Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I would like to give notice of the following motion. I'll read it very slowly.
That, given that: (i) the Auditor General has found that the ArriveCAN application has cost taxpayers at least $60 million and that the Canada Border Services Agency’s management of public funds with respect to the ArriveCAN application has been disastrous; (ii) the Canada Border Services Agency is currently working on implementing an official, digital system of record to apply international trade policies for commercial duties and taxes for importers and trade chain partners, known as the CBSA Assessment and Revenue Management (CARM), and that this new system will come into effect for everyone on May 13, 2024, despite a short trial period and limited testing; (iii) the government procurement website canadabuys.canada.ca states that contracts awarded to Deloitte for the development of the CARM project have a minimum value of several hundred million dollars; Pursuant to Standing Order 108(3)(c), the committee A. orders the Canada Border Services Agency to produce, in both official languages, unredacted copies of: a) all signed contracts relating to the development and implementation of the CARM project since the beginning of 2018; b) all CBSA communications relating to the 2018 Deloitte technical specifications; c) all CBSA communications relating to CARM Release 2 testing since October 2023; provided the documents are submitted to the committee clerk no later than 15 days following the adoption of this motion; and B. once the documents have been received by the committee that it invite the President of the Canada Border Services Agency to testify at a 2-hour meeting to answer the committee’s questions about the contract for the development and implementation of the CARM.
As I said, I am simply giving notice of this motion, which has to do with the Canada Border Services Agency. This is another application that seems to be related to overspending and uncontrolled spending.