Thank you very much.
I'd like to begin by thanking the committee for inviting me to discuss the ArriveCAN application.
ArriveCAN cost too much to build. Canadians should be angry, not because of the cost, but because of what our inability to deliver good technology quickly means for the future of our society.
This Thanksgiving, a couple of tech firms cloned the ArriveCAN app’s front end to show that its development was too expensive. As it has been pointed out, this PR stunt doesn't prove much about the cost of the program, because it takes more than copying a few screens to run a border.
ArriveCAN had to be invented in the first place, and deployed, hosted and backed up. As we have heard, just the hosting fees for running it for a year and a half cost $4 million. It had to be updated constantly during that time. It needed to connect to passport, medical and travel databases. Thousands of people from coast to coast to coast had to be trained in the middle of a global public health crisis.
ArriveCAN teams faced so many bureaucratic hurdles, outdated rules and legacy systems—en deux langues—that it’s amazing the app was built at all, let alone in a month. Few people are comparing the cost to the alternatives—face-to-face manual processes during a pandemic, or shutting down the border entirely—but it was still much too expensive.
ArriveCAN cost so much because we do not have a digital government. While some of the ArriveCAN criticism may be a thinly veiled protest about vaccine mandates or public health measures, most of it is warranted, because our public sector is falling behind in its ability to deliver reliable and accessible technology on time and on budget.
Each year, the UN publishes an assessment of digital government across its 193 member nations. In 2010, Canada ranked third in the world. This year, we’re 32nd. We should be angry because our government is unable to deliver superb information technology quickly and affordably.
Canadians already spend nearly eight hours a day online. We are fluent in apps, living on the web and connected in our classrooms and our cars. We sleep by our phones. They’re the first thing we check every morning. We are always connected, with a screen in every pocket, just 15 years after the iPhone was introduced. We are quickly becoming, at least partly, a digital species. In the next century, we will fundamentally rethink everything about government, from how residents interact with public services to how we choose our leaders. A hundred years from now, our government will be as unrecognizable to us as modern democracy is to the monarchy. We are changing, and the government is not adapting alongside us.
While on the outside, the government looks like the thing that builds roads, tests cars, checks crops, staffs service desks, protects coastlines and, yes, chairs committees, at its core the government deals in information. The government ushered in the mainframe, the Internet and satellites. The government is information technology.
As chair of the world’s leading conference on digital government and public sector modernization, I have had the chance to speak with the national CIOs from dozens of countries, including many that now outrank us on the UN’s digital government assessment. In those countries, people brag about the amazing apps they’re building for their fellow citizens. Innovation and experimentation are celebrated. New graduates want to work in government technology. However, here in Canada, we are stumbling into the digital age.
The answer is not more outsourcing. There’s plenty of room for public-private sector collaboration on the utility parts of computing and technology, such as cloud computing, broadband or off-the-shelf software. I don’t want a government to be a hollowed-out shell of policy-makers and bureaucrats, completely dependent on the private sector for its operation. We cannot abdicate the reinvention of our society to others. The government must code.
Fixing this problem will take real, meaningful changes in compensation, culture, training and, yes, the replacement of those who can’t or won’t adapt. Many of these changes are politically unappealing, but they are also necessary.
The hard truth is that we live in a digital society and we deserve a digital government. ArriveCAN is a canary in the digital coal mine, warning us that we are unprepared, unwilling or unable to adapt to that new reality.
Mr. Chair, my objective with these remarks is to not to give you an exhaustive explanation of why ArriveCAN cost so much, but to frame this conversation in a broader context.
I was invited here because of my background in technology start-ups and my role as the founder of a digital government conference.
I will be pleased to answer any questions from the committee members.
Thank you.