Thank you, Madam Chair.
I have a motion, of course presented in due course to committee in both official languages, and it reads as follows:
That the Standing Committee on Government Operations and Estimates hold hearings into the matter of "phantom positions" within the public service, as raised by the Public Service Commission in its 2005-2006 annual report; that the Committee call witnesses to testify on the matter; and that the Committee issue and table a report in the House of Commons, based on its findings.
I table this motion, Madam Chair, with mixed feelings. On the one hand, I don't want to get away from what we want to do. In this committee we're committed to following through with accrual accounting; we're committed to trying to stay the course and present a report that I think is probably the most important area of study before Parliament, which is of course the spending estimates. That can't be done accurately unless we finish accrual accounting.
But what prompted this motion the other day was when Madam Barrados from the Public Service Commission came forward. In her statement and report she said the cases she talked about raise troubling questions about political meddling in the staffing of the public service that would warrant—and this is the wording that goes directly to the heart of this committee—that would warrant tougher rules or legislation to stop the wide-open and unmonitored movement of bureaucrats between ministers' offices and the public service.
I took that as a plea to say we have a problem, and let's address that problem, when it came directly from the head of the Public Service Commission to this committee. We are mandated and I think have an obligation to deal with it. I don't think it's something we can just slough off.
I don't want to delay the regular workings of this committee. Perhaps we could do it at extra or special meetings, but I believe we definitely have to look at it. The motion before us is quite simple. It essentially calls on this committee to hold the hearings into the matter as described, and then, of course, make a report back to Parliament.
The very simple reason is “phantom positions”. It's unbelievable. Is there one? Are there two? Are there more? It's an open-ended book, and we just can't accept that. We need to know exactly who requested these appointments; we need to know who signed off on them; we need to know whether any disciplinary action should be taken. We should also determine whether there are more cases. This has to be done. I really feel we have to move on this.
What I'm suggesting and asking is that we hold a few more hearings, obtain some answers, and then issue a report to Parliament so that we can ensure this type of offence never happens again. We are an oversight committee. That's our job, and it's our duty. I don't want to get sidetracked, but I think this is so important that we can't overlook it and can't just pass it by.
When Madam Barrados makes this kind of statement to this committee, I really think that is a plea. She states unequivocally that there is a problem. We need it fixed. Does it require legislation? Does it require action? Does it require study?
I believe this committee should seriously look into this matter. I would ask the committee to unanimously endorse our moving forward and taking this to the steering committee to see whether at some particular point in our schedule we could bring it forward so as not to interfere with our regular duties.