Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Ms. Barrados, you are responsible for protecting the integrity of the staffing process. From time to time, I think, and depending on the mandate you receive from our committee, you can conduct audits and investigations to confirm the effectiveness of the staffing system. At this time, more and more private firms that are left to manage the various sectors, whether dealing with purchasing or staff recruitment, as is the case here. As I said earlier, some articles report that there about 140 private companies whose work consists of recruiting staff. That constitutes an enormous cost and it is constantly increasing. I have before me the characteristics of the public service workforce. There are contracts for temporary help and contracts for casual employment. In both cases, section 30 of the PSEA, which stipulates that appointments must be made on the basis of merit, does not apply, which means that there is no guarantee that these people are entitled to work in the position they do: there are not necessarily any official language requirements; a security clearance is not necessarily conducted; and these people do not have to swear an oath, as all public service employees must do. Thus, these four elements do not apply in terms of the integrity of the staffing process, if I am not mistaken. That is very serious.
Also, I think that people who work in temporary service contracts or as casual employees can get caught in a trap in the sense that, not only do they not have job security, but as my colleague said, a certain employment sector might have an unhealthy work environment. It is also possible that hiring a temporary employee could provoke an unhealthy work environment. A few years ago, I introduced a bill to address psychological harassment in the workplace. In several departments, these kinds of situations arise because, when an employee arrives through the back door and works in a position that he or she is not qualified for, people do not know how to remove that person and this could result in potentially unacceptable actions.
Lastly, Ms. Barrados, 80% of indeterminate jobs are apparently filled by employees who previously worked in term positions. Once again, that does not correspond in any way to your mission, vision and mandate. You also said you are very concerned. You find the situation worrisome, since you have “quantified a pattern of recruitment through the temporary workforce.” You said you are “preoccupied with the heavy reliance on building a permanent workforce through hiring temporary workers”.
Mr. Chair, considering all those factors, I would like to move a motion that the Standing Committee on Government Operations and Estimates may ask Ms. Barrados to conduct a study, to take a closer look at the consequences of all the factors I mentioned. Accordingly, we could: first, help her with the excellent work she is already doing; second, have a clear picture of what is going on within the federal public service; and third, examine the costs. It is costing the Canadian government $55 million more.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.