Thank you very much, Chair.
Thank you all for being here--and there's a lot of “all” today.
I want to start with the chief information officer. In the auditor's opening remarks, she comments as follows:
The audit also examined whether the Chief Information Officer Branch of the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat has determined if aging IT systems is an area of importance to the government as a whole....We found that the Chief Information Officer Branch of the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat has been aware that aging IT poses significant government-wide risks for over a decade. However, it has not formally identified the issue as an area of importance for the government. Furthermore, it has not established or implemented government-wide strategic directions to address the issue.
In your opening remarks, deputy, you said the following:
As a central agency, the Treasury Board Secretariat isn't there to tell departments how to manage their organizations. Rather, we are responsible for establishing the overall government-wide strategic direction for IT through policies and policy instruments. We do this in consultation....That is why, until now, we have looked at the risk of departmental IT systems on a case-by-case basis. But this new assessment will allow us to gain a government-wide perspective.
What I don't understand is this. Your mandate is information, and there's evidence that this has been a growing problem for a decade. At best, we have one-offs in some departments but no overall view.
It seems to me that would be your role.