Thank you for your confidence in my explaining of the importance of the role of the federal ombud.
Again, there's only one. I have the authority to do three main things.
Number one is that we do systemic reviews with recommendations across over 90 departments and agencies to improve procurement practices where we see reasonable grounds.
Two, we review complaints from Canadian suppliers about the awarding or administration of federal contracts. Again, that makes us different from the Canadian International Trade Tribunal, which can look only at complaints associated with awards covered by free trade agreements.
Finally, we offer alternative dispute resolution services for Canadian suppliers that successfully win federal government contracts and experience issues. This is something that has been historically underutilized. Here we're seeing more and more acceptances from departments. That's where I see optimism. We are seeing departments with the goal of resolving these disputes successfully. That's happening, and it's an efficiency that saves taxpayer dollars, because it's not going to litigation. It's not costing millions of dollars. Our mediation services typically only take one day. If you have the right people in the room, absolutely, you get resolution and results.
We also see the importance of professionalizing the community. That's why we share knowledge across the community broadly with our knowledge-deepening and knowledge-sharing pieces. We've committed significant energy to diversifying the federal supply chain. I've said a number of times that one of the shocking statistics we've come up with is this: Over the course of my tenure, we have analyzed the data and seen that in many instances of competitive procurements, only 32% result in more than one competitive bid. You have one bidder. Part of my role is making that system work better. You're not benefiting from diverse solutions, or from pricing and competition. That's inefficient.