Thank you.
I've certainly enjoyed listening to the interventions. I also really appreciate this committee's allowing us to dig into this issue. As many of you know, this is a topic of keen interest, finding the outcomes for equity policies that are in put in place.
I'm going to take my time to explain, to my understanding, the federal contractors program. Then I'm going to invite a witness response on where that program is and how it might be coming along in terms of outcomes. We heard today in opening statements that a lot has happened since the 2018 reports, so I'm keenly interested.
For the purpose of this meeting, the federal contractors program, which is a program for employment equity, was established in 1986 and is administered by ESDC. It's stated that it requires suppliers with 100 employees or more that have federal contracts worth $1 million or more to take steps to hire from employment equity groups. This is a beautiful stated outcome that they're looking for. These groups include women, members of visible minorities, aboriginal peoples and persons with disabilities. It also states that a supplier must set related goals and monitor the progress towards them.
The contractor policy also specifies that once a supplier is awarded a contract of $1 million or more, it is then required to honour its agreement to implement employment equity as an ongoing obligation and not simply during the life of the contract. This is an important clause: Non-compliance with or withdrawal from the program may result in the termination of the contract and result in the supplier's placement on the federal contractors program limited eligibility to bid list. This list makes the supplier ineligible to do business with the federal government until it has been found to be in compliance.
On the surface, it sounds like a policy and a program that has real teeth, that states what it wants as an objective, that clearly delineates and defines the ways in which this program should be audited. However, to date, nobody has been found to be out of compliance, and there are no suppliers on the limited eligibility to bid list.
My question, through you, Mr. Chair, given the fanciful way in which this federal contractors program is being promoted and talked about as outcomes-based procurement, is this: Would the ADM care to comment on how it can have a program of this size and scope and yet have absolutely nobody currently named on the limited eligibility to bid list? Is it so good that every company over 100 people with $1 million contracts is adhering to this?