Thank you, Chair, and thank you to the guests today for their presentation.
I want to focus on two related areas. We've heard comments from Ms. Barrados as well about the area of temporary help services and the effects they have on the overall public service and how that relates to hiring people out of the equity groups.
I'm going to start with the temporary help services. I've done a little homework. I did some order paper questions. It just so happens, and sometimes you just get lucky, I guess, that these are the order paper questions I asked for: five years of inventory in the national capital area--I was hoping to get the whole country--and how much was spent on temporary help services, and I was able to come up with the amounts.
The committee might be interested in this. Over the last five years we spent $644 million on temporary help services in the national capital area. In 2001-02, the total expenditure on temporary help services in the Ottawa area was $114 million. Fast forward to 2005-06. It was $194 million, and for the first half of this fiscal year, it's $110 million. Do the math. If we're halfway through the year at $110 million, we're on our way to possibly hitting $220 million.
I mention that, Chair, because if you go back to 1995, we know about 45,000 jobs were shed from the public service, and it's pretty obvious they had to fill in the services somewhere.
The definition I got from the standing offers Treasury Board puts out to local contractors is that the supplier must provide temporary help services as and when requested by various federal government departments and agencies located in the national capital area in accordance with the classifications indicated in the temporary help services online system. Temporary help services are to be used against vacancies during staffing action, when a public servant is absent for a short period or when there's a temporary workload increase for which insufficient staff is available. The last might be passports, which I think we'd all welcome. In fact, I would like to see more temporary workers hired.
My question to you is, first of all, were you aware we were spending this amount of money? Maybe you weren't. I was able to get the order paper questions. I would just like your comments on the fact that we're spending this amount of money on temporary help services.
I will follow up, because I have some information about what kind of people we're hiring for temporary help and the classifications they have.
We seem to have runaway costs in temporary help services. Getting back to what Mr. Epp was saying, presumably we want to attract people by saying we have a place for you in the public service. There's a job, a career and there's work to do.
On the other hand, we seem to be using temporary help services as a proxy so that the public service can actually hire people.