When you look at the website—just google “CARM process”—you can find some of the old archived web pages. They say in their vision statement, “The vision of CARM is to deliver a globally-leading customs experience that is customer-centric”, and then it continues on.
As my colleague mentioned earlier, I've never been inundated as much as I have by stakeholders, since being here in 2019, on any other committee topic. They have expressed their concerns to us. They're are concerned about this drop-dead date, May 13, and the implementation.
I was talking to one individual, and they said to me that the ability does not exist for an importer to access an itemized receipt through the CARM client portal that breaks down the duties and taxes calculated and invoiced by the CBSA at the transaction level. Essentially, CBSA has created a platform where they issue an invoice to an importer at the end of each month for payment without providing any backup to the importer supporting how CBSA arrived at the specific duties and taxes owed by the importer for each transaction invoice.
Can you understand their concerns with that? I'm hearing that CBSA is working on a back-of-house kind of solution to address some of those issues, but I don't think there is a timeline on how quickly they can be produced.
From what I understand, we're talking about a contract of $430 million, and to find a solution to that, a CBSA officer will have to manually design an Excel spreadsheet to provide a detailed, itemized list to that importer. For $430 million, I think we can do a lot better than having a CBSA officer working on an Excel spreadsheet.
We're talking $430 million. How can we rationalize this as modernization if we're going backwards?