Thank you, Madam Chair.
Good morning again to you Madam Auditor General. I appreciate all your hard work to help us understand how government works. I know that Canadians who pay their taxes and work hard for their money want to get the best value possible for the dollars they send to our federal government.
I want to say initially that while your job is to point out where the deficiencies are and where we need to do better, there are a lot of things in government that work well and where Canadians do get good value for their money.
Obviously the key for us is huge amounts of money going into areas where there isn't proper accountability. We need to focus and improve on those areas. The IT spending really jumped out at me. You indicated there has been $8.7 billion approved for new business projects for the federal government over the last three years. That's a large amount of money.
Mr. Kramp's example of an IT project, on a small level, gone awry...I know others had that experience. I also had that experience when I was newly elected, with the first office I looked at renting. The landlord had stars in his eyes at the thought of a big fat government cheque coming in. He promptly beefed up the price, and I promptly walked away and went some place where I got a good deal.
I guess these are things Canadians worry about: that we are getting good value for the money and that we know what we're doing with the money.
What jumped out at me in chapter 3 was when you said that most of these large information technology projects suffered from the same shortages of experienced and qualified people and inadequate analysis of key business issues as before. This is a long-standing problem. You found that four of the seven projects were well-managed but that the quality of management varied widely, and those with weak project management practices experienced long delays and cost overruns.
There are all kinds of good examples in the private sector and in the public sector. What is the big stumbling block for our government in identifying best practices and getting those adopted, especially with these large IT projects?