Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I believe my colleague Mr. Genuis has indicated the reasons for the President of the Treasury Board to be present in front of this committee to account for not only her announcement yesterday but also for her implication in the oversight of ArriveCAN, or the arrive scam.
I would also like to get the President of the Treasury Board in front of the committee on another matter that was brought up here today by the deputy minister. As was indicated yesterday, we found out that an individual who is working with the public service has received $8 million from the arrive scam scandal. The deputy minister today said herself that she has seen, in her oversight, the firing of five employees for failing to disclose conflicts of interest.
Mr. Chair, you may remember that LifeLabs was granted millions of dollars for COVID testing, and the President of the Treasury Board did not disclose this conflict to the Ethics Commissioner. She did disclose other things, but prior to the pandemic, as you'll be interested to know, Mr. Chair, LifeLabs, the company on whose board the husband of the President of the Treasury Board sits as a director, received only $150,000 in contracts. It was only three contracts. During the pandemic when, I will remind the committee, the current President of the Treasury Board served as Minister of Procurement, LifeLabs received a contract for—and this number goes beyond the number we've been discussing here in arrive scam—$66.3 million dollars on June 23.