Thank you.
This is my first appearance in front of this committee. Thank you for having me this afternoon. I'm still a relative newbie to government. I've been less than two years as the chief information officer of Canada. I'm joining from a 30-year career in the private sector, so this is a space that's incredibly interesting for me.
We are dealing with an analog problem in a digital world. To build on what the minister said, we're dealing with a lot of paper-type records to which we're trying to provide access to Canadians, and we're doing so by trying to migrate into a digital world.
The minister has highlighted the fact that we've set up this portal. We are intending to fully onboard all departments within government so that Canadians have a common front door into the process—that's an aspiration we have for digital right across government—and to provide processing software, as she noted, that's going to be helpful in automating.
Really, at the core of the talent crunch we're in right across some of these more expertise-related areas is trying to move as much as we possibly can to an automated form, including some of the service requests we're seeing as part of the access to information requests such as immigration status. Trying to really stand those up as services is a big part of how we want to tackle that.
The report sets out conclusions, but it has not stopped us from advancing things while we're looking at and building out an action plan.
Thank you.