Good afternoon, and thank you for inviting me to speak.
It's not easy for me to be here today. I'm a loyal MDA employee and have been for eight years. I do not want to damage the good name of MDA or curb our prospects as a strong Canadian company. However, there are aspects of this proposed sale that I feel are not well known by the people of Canada, who help pay for many of the great things that MDA has done as a company.
I do not claim to represent large numbers of employees. I do, however, represent the views of more than just myself. In the short time I had to prepare, I received confirmation from 12 other employees that what I say here today represents their views as well as my own.
There are three main points that as a professional I would like to bring to your attention. First, I do not see that jobs will stay in Canada with this deal. Some employees like me will leave because they cannot in good conscience work for ATK. Some already have left. But this will be minor in comparison to the central reason why this deal will not maintain jobs in Canada.
ATK has announced that the key to the success of this deal is their ability to win U.S. classified programs. Only U.S. citizens are allowed to access U.S. classified information. Even on non-classified programs, it is very difficult for Canadians to work with U.S. companies on space technology. For example, early in my own career at MDA, we as a company were unable to work with Orbital Sciences, our own parent company, to build part of RADARSAT-2. Why was that? The technology was protected under ITAR, the international trafficking in arms restrictions. That's a much less severe restriction than classified designations. Jobs will not stay in Canada.
Secondly, when ATK buys the systems division of MDA, they will be buying our intellectual property. When ATK bids new technology developed in Canada for U.S. classified projects, it seems highly likely that this technology will also become classified. Canada will lose access to technology that has been developed by Canadians in Canada for the benefit of Canada.
Canada is on the verge of losing unique and world-class capabilities. Canada has not maintained a consistent and reliable level of funding for Canadian space programs. For example, projects like the follow-on to RADARSAT-2, the RADARSAT Constellation mission, had $200 million allocated in the 2005 federal budget. Up until now, less than $20 million of that funding has been spent by the CSA. The result of these kinds of delays is that a deal like this one from ATK is forced upon MDA in order to maintain shareholder value. As a result, cash will replace Canadian ingenuity and skilled industry. Sure, this deal will open new markets for our technology, but ATK will bid it to U.S. military markets, and those are closed to Canadian engineers.
Maybe in the short term some small pieces of that work will stay in Canada, but the specialized leading-edge capabilities of MDA to be a prime contractor for space missions will not continue. The skill and know-how that have taken years to build will disperse and be lost as a result of this deal.
Separately from these points, on a personal level, there are two additional aspects of this transaction that concern me as an employee. First, when I read the text of the Ottawa treaty banning land mines, it seems clear to me that although working for ATK might not violate the letter of the treaty, it certainly violates the spirit of the treaty. I personally have a problem with working for a company that violates international law, even if they don't violate the law in their own country.
Secondly, many of my co-workers and I, as well as many other Canadians, are against the weaponization of space. Canada opposed national missile defence and did not support U.S. efforts to advance this program. ATK is heavily involved in this work. I do not want to be associated with a company doing this work, even if I am not directly involved.
MDA management tells us that this is the best thing for jobs. ATK management tells us that this is the best thing for Canada. Well, I am both a Canadian and an MDA employee, and I assure you that this is not the best thing for me. I cannot and will not work for ATK. As a result, my skills are unlikely to contribute to future Canadian space projects. But regardless of people with views like mine, the jobs, technology, and expertise that Canada has invested so much in will not hang together in Canada over the long term as a result of this deal.
The only sensible thing for Canada to do now that we have reached this state, is to reject this deal and reject the transfer of the RADARSAT-2 operating licence, and immediately move forward so that MDA can get on with building the things that Canada wants and needs for our security, our sovereignty, and our contributions to global environmental monitoring. This will continue our tradition of building a healthy, high-tech space industry that is not beholden to whatever the next plans of the U.S. military might be.
I am outraged as a taxpayer that ATK will receive the benefit of so many of our tax dollars. I am outraged as an employee that ATK will receive the benefit of so much of our hard work.
Maybe this could have been foreseen, and maybe the best time to act was indeed years ago, but please do what you can now to prevent this tragic loss of Canadian industry and technology.
Thank you.