At the prompting of this committee, I actually went back and looked at some previous work I had been involved in on this issue of classification. There was a report by the Auditor General in May 2003 that gives, in my humble opinion, a fairly good description of what the problems with classification had been in the Government of Canada.
It describes the whole story of the universal classification system, which was an effort to modernize and reform classification and ended up failing and costing a lot of money. At the end of the piece, the Auditor General is recommending that there be some clear direction given on how the reforms are going to go forward and how the system is modernized. For it to work well, you must have a system that reflects the work that's in the government, and some of the classification standards are indeed very old.
The Treasury Board then took it upon itself, in part in response to this, I think, to do a big study on pay and classification, which was authored by Jim Lahey. He concluded in his study that this was an area that was really under-managed and that there was a need to manage this system. In his study, he does a fairly lengthy analysis. There was a need to manage this system and also to have clearer oversight of the system. He talks specifically about the requirement to do audits of the classifications.
The best person to speak to this is the chief human resources officer, because this is now squarely her responsibility, and not the responsibility of the commission. To date, we have had movement on trying to update the standard, but it's piecemeal. As far as I know, there is no real oversight and no real audit of the classification system. There is only a requirement that all reclassifications be posted.
The only real control on classifications is for EX-4 and EX-5 positions--these are assistant deputy ministers--where the Treasury Board controls the numbers of these positions. To get a new position created, you need to have a Treasury Board submission.