to develop a strategy to address the report's recommendations.
I'm pleased to say that we have not only embraced the recommendations in this report, but we've taken it as a rallying cry for change.
For the RCMP, this is a critical issue as without transparency, we cannot build trust and without trust, citizens are less likely to work with us in investigations. That is why we went further than addressing the systemic investigation in our five-year strategy, “Access Granted: Restoring Trust in the RCMP's Access to Information and Privacy Program”.
This strategy is an ambitious plan to modernize from not only an access to information perspective, but privacy as well, which I am sure is of interest to you.
I encourage anyone with interest to review the strategy and follow our progress on our ATIP modernization page, which is on our external website.
While we are still early in this effort, we are seeing some results. Firstly, we have succeeded in resolving one of the Information Commissioner's key concerns—evidenced by the title of the review and her recent testimony to this committee—which is the need for leadership.
Just two years ago, our program was led by a single director supported by three managers. Neither my position nor my colleague's position existed.
Today, we have a director general and three directors each leading dedicated streams for information access, privacy and operational support, supported by eight managers.
Our staff is growing, from approximately 60 FTEs toward a funded FTE complement of over 100 FTEs.
We contracted business consultants to help us improve processes, created intergovernmental fora to share best practices, and implemented new training and guidance material for our personnel. We have and continue to invest in new technologies to help process requests more efficiently and to help us leverage the lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic to create a more national workforce.
In terms of concrete results, in the last fiscal year our information compliance rate increased to 40.1% from 26.4%. The Privacy Act compliance increased to 46.1% from 32.8%.
These results were achieved thanks to the hard work of our personnel, the support of our senior leadership, and despite the numerous challenges that continue to impact our chances at success.
For example, we all share the challenge of attracting new staff. Let's be blunt. There are currently far more positions than candidates in ATIP, particularly at the most demanding levels. While the RCMP is trying to change this with clear career streams, the fact remains that there are insufficient numbers of candidates to fill our vacancies.
Staffing challenges make it difficult for us to manage some of the RCMP's unique challenges that result from our mandate.
The RCMP is front and centre at the major events of public interest in Canada, which inevitably result in a significant number of requests.
Tasking, collecting and reviewing records in a situation when the very employees who hold them are assisting in a flood evacuation or investigating a tragedy is a unique challenge. This requires experienced and informed ATIP personnel, who are extremely difficult to replace. The RCMP also remains a largely paper-based organization, such that manual searches through boxes of files are still necessary.
This committee is also no stranger to our need to conduct robust privacy assessments of new technologies. We have created an entire stream for privacy compliance, which includes reviewing and approving privacy impact assessments, to ensure that we have the capacity to stay ahead of critical but invasive emerging technologies.
In closing, I want to stress that the RCMP is committed to modernizing, and that I and my employees are passionate about improving this critical function at the RCMP. However, I do not want to paint a picture that we are satisfied with the early progress we have made. We know we must keep building on this, and these efforts will take continued investment.
However, these early results provide much needed momentum to fuel the changes that need to take place.
I am happy to provide the committee with any information you require for your review. I look forward to the results of your study to further help us refine our modernization effort to better serve Canadians.
We look forward to your questions and the forthcoming discussion.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.