Thank you, Mr. Chair, for the opportunity to speak before this committee as part of your study on the Auditor General's report on SDTC.
The release of the Auditor General's report in June concluded a two-year effort that I had initiated to expose how SDTC's idealistic mission was co-opted by a group of corrupt executives, board members and insiders within the clean-tech ecosystem. All or some....
You know, there's a lot of speech here. Frankly, I'm embarrassed to be here, because my being here is an indication that the systems that are set out to protect people don't work. That's the biggest issue here. I'll continue with my speech, but I want to make it clear that I'm here not just for SDTC. I want to point out that it should not have taken a two-year effort to get to this point. Even to this day, real accountability doesn't exist.
The Auditor General's findings conclusively validated and vindicated every single one of the issues that I had initially raised. Within hours of the report's publication, the minister dissolved SDTC—a clear indication of the severity of the misconduct. This decision should serve as further proof that SDTC was beyond repair, with corruption that was so badly ingrained it rendered the organization unfixable. It also serves as the ultimate indictment against SDTC's leadership, who continue to work today.
I'd like to extend my gratitude to the Office of the Auditor General for their dedication to this inquiry and their wider efforts as one of the few independent institutions in Canada that continue to uphold public trust in a system that has become increasingly opaque and unjust. Just as I was always confident that the Auditor General would confirm the financial mismanagement at SDTC, I remain equally confident that the RCMP will substantiate the criminal activities that occurred within the organization.
Again, I accepted this invitation to come to this committee because I'd like to talk about the actual effort that was required to get to this point and what the continued lack of action by the federal government indicates about our society. The real issues extend beyond SDTC's collapse. The true failure of the situation stands at the feet of our current government, whose decision to protect wrongdoers and cover up their findings over the last 12 months is a serious indictment of how our democratic systems and institutions are being corrupted by political interference. It should never have taken two years for the issues to reach this point. What should have been a straightforward process turned into a bureaucratic nightmare that allowed SDTC to continue wasting millions of dollars and abusing countless employees over the last year.
The first government official I approached was the Liberal member of Parliament for Calgary Skyview, George Chahal, at an SDTC event all the way back in May 2022. He assured me that he took this situation seriously and guaranteed that he would facilitate contact with the appropriate people in the federal government and the Auditor General's office. His subsequent refusal to engage forced us to spend the next five months trying and failing to contact various agencies, including ISED, the Ethics Commissioner and the public integrity commissioner, to name just a few. It was only in December 2022 that I finally contacted the Auditor General's office, which set off a chain of events that finally culminated in the report in June.
It took almost a full year after we initially talked to the MP until this file eventually ended up at ISED, which then hired RCGT in March 2023 to conduct a fact-finding exercise. This fact-finding was supposed to be a six-week exercise with a simple goal—to validate the documentation I had provided, with a stated guarantee that subsequent investigations involving the AG, ISED and the RCMP would be initiated if any of those documents and allegations were proven true.
By May 2023, ISED had already confirmed most of those allegations. RCGT had even drafted a report and provided a debrief to me, with ISED bureaucrats stating their plan to make a recommendation to the minister and PCO that the report be released and that at least four separate investigations be initiated and managed through a newly created office within ISED.
All of this should have led to immediate action, but once those findings reached the Privy Council Office and the minister's office, everything changed. The investigation was delayed for another four months, allowing SDTC to continue misusing funds and mistreating employees, when at this point the federal government had in fact known this was true.
By late August, ISED confirmed that no further investigations were required; instead, there were plans to release the report, suspend SDTC and remove the board and executive team immediately. This was the outcome I was expecting, and I was satisfied that this situation was finally going to be resolved, yet the minister and the government didn't act. ISED manipulated the findings and withheld the report from the public, and only suspended SDTC on a temporary basis with no plans to act against any single one of the wrongdoers despite having overwhelming evidence to the contrary.
The minister himself defended his inaction, stating that RCGT's report was inconclusive, but if anyone read the legal disclaimers RCGT had written in the reports, they actually stated the contrary. The report explicitly stated that none of the findings and work done by RCGT could actually be used to prove or disprove misconduct. This delay and lack of action again let SDTC continue operations unchecked and allowed them to continue to misuse taxpayer dollars.
At this point, the AG's office informed me of its decision to act, and in response, I made the decision to blow the whistle a second time, this time publicly releasing recordings that exposed ISED's deliberate inaction and falsehoods. The fact that I had to act again speaks volumes about the depth of corruption, not just within SDTC but within the government and bureaucracy. The government's failure to act promptly or transparently is not just a bureaucratic failure; it is a moral one.
These revelations triggered further inquiries in—