Thank you, Chair.
I have to say that the scale of the government incompetence and its negative impact on Canadian citizens is mind-boggling. I've been around a long time, but I have to really search my memory to remember a file that was as bad as this one in terms of the governance and its negative impact on Canadian citizens, the ones who work for this government and for Canadians, and it's ongoing still.
Normally we're looking at the past and at past damage. As we're here today, there's still ongoing damage, and I have to say at the outset, Chair, that a lot of the answers we're getting are not sufficient. There's still way too many grey areas and unknowns. I'm hoping that we stay at this until we get the answers we need, because the main goal for us is to make sure we get this fixed and to bloody well make sure it doesn't happen again.
I want to say, first of all, to Deputy Lemay, thank you for the apology. You said, “I am deeply sorry for the hardship being felt by the public servants and their families.” That alone doesn't change anything, but I know it matters. That's appreciated, and I wanted to acknowledge it. I would also say that I was disappointed that the Treasury Board, which has overall responsibility, didn't feel the same need to come in and apologize.
Where do you begin?
IBM is who was hired to implement Phoenix, correct?