Thank you, Madam Chair, for the opportunity to present the perspective of the Office of the Information Commissioner of Canada as part of the committee's study of the impact of the freeze on federal institutions' budgets.
I come before you today with two perspectives. One, as the head of the Office of the Information Commissioner. Second, as the ombudsman of the access to information regime in Canada. My remarks this afternoon, Madam Chair, will outline both perspectives.
First, I would like to state that as a steward of public funds, I fully understand and support this exercise in fiscal restraint given the current economic situation. That said, I also believe that the budget cost containment measures have a greater impact on small institutions as the largest part of their budget is dedicated to salaries.
Since its creation in 1983, the office has been facing an ever-increasing backlog of complaints. Investigations sometimes took years to complete, which affected the service we provided to Canadians, and in some cases their right of access to information. Last year we put into motion a very ambitious plan to maximize our efficiency and provide more timely and effective responses to our complainants by taking critical actions on investigations. Among other things, we engaged the services of investigators on contract to work on our oldest and more complex cases. We dedicated a team to our longstanding cases and we streamlined our approach to the early resolution of straightforward complaints.
After a year of implementation, we see that these initiatives are bearing fruit. We have made a significant dent in our inventory of complaints. In fact, we closed more complaints this year than we have in 20 years.
However, delivering on this ambitious plan is proving to be quite a challenge. Contrary to bigger institutions, we have almost no flexibility when meeting budgetary constraints simply because there is very little fat to trim down, so to speak. Madam Chair, I am currently using every dollar appropriated to the office. My budget is extremely stretched and we are operating at full capacity. In fact, we finished the last fiscal year with a carry-forward of only $180,000, which is less than 2% of our budget and less than our allowable carry-forward.
Two years ago my office received a significant increase in its budget. However, we did not get the funding we needed to support our systemic investigations function, which is responsible for our report cards and for allowing us to look at system-wide issues. This function is, in my view, absolutely crucial to the effectiveness of my investigative activities. Therefore, I had to reallocate resources internally to support it, which did have an impact on our remaining investigative cases. As a result, this year I'm starting with a deficit of $700,000. This constitutes a major pressure on my office, which could impact on our capacity to deliver on our mandate.
The absorption of the wage increase only compounds this problem. In terms of this year's main estimates, our salary and operating budget is $10.8 million in 2010-11, and our number of full-time equivalents is 106. I can report that at this time I actually have 107 people on staff. Seventy-six percent of our budget is allocated to salaries, and 7% is allocated to non-discretionary operating costs, which includes office equipment and the like.
Of the remaining $1.8 million, only 17% remains for discretionary costs. Sixty-two percent of this envelope is program-related and covers the costs of the consultants working on investigations. Fourteen percent is allocated to our information management strategy and 24% to our internal services.
The salary cost we will have to absorb this year is estimated at $100,000, increasing to $355,000 in 2012-2013.
Madam Chair, I know that coming after the presentation by the Department of Public Works, this figure must seem to committee members like a very small drop in a very big ocean, but for my office this has a huge impact. To put it in perspective, this is what it actually means. It is the equivalent of the resources required to close some 400 cases. It represents about 20% of our $1.8 million envelope for our discretionary operating costs. This makes us very vulnerable to any new pressures that may arise this year, either in the form of another court case or several court cases or with an increase in complaints, which could further erode our ability to deliver on our mandate. And to be very honest with you, Madam Chair, the last thing that I would want is to find myself in the position of seeking additional funding from Treasury Board Secretariat to fund litigation cases in which they might be one of the institutions involved in the litigation.
This fiscal year, in order to keep within our appropriations, we will have to cut costs in key areas such as training, computer replacement, and our internal audit function. But perhaps most importantly, I have a great concern as the ombudsman for access to information. In times of fiscal restraint, institutions have historically made cuts to their internal services, including their ATIP programs. As ombudsman for the access to information regime in Canada, I am indeed greatly concerned, because inadequate funding inevitably affects this fundamental service to Canadians, and not only their service, but their fundamental democratic right.
The risks include failure to meet legal requirements, declining performance, and an increase in complaints to my office. And I say this in all seriousness, because in our last two report cards we have observed that under-resourced institutions use time extensions as a coping mechanism, thereby creating unnecessary delays. The drafters of the act never intended time extensions to be a tool to manage workload.
With this in mind, Madam Chair, I fully intend to continue to monitor the performance of federal institutions in access to information through my report cards and systemic investigations, which are, in my opinion, key tools in assessing institutions' performance and also in protecting the rights of Canadians.
In closing, the Office of the Information Commissioner of Canada has made great strides this year in reducing our inventory of cases. However, we continue to deal with an important caseload and until such time as we reach a manageable caseload, dealing with investigations will be my number one priority. I will continue to monitor and adjust our investigation process to reap further efficiencies so that we can reallocate resources internally.
However, at this time I do not exclude the possibility of going back to Treasury Board Secretariat as well as the advisory panel on the funding and oversight of officers of Parliament to ask for additional funding.
Thank you, Madam Chair.
We will be pleased to answer your questions.