I perhaps need to clarify, Chair, one of our recommendations, which was about performance indicators.
There have been many initiatives to reform human resource management over the past two decades. I think many observers would agree that they haven't all been successful, and I'm being generous. This modernization, this effort that went into changing this legislation, was a very significant one by the public service. There was a lot of time, a lot of effort, and a lot of study that went into trying to address the issues that were evident.
I'll give you one example. People are asking about why the change was necessary. I think we did an audit in the late nineties that showed there were some 70,000 rules in human resource management. It was completely rules-bound, a very difficult system. The managers were not managing human resources and it was obvious that things needed to change. The government responded and went through this initiative.
It's really important that this work. It's really important that this initiative be successful. When we did the audit in 2005, which is when the act had just been adopted and implementation was about to begin, we said it was really important that government put in place indicators so they would know if they were achieving the objectives they had set out, largely because there had been other initiatives in the past that had never amounted to anything. The government at the time, in 2005, agreed that, yes, there should be indicators. Well, we have come along four years later and there isn't a complete set of indicators. We are concerned that with this legislative review that is coming, government needs to be able to tell parliamentarians what is working, what is not working, and how they are going to track the success or not of this legislation over time.
So that is our major preoccupation. We see that the things required under the legislation have been put in place, but are they getting the results that were intended? That is really what is the base, I think, of our recommendations in this report. We agree there are some indicators. We just think they need to be more comprehensive. The data may not have been tracked over time; there are indicators that have changed year to year. So how will government and Parliament know what the trend lines are and if the objectives are being attained?