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Media Advisory

Reports of the Auditor General of Canada and Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development to be tabled on 30 October 2007

Ottawa, 11 October 2007—Reports of the Auditor General of Canada, Sheila Fraser, and the Interim Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development, Ron Thompson, will be tabled in the House of Commons on Tuesday, 30 October 2007. Details of the media lockup and news conference to be held on tabling day, as well as Ms. Fraser’s and Mr. Thompson’s availability for interviews, are provided below.

The October 2007 Report of the Auditor General of Canada contains the following chapters:

Chapter 1—Safeguarding Government Information and Assets in Contracting. The audit examined how the federal government ensures the security of sensitive information and assets that it makes available to industry in the course of contracting. It looked at the main program set up to provide the necessary safeguards, the Industrial Security Program delivered by Public Works and Government Services Canada. The audit also looked at how the three federal organizations with the highest numbers of contracts processed by the Industrial Security Program—Public Works and Government Services Canada, National Defence, and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police—carry out their responsibilities for security in contracting (industrial security) under the Government Security Policy. The audit also reviewed the role of Defence Construction Canada, as the contracting authority for defence projects, and the Treasury Board Secretariat’s role in monitoring the implementation and effectiveness of the Government Security Policy.

Chapter 2—Management and Control Practices in Three Small Entities. This is the first in a series of planned audits of management and control practices in small federal organizations. The audit included the Canada Industrial Relations Board, the Canadian Forces Grievance Board, and the Courts Administration Service. It looked at the controls applied by the three entities in the use of acquisition cards, contracting, executive travel, hospitality, executive compensation, and selected areas of human resources management. It also examined whether the entities’ management and control practices comply with government policies in these areas.

Chapter 3—Inuvialuit Final Agreement. The audit examined how and to what extent the federal government has fulfilled its obligations under its 1984 agreement with the Inuvialuit (the Inuit of the Western Arctic). The Agreement transferred about 91,000 square kilometres of land to the Inuvialuit, along with a total payment of just under $170 million; in return, the Inuvialuit relinquished their claim to 335,000 square kilometres that had been part of the original claim. The principles expressed in the Agreement include enabling Inuvialuit to participate equally and meaningfully in the economy and society of Canada’s North and of the nation; protecting and preserving the wildlife, environment, and biological productivity of the Arctic; and preserving Inuvialuit cultural identity and values within a changing Northern society. The audit looked at the actions taken by several federal departments to meet their specific obligations under the Agreement: Indian and Northern Affairs Canada (the lead federal department), Environment Canada, the Parks Canada Agency, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, and Public Works and Government Services Canada.

Chapter 4—Military Health Care—National Defence. The provision of health care to members of the Canadian Forces falls under the National Defence Act rather than the Canada Health Act. The audit examined how National Defence determines that the Canadian Forces physical and mental health care system provides military members with timely, consistent access to quality health care at military sites; it did not look at the provision of health care to members deployed on missions. The audit also examined how the Canadian Forces health care system ensures that its health practitioners are qualified and can maintain their clinical skills and their licenses to practice.

Chapter 5—Keeping the Border Open and Secure—Canada Border Services Agency. The Canada Border Services Agency was created in December 2003 to integrate the front-line border management and enforcement activities of three other agencies. The audit examined whether the Agency’s approach to border management is based on threat and risk assessments and achieves the desired levels of border openness and security. More specifically, we looked at how the Agency identifies and intercepts people and goods that represent a high risk to Canada and, at the same time, facilitates the free flow of low-risk people and goods into Canada.

Chapter 6—Management of the 2006 Census—Statistics Canada. As Canada’s national statistical agency, Statistics Canada is required to carry out a census of the Canadian population every five years. The audit examined whether Statistics Canada applied its established quality assurance systems and practices in managing the 2006 Census of Population. It looked at the Agency’s efforts to improve the quality of Census data on selected hard-to-count groups and to what extent the 2006 Census program complied with the government’s risk management policy, particularly in its ability to recruit and retain the temporary field staff needed, and in managing the risks to the privacy of respondents.

Chapter 7—Technical Training and Learning—Canada Revenue Agency. The audit examined how well the Canada Revenue Agency identifies and analyzes its needs for technical training and learning solutions to support its tax administration mandate. It also looked at how well the Agency evaluates the effectiveness of its training and learning activities. The audit focused on three key branches—Compliance Programs, Appeals, and Legislative Policy and Regulatory Affairs—and the training provided to their auditors, investigators, appeals officers, and rulings officers, who play a key role in interpreting tax legislation and ensuring compliance with it.

The October 2007 Report of the Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development contains the following chapters:

Chapter 1—Sustainable Development Strategies. This chapter is the Commissioner’s tenth annual report on the sustainable development strategies of federal departments and agencies. This year, in addition to following up on key recommendations from previous reports and examining the implementation of selected commitments from the strategies, we set out to determine whether the significant weaknesses that we have noted in the strategies over the past decade persist, and whether the strategies represent substantive plans for helping departments progress towards sustainable development. 

Chapter 2—Environmental Petitions. This chapter contains a retrospective study on environmental petitions and the petitions process since 1995. The study describes the nature of environmental petitions and the extent to which some of them may have influenced the federal management of environmental issues in Canada.  This chapter also contains the Commissioner’s annual report on environmental petitions received from Canadians between 1 July 2006 and 30 June 2007, as required under the Auditor General Act.

Media Lockup:

9:00 a.m.-1:45 p.m. EDT, Main Hall, Government Conference Centre, 2 Rideau Street, Ottawa (for journalists accredited by the Canadian Parliamentary Press Gallery).  Entry via Rideau Street entrance. Journalists must respect the media embargo until the reports are tabled shortly after 2:00 p.m.

News Conference:

12:30 p.m., Main Lounge, Government Conference Centre, 2 Rideau Street, Ottawa (under lockup conditions). Broadcast journalists may tape the news conference but no live broadcasts will be permitted.

Interviews:

Auditor General Sheila Fraser and Interim Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development Ron Thompson will be available for interviews after 3:00 p.m. To book an interview, please call (613) 952-0213 ext. 6292.

The reports, along with news releases for each chapter, will be available on the Office of the Auditor General of Canada’s website (www.oag-bvg.gc.ca) immediately after tabling.

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For information, please contact:

Margot Booth
Office of the Auditor General of Canada
(613) 952–0213, ext. 6292
Email: Margot.Booth@oag-bvg.gc.ca